The American Hotel and Lodging Association, a
group with members including Marriott International and Hilton Worldwide, have
taken credit for many of the major setbacks Airbnb has encountered, calling the
Federal Trade Commission’s investigation into Airbnb and the former New York
bill that would fine Airbnb hosts for breaking housing rules "notable
accomplishments," the New York Times reports. The plan to take out Airbnb
was laid out in two separate documents presented to the AHLA board, according
to documents the New York Times has since obtained. In response to AHLA's
efforts, Airbnb released a blog post Monday morning titled "The Hotel
Industry Agenda: Punish the Middle Class." As the title suggests, Airbnb
argues the hotel industry's multimillion-dollar efforts to quash Airbnb's
growth is ultimately hurting middle-class Americans who use the site for
supplemental income. Many hoteliers count Airbnb listings as new supply in
their markets, which explains the concern. Unlike other sectors, hotels are not
guaranteed a steady inflow of cash from long-term leases since their tenants
come and go on a day-to-day basis. As such, any new hotel supply is considered
very disruptive. Unlike other sectors, hoteliers are not guaranteed a steady
inflow of cash from long-term leases since their tenants come and go daily. As
such, new supply is considered extremely disruptive — which explains the
industry’s abhorrence to the rise of Airbnb, which it considers new supply.
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