Kuwait Times

Cuba’s private sector suffering from a drop in tourist numbers

Restaurant­s, cafes remain closed; convertibl­es back in garage

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HAVANA: Havana is a ghost town. The American convertibl­es swooned over by tourists are back in the garage, while most restaurant­s and cafes are closed. Cuba’s private sector has been suffering since the island nation closed its borders over the coronaviru­s pandemic.

In the charming old building where the 1993 comedy “Strawberry and Chocolate” was filmed, a spiral staircase leads to the deserted La Guarida, the most famous privately-owned restaurant, or “paladar”, in Cuba. “We decided to close the restaurant from March 15,” nine days before Cuba’s authoritie­s imposed their first viruslinke­d restrictio­ns, said owner Enrique Nunez.

By Saturday, the country of 11.2 million people had close to 1,000 coronaviru­s cases and 32 deaths. “I have friends with restaurant­s in Spain, they told me what was happening, about the danger, the difficulty of continuing to serve customers in these conditions,” Nunez said.

His restaurant usually serves 200 people for each sitting. Omnipresen­t in tourist guides, it’s a must stop for many visitors, including stars such as Beyonce, Madonna or Pedro Almodovar, whose photos adorn the walls.

“That was the main reason we took this decision. We’re a very attractive site, many people arrive in Havana with the desire to experience La Guarida.” What that meant was that “we were on the front line” of potential coronaviru­s infections.

‘Tourism was already struggling’

In this communist country where the state and its businesses dominate economic activity, the private sector has little by little managed to make its mark over recent years: it now employs almost 635,000 people, or 14 percent of Cuba’s work force. These Cubans rent out rooms, run small restaurant­s or hair salons, among other activities.

“Many private enterprise­s were built on tourists, because no Cuban is going to go to a restaurant and spend $100 on a meal,” said economist Omar Everleny Perez. So they quickly sensed the danger: two days after the borders were closed to non-residents-a measure subsequent­ly expanded to all arrivals — 16,000 private workers asked for their licenses to be suspended, according to the Labor Ministry, which temporaril­y exempted them from taxes.

By Wednesday that figure had risen to 119,000, around 19 percent of the private workforce.

This health crisis could not have come at a worse time, on the back of two bad years when Cuban businesses suffered under the increased sanctions imposed by the administra­tion of US President Donald Trump. “The private sector was already struggling, especially in Havana, after the American cruise ships stop coming” from June 2019 due to new sanctions, said Perez.

It meant that in 2019, the number of tourists dropped by 9.3 percent to 4.3 million. Over recent years, Americans had become the second largest group of tourists after Canadians, thanks to the thawing of tensions with the United States since 2014, under the Barack Obama administra­tion.

‘Sorry, we’re closed’

In January and February, tourist numbers were down 16.5 percent on the previous year, with a drop of 65 percent for Americans. The sector, the second largest revenue generator on the island nation, was worth $3.3 billion in 2018. Even before the coronaviru­s outbreak, restaurant­s and sales weren’t posting “the same numbers as two years ago, and now COVID-19 has arrived and finished them off,” said Perez.

It’s been tough on employees used to much higher salaries than the average $50 a month in the public sector. “Sorry, we’re closed,” says the old metal sign attached to El Cafe, a coffee shop in Havana’s now deserted old town, popular among tourists. Loliet Gonzalez, a 25-year-old psychology student who’s worked there for two years said her earnings “allow me to have the quality of life I want.” Her boss gave her two weeks’ salary to keep her going through the crisis. “For now I’m fine but there will come a time when I’ll have to delve into my savings,” said Gonzalez.

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