History
Cuba has long been a popular
attraction for tourists. Between 1915 and 1930,
Havana hosted more tourists than any other location
in the
Caribbean. The influx was due in large part to
Cuba's proximity to the United States, where
restrictive prohibition on alcohol and other
pastimes stood in stark contrast to the island's
traditionally relaxed attitude to leisure pursuits.
Such tourism became Cuba's third largest source of
foreign currency, behind the two dominant industries
of sugar and tobacco
A combination of the Great
Depression of the 1930s, the end of prohibition, and
the second world war severely dampened Cuba's
tourist industry, and it wasn't until the 1950s that
numbers began to return to the island in any
significant force. During this period, American
organized crime came to dominate the leisure and
tourist industries, a modus operandi outlined at the
infamous Havana Conference of 1946. By the mid-1950s
Havana became one of the main markets and the
favourite route for the narcotics trade to the
United States. Despite this, tourist numbers grew
steadily at a rate of 8% a year and Havana became
known as "the Latin Las Vegas".
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Hotel Nacional in Havana.
The hotel's guestlist includes Frank
Sinatra, Winston Churchill and Ernest
Hemingway, and also played host to the
infamous Havana Conference in 1946
Immediately upon becoming
President of Cuba after the Cuban revolution of
1959, Manuel Urrutia ordered the closing of many
bars and gambling halls associated with prostitution
and the drug trade, thus effectively ending Cuba's
image as a hedonistic escape. A new governmental
body, the National Institute of the Tourism Industry
(INTUR), was established to encourage more tourism;
taking over hotels, clubs, and beaches making them
available to the general public at low rates.
Tourist board chief Carlos Almonia announced a
program of huge investment in hotels and the
creation of a new airport. But fears of Cuba's
post-revolutionary status amongst Americans, who
constituted 8 out of 10 of visitors, meant a rapid
decrease in travel to the island.
In January 1961, as relations
between the nations deteriorated, tourism travel to
Cuba was declared by the U.S. State Department to be
contrary to U.S. foreign policy and against the
national interest. Tourism that year dropped to a
record low of a mere 4180, forcing a dramatic
downsizing of Cuba's tourist plans.[4]
Visitors to Cuba during the 1960s, 70s and 80s were
comparatively rare. The number of tourists to the
island did increase slowly, but it wasn't until 1989
that they were to equal pre-Revolutionary numbers.
The collapse of the Soviet Union
in 1991 caused a crisis in the Cuban economy. The
Soviets were Cuba's chief trading partner, and had
effectively sheltered Cuba's sugar industry with
large subsidies for 30 years. The lack of economic
diversification during this period, and the sudden
loss of key markets sent the country into a deep
economic depression known in Cuba as the Special
Period. The crisis precipitated an urgent need to
find new avenues of national income.
Policies were drawn up to satisfy
the growing tourist markets of Canada and Europe
with an aim to replace Cuba's reliance on the sugar
industry and gain much needed foreign currency
rapidly. A new Ministry of Tourism was created in
1994, and the Cuban state invested heavily in
tourist facilities. Between 1990 and 2000, more than
$3.5 billion was invested in the tourist industry.
The number of rooms available to international
tourists grew from 12,000 to 35,000, and the country
received a total of 10 million visitors over that
period. By 1995 the industry had surpassed sugar as
Cuba's chief earner.
Today, Cuba welcomes travelers
from around the world, and especially Canada,
Germany, the United Kingdom, Spain, Italy, France
and Mexico. In recent years, more than 600,000
Canadians, 200,000 British, and 114,000 Germans have
visited Cuba annually. Each year, thousands of
Americans visit Cuba, even though the official U.S.
trade policy usually does not permit travel there.
According to TIME Magazine (May 11, 2007), 20,000 to
30,000 Americans illegally travel to Cuba every
year. Americans usually reach Cuba via flights from
Toronto, Montreal or Cancun. Cuban immigration
officers do not stamp U.S. passports so Americans
can keep their visits private.
Foreign
investment
Foreign investment in the Cuban
tourism sector has increased steadily since the
tourism drive. This has been made possible due to
constitutional changes to Cuba's socialist command
economy, to allow for the recognition of foreign
held capital.
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By the late 1990s, twenty five
joint foreign and domestic venture companies were
working within Cuba's tourist industry. Foreign
investors and hoteliers from market based economies
have found that Cuba's centralized economy and
bureaucracy has created particular staffing issues
and higher costs then normal. An additional factor
cited by foreign investors is the degree of state
involvement at the executive level, which is far
higher than average.
The influx of foreign capital, and
associated capitalist management methods, led
outside observers to question whether Cuba's
socialist system could survive the resulting
transformation. Fidel Castro responded in 1991,
"In the conditions of a small
country like Cuba... It is very difficult to
develop... relying on one's own resources. It is
for this reason that we have no alternative but
to associate ourselves with those foreign
enterprises that can supply capital, technology,
and markets."
Castro was also of the belief that
despite the undeniable influence of "capitalist
ideology", socialism would prevail both in Cuba and
the wider "battle of ideas".
Tourism
and the environment
The Cuban government has
established safeguards designed to ensure that
tourism and other development do not result in
significant environmental impacts. The development
of new tourist facilities and related infrastructure
in Cuba must, among other things, proceed in
accordance with Cuban environmental laws and
policies. In 1994 the Cuban government established
the Ministry of Science, Technology, and Environment
(CITMA) and in 1997 the National Assembly has
enacted Law 81 of the Environment, one of the most
comprehensive "framework" environmental laws in the
region. Pursuant to that Law, the government adopted
a number of decree laws and resolutions aimed at
ensuring that future development (including tourism
development) is sustainable. Of particular
importance to tourism development is Decree Law
212,Coastal Zone Management, which establishes
setbacks and other sitting requirements for new
facilities in coastal areas. CITMA Resolution 77/99
requires a thorough environmental assessment of
major new construction projects and requires that
project developers obtain an environmental license
from CITMA.
Health
tourism
- Further information:
Healthcare in Cuba
As well as receiving traditional
tourism revenues, Cuba attracts health tourists,
generating revenues of around $40m a year for the
Cuban economy. Cuba has been a popular health
tourism destination for more than 20 years. In 2005
more than 19,600 foreign patients traveled to Cuba
for a wide range of treatments including
eye-surgery, neurological disorders such as multiple
sclerosis and Parkinson's disease, and orthopaedics.
Many patients are from Latin America although
medical treatment for retinitis pigmentosa, often
known as night blindness, has attracted many
patients from Europe and North America.
An Oct 2007 Miami Herald story
addressed the high quality of health care that
Canadian and American medical tourism patients
receive in Cuba.
Some complaints have arisen that
foreign "health tourists" paying with dollars
receive a higher quality of care than Cuban
citizens. Former leading Cuban neurosurgeon and
dissident Dr Hilda Molina asserts that the central
revolutionary objective of free, quality medical
care for all has been eroded by Cuba's need for
foreign currency. Molina says that following the
economic collapse known in Cuba as the Special
Period, the Cuban Government established mechanisms
designed to turn the medical system into a
profit-making enterprise, thus creating a disparity
in the quality of healthcare services between Cubans
and foreigners.
Casas
particulares
-
Main article: Casa
particular
A "Casa particular" ("private
house") is a private residence in Cuba converted to
allow paid lodging, usually on a short-term basis,
they are akin to the Bed and Breakfast residences
elsewhere. Casas particulares are typically operated
from a single-family residence and are a very
popular choice for tourists. Prices can range
between 15 and 30 Euros per night, or less for
longer stays, and thus the casas provide a more
viable option for young or independent tourists. A
stay in a private casa allows tourists more
opportunity to mix with local Cubans, and engage in
Cuban cultural life.
Impact
on Cuban society and tourism apartheid
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"Cocotaxis" in Plaza de
la Revoluc?n, Havana. A popular form of
transport for tourist sightseers. Due to
the rapid growth of tourism in Cuba,
taxi drivers can earn more than lawyers
and doctors
Cuba's tourism policies of the
early 90s, which were driven by the government's
pressing need to earn hard currency , had a major
impact on the underlying egalitarianism espoused by
the Cuban revolution. Two parallel economies and
societies quickly emerged, their demarcation line
was represented by access to the newly legalized
U.S. dollar. Those having access to dollars through
contact with the lucrative tourist industry suddenly
found themselves at a distinct financial advantage
over professional, industrial and agricultural
workers.[
Barstaff, hotel receptionists and
taxi drivers became the coveted occupations in urban
Cuba, and by 2006, permission to operate a private
taxi cab service could cost up to $500 in bribes.
Musicians have also found a radical shift in their
economic status. El Nuevo Herald reported that the
$200 a month one band percussionist receives in tips
performing to tourists in Old Havana is more than 30
times what he would receive from the Cuban
government for the same work.
To insure the isolation of
international tourism from Cuban society, it was to
be promoted in enclave resorts where, as much as
possible, tourists would be segregated from Cuban
society. This was not lost on the average Cuban
citizen, and the government tourism policy soon
began to be referred to as "enclave tourism" and
"tourism apartheid".
In 1992, as Cuba entered the
period of severe economic austerity, Fidel Castro
defended the newly instituted policies in a speech
to the Cuban National Assembly. He described the
moves as an economic necessity that would need to be
maintained for as long as the country had a need for
foreign currency. According to Castro, the
government was "pondering formulas" that would allow
Cubans to use some of the tourist facilities as a
reward for outstanding work, but believed that
giving Cubans access to amenities at the expense of
paying foreign tourists would ultimately be a
counterproductive move for the economy; "For every
five Cubans staying two or three days in one of
those hotels, the country would have one less ton of
meat to distribute to the people,".
Until 1997, contacts between
tourists and Cubans were de facto outlawed,
and Cubans seen in contact with tourists were
regarded as potential thieves by police.Global human
rights groups complaints, and the upcoming Pope's
visit, helped cause an about-face, although such
contacts are still frowned upon, with standard
harassment such as police identification checks for
any Cuban seen in contact with a tourist common.
Tourist identification is usually not checked unless
the tourist has dark skin and is mistaken for Cuban.
Despite the restrictions, average Cubans thrive on
Cuba's tourist industry,[and
many simply see the policy as inevitable.
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A street in the popular
tourist district of Old Havana
Jineterismo,
the sex tourism industry in Cuba, has been closely
associated with tourism apartheid; with some
claiming that the only Cubans allowed into the
resorts as a group were prostitutes, the
jineteras, whilst the Cuban government claimed
that its restrictions on Cubans were part of its
policy to combat prostitution and hustling.
According to Elisa Facio, the government turns "a
blind eye in hopes the dollars jineteras
earned would help overcome the Revolution's worst
economic crisis.
Colin Crawford, of the Andrew
Young School of Policy Studies at Georgia State
University, has suggested that tourist apartheid
might become a permanent regression to the
pre-revolutionary state of Cuban society , while
Saundra Amrhein and Tamara Lush point out the irony
of the situation: "That tourism has brought
exclusive resorts, segregated hotels and a general
playground for foreigners swinging through the
island looking for Caribbean romance. Ironically,
these are precisely the circumstances the revolution
worked 40 years to erase."
The policy of restricting certain
hotels and services to tourists was ended by the
government of Raul Castro in March 2008.[26]
As well as officially allowing Cubans to stay in any
hotel, the change also opened access to previously
restricted areas such as Cayo Coco.