U.S. travel sector to suffer if Trump reverses Cuba detente

Visitors to the Caribbean island could increase as much as sevenfold by 2025. Picture: Pintrest.

Visitors to the Caribbean island could increase as much as sevenfold by 2025. Picture: Pintrest.

Published Jun 2, 2017

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HAVANA/WASHINGTON  - U.S. cruise operators

and airlines stand to lose around $712 million in annual

revenues if the Trump administration fully reinstates

restrictions on travel to Cuba, Washington lobby group Engage

Cuba said in a report released on Thursday.

U.S.-operated cruises and scheduled flights to the Caribbean

island were relaunched last year after a half-century hiatus, as

part of the detente with Cuba pursued by former President Barack

Obama.

That may be under threat as U.S. President Donald Trump's

administration considers reinstating some of the restrictions on

travel and trade eased by Obama as it prepares to roll out a new

Cuba policy as early as this month.

"Rolling back expanded travel will cost airlines $512

million annually ... based on the average ticket fare," Engage

Cuba wrote in the report to which a host of Cuba experts

contributed.

U.S. airlines flying to Cuba include JetBlue,

American, Delta and Alaska.

Cruise operators, from Carnival to Norwegian

, stand to lose $200 million in revenue per year, Engage

Cuba estimated, noting thousands of jobs in both sectors were at

risk. The estimate was based on lost revenue from fully booked

flights and cruises.

Eliminating cruises to Cuba could also cost South Florida's

economy an additional $212.8 million, given what passengers

spend in port communities, Cuba Engage said.

The study likely overestimates the economic impact of a

rollback, some Cuba experts said, as Trump is not expected to

unravel the entire detente.

"First, tightening regulations does not mean severing

completely certain U.S.-Cuba economic ties," said Paolo Spadoni,

Associate Professor of Political Science at Augusta University.

"Second, what about the gains of charter companies if

commercial flights are discontinued?"

Supporters of the U.S.-Cuban detente are stepping up their

lobbying to influence the Trump administration review.

A bipartisan group of U.S. senators last week reintroduced

legislation to repeal all restrictions on travel to Cuba, this

time attracting far more co-sponsors.

U.S. tourism to Cuba is still not allowed, but Obama's

decision to ease travel restrictions fueled a boom in American

visitors under categories like educational travel. The number of

U.S. visitors rose 74 percent last year. 

Source: Reuters

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