Tourism arrivals to Cuba fell to 30,883 in May, with the January-to-April total down 55.8% year on year 1. That is enough of a fall to strip out roughly half the foreign currency that tourism feeds into the economy. Tourism is, with diaspora remittances, one of Cuba's two main hard-currency sources, and the reform's foreign-investment pillar targets exactly this gap.
The hotel exodus deepens it. The Spanish chains Melia and Iberostar, which ran GAESA-linked properties, have walked rather than risk US blacklisting , , removing both the rooms and the marketing that fills them. Each chain that exits takes a slice of inbound dollars with it, so the 55.8% arrivals fall understates the foreign-exchange loss: the rooms that close are the ones that earned in dollars rather than pesos.
GAESA sanctions drive a self-reinforcing loop: they push the hotel chains out; fewer tourists supply less foreign exchange; the dollar shortage that has already driven the peso to record lows widens; inflation and shortages deepen; protests and repression follow . The reform's foreign-investment pillar is meant to break that loop by attracting private capital from abroad. The sanctions cut against it at the same node: the lost tourism dollars are the largest single source of the hard currency the reform needs, and the same secondary-sanctions exposure that emptied the GAESA hotels deters the foreign investors the new rules invite. Havana legislated a hard-currency rebuild on the same days its hard-currency base was draining fastest.
