domingo, 1 de mayo de 2016

Cuba's budding businesswomen are learning as they build

Cuba's budding businesswomen are learning as they build
Carole Sole, AFP

The six women came to Mexico City to participate in the Women's Forum on
Wednesday and Thursday, an international gathering of women, but also
men, from politics, business and civil society to discuss social and
economic issues.

They came with an arsenal of business cards with phone numbers, email
addresses and even Facebook pages or business websites.

While they use the Internet, web access is very expensive and hard to
come by in Cuba, where it is tightly controlled by the state.

Only 3.4 percent of households have Internet access, but the government
is opening public WiFi hotspots and President Raul Castro has promised
access to all Cubans by 2020.

"Our dreams and wishes include being able to export and through the
Internet you can not only buy but also sell," said Caridad Luisa
Limonta, who owns a workshop of seamstresses in Havana.

"If Cuba is opening up to the world, one of its potentials is to be able
to export," she said.

Gradual changes
In the meantime, like many Cubans who can afford to travel, they take
advantage of their trips to shop for the things they can't find in Cuba.

De la Rosa bought fabric for her children's decoration store, but it was
a "limited" quantity to avoid problems with customs in Havana.

It's nothing compared to the stuff that Nidialys Acosta buys and brings
on planes.

"For example, I've had car bumpers and fenders in my luggage," said
Acosta, who since 2011 has run a business that repairs the famous
classic American cars from the 1950s that are part of Cuba's street
landscape and which are used as taxis for tourists.

Most of the six women used to work for the government but they entered
the nascent private sector that Castro allowed after he succeeded his
brother, Fidel, in 2008.

This has helped them earn more money in a country where the average
monthly salary is $24.

Only 10 percent of the island's labor force, or nearly half a million
people, is in the private sector.

While the US-Cuba diplomatic thaw has raised hopes of change on the
island and a potential end to the US trade embargo, the Communist Party
Congress earlier in April suggested that Havana's opening to the world
would remain slow.

"I think that there were a lot of expectations of sudden, quick changes,
but I think the changes that are coming will be very gradual," Vicente said.

Source: Cuba's budding businesswomen are learning as they build -
Business Insider -
http://uk.businessinsider.com/cubas-budding-businesswomen-are-learning-as-they-build-2016-4?r=US&IR=T

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