sábado, 5 de febrero de 2011

Cubans warily become entrepreneurs

Cubans warily become entrepreneurs
'Cuba is falling apart ... We could help rebuild it,' struggling
carpenter says
By VICTORIA BURNETT
The New York Times
updated 2/4/2011 6:48:40 AM ET 2011-02-04T11:48:40


BAUTA, Cuba — Marisela Álvarez spends much of the day bent over a single
electric burner in her small outdoor kitchen. Her knees are killing her.
Her red hair smells of cooking oil.

She hasn't felt this fortunate in years.

"I feel useful; I'm independent," said Ms. Álvarez, who opened a small
cafe in November at her home in this scruffy town 25 miles from the
capital, Havana. "When you sit down at the end of the day and look at
how much you have made, you feel satisfied."

Eagerly, warily, Cubans are taking up the government's offer to work for
themselves, selling coffee in their front yards, renting out houses,
making rattan furniture and hawking everything from bootleg DVDs to
Silly Bandz and homemade wine.

Hoping to resuscitate Cuba's crippled economy, President Raúl Castro
opened the door to a new, if limited, generation of entrepreneurs last
year, after warning that the state's "inflated" payrolls could end up
"jeopardizing the very survival of the Revolution."

The Cuban labor federation said the government would lay off half a
million of about 4.3 million state workers by March and issue hundreds
of thousands of new licenses to people wanting to join Cuba's tiny
private sector, in what could be the biggest remodeling of the state-run
economy since Fidel Castro nationalized all enterprise in 1968.
Story: Cuba begins laying off 500,000 state workers

By the end of 2010, the government had awarded 75,000 new licenses,
according to Granma, the Communist Party's official newspaper, swelling
the official ranks of the self-employed by 50 percent.

That is still a long way from the amount needed to create alternatives
for all the workers who will eventually be laid off, and there is no
guarantee that the market will support hundreds of thousands of
freelancers. But licenses have been granted quickly, and the government
has been encouraging the bureaucracy to keep them flowing.

Brisk business
Streets once devoid of commerce in towns like this and in Havana are
gradually coming to life as people hang painted signs and bright awnings
outside their houses and mount roadside stalls. An electronics engineer,
who for years operated in the shadows, now publishes leaflets that claim
he can mend every appliance under the sun. A practitioner of Santería
sells beaded necklaces, ground sardines and toasted corn used in
ceremonies at the tin-roofed shop in her yard.

Ms. Álvarez and her husband, Ivan Barroso, took out a license for the
cafe and another to sell meat and fish. Now the couple does a brisk
business serving soft white rolls filled with garlicky pork and fresh
tuna for 60 cents at a wooden counter in the gateway of their house. Ms.
Álvarez, a former school librarian who gave up work several years ago,
runs the cafe with her stepson. Mr. Barroso goes fishing, culls pigs and
delivers produce to clients in Havana.

"If you have the ability, the dedication to achieve something, you
should enjoy it," said Mr. Barroso, who until November sold fish and
pork without a license to a close circle of friends and clients.

About 85 percent of all Cubans with jobs are employed by the state,
earning about $20 per month in exchange for free access to services like
health and education, and a ration of subsidized goods.

Fidel Castro grudgingly allowed the private sector to take root in the
early 1990s, after the collapse of the Soviet Union brought the Cuban
economy to its knees. Over the years, however, the government stopped
issuing new licenses and suffocated many businesses with taxes and
prohibitions.

This time Raúl Castro, who took over from his brother Fidel in 2006,
says things have changed. In a speech to the National Assembly in
December, he urged members of the government and the Communist Party to
help the private sector, not "demonize" it.

"It is essential that we change the negative feelings that no small
number of us harbor toward this kind of private labor," Mr. Castro said.

'New opportunities'
Many remain skeptical. Juan Carlos Montes ran a private restaurant on
the patio of his Havana home for five years but became worn down by
nit-picking inspectors and closed it in 2000. Now he is reluctant to try
again.

"When someone who has made the same argument for more than 40 years
suddenly changes their tune, you have to have a lot of faith to believe
them," he said.

His wife, Yodania Sánchez, has been trying to change his mind. She has a
license to rent two rooms in their higgledy-piggledy house and pays
about $243 in taxes every month, whether the rooms are occupied or not.

"The changes are really positive; there are new opportunities," she said
on a recent morning as she cleaned their tiny kitchen. "People want Cuba
to become Switzerland overnight, and that's not possible."

But Mr. Montes swears he will not open a new restaurant until there is a
wholesale market.

"People can't get what they need to run a business," he said. "The
carpenter has no wood. The electrician has no cable. The plumber has no
pipes. Right now, there is no flour in the shops. So what are all the
pizzerias doing? They have to buy stuff that is stolen from bakeries."

The government says it will set up a wholesale market — though it might
take years — and this year will import $130 million worth of goods and
equipment for the private sector. It is also planning microloans and
business cooperatives and mulling allowing people to buy and sell cars
and houses, measures that some analysts speculate might be announced
ahead of the Communist Party Congress in April.

For now, carpenters like Pedro José Chávez are allowed only to do
repairs, rather than make things, because there is no legal market for
wood. His workshop, perched on a rooftop in the Vedado area of Havana,
is filled with crude machines made of salvaged parts because proper
tools are too expensive.

"It's absurd that they will give you a license to work but they won't
give you access to materials," Mr. Chávez said. "Cuba is falling apart,"
he added, gesturing to the crumbling buildings nearby. "We could help
rebuild it."

Wealth disparities
For the private sector to thrive, the government should vastly expand
the list of occupations open to the self-employed to include mainstream
professions like engineering or law, said Ted Henken, an expert on the
Cuban private sector at Baruch College.

The list of 178 jobs currently open to self-employed Cubans — among
them, fixing parasols and mending bed frames — is highly specific and
seems intended mainly to legalize and tax people working on the black
market.

"There is a lot more to be done for the state to get out of the way and
for people to produce and employ," Professor Henken said.

The government will also need to confront the question of civil and
political rights that will emerge with the growth of a commercial class,
including potentially divisive issues like growing disparities in wealth.

"There's no end to the chaos and demands of a private economy,"
Professor Henken said.

In the meantime, Ms. Álvarez and Mr. Barroso are relishing life on the
almost-free market. Mr. Barroso pores daily over an exercise book where
he calculates profit margins. Total sales for the two businesses are
around $270 a week, he said. He and his wife each pay about $37 a month
in taxes, plus 10 percent on profits at the end of the year.

Ms. Álvarez vies for customers with a couple of cafes that have opened
within two blocks of hers. On a recent morning, all three had more
clients than the bleak state-run bar on the same street, whose offerings
included omelet sandwiches, hand-rolled cigars and condoms.

"I think the government has realized that state business doesn't
function," Mr. Barroso said. "It's the private sector that generates
competition. We have a habit of doing things poorly in Cuba, but
competition is going to put this straight."

This story, "In a Shift, Cubans Savor Working for Themselves",
originally appeared in The New York Times.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/41421802/ns/world_news-the_new_york_times/

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