By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA, Apr 14, 2011 (IPS) - Cuba's governing Communist Party (PCC) will
meet over the weekend to decide on the direction and scope of
far-reaching reforms aimed at modernising the country's socialist
economy over the next few years.
The sixth congress of the PCC, Cuba's only legal political party for the
last five decades, will draw 1,000 delegates from around the nation, who
will also select new members of the party's central committee, which
will in turn choose the party's first and second secretaries.
The party congress was postponed in 2002 due to economic problems, and
continued to be delayed after former President Fidel Castro fell ill in
2006, according to official sources.
The Apr. 16-19 gathering will be the first PCC congress to be held in 14
years. The party congress, the PCC's top-level meeting, normally takes
place behind closed doors.
Castro stepped down from the presidency when he fell ill in 2006. But he
never officially resigned as first secretary of the PCC.
However, he clarified on Mar. 22, in one of his regular columns, that
when he got sick he "resigned without hesitation all of (my) state and
political positions, even that of first secretary of the party."
It is widely assumed that Fidel's 79-year-old younger brother Raúl, who
took over as acting president in July 2006 and officially succeeded his
brother in February 2008, will be elected first secretary in this
weekend's congress, at least until the next congress, which would
normally be held in five years time.
In 2007, Raúl Castro, who is now officially second secretary, said he
would introduce "structural and conceptual" reforms needed to bolster
the economy.
The president sees the "economic battle" as "the principal task and the
key ideological work" of the PCC and the Young Communist League (UJC),
"because on this depends the sustainability and preservation" of Cuba's
socialist system.
The discussions in the sixth congress will focus on a 32-page document
called the Draft Guidelines for Economic and Social Policy, which was
previously submitted to popular debates in which more than seven million
of Cuba's 11.2 million people reportedly took part.
Suggestions expressed by ordinary Cubans in the nationwide neighbourhood
or workplace meetings led, according to official sources, to the
modification of more than two-thirds of the 291 paragraphs in the draft
guidelines.
The draft document, "enriched" by the popular debates, will serve as the
basis for designing the party's strategy and creating mechanisms and
instruments to achieve the desired economic and social model, economist
Armando Nova wrote in an article to which IPS had access.
The draft guidelines will introduce sweeping changes, such as a much
greater role for private enterprise. But the document clarifies that
economic policy will be based on "the principle that only socialism is
capable of overcoming the difficulties."
Another expected change is the eventual expansion of the system of
cooperatives, currently limited to agriculture, to the areas of industry
and services.
There are also hopes that the possibility of self-employment, currently
authorised for 178 private activities, will be expanded. As things stand
now, university students cannot use their skills in private business, as
none of the permitted occupations involve professional activities.
Self-employment was introduced in Cuba for some 150 occupations in 1993,
at the height of the economic crisis that hit the country in the wake of
the collapse of the Soviet Union and East European socialist bloc. It
was expanded last year when the government announced massive lay-offs of
public employees, potentially affecting one million people by the end of
2011.
Many people are hoping for changes in the system of property ownership.
Currently, people can own homes and cars but cannot freely sell them.
They can only legally swap them for property of equal value. Cubans are
also hoping for a loosening of restrictions on travelling abroad.
One worry is the announced elimination of the ration card system, which
provides the entire population with staple foods at subsidised prices.
The move will have a heavy impact on the lowest-income sectors.
Arturo López-Levy, a Cuban-born lecturer at the University of Denver,
Colorado, said that what is most urgently needed, within the context of
the reforms that have begun to be adopted, is for the government to stop
treating the concepts of private property and the free market as "anathema."
In his view, there is a need to "usher in a change of mentality among
the PCC cadres, so they will become promoters of a mixed economy, with a
minimum of coherence," because the draft guidelines do not clearly
outline a new form of economic organisation.
"Progress by two parallel processes also announced as part of the
reforms, decentralisation and the downsizing of the state apparatus,
depends on that change in mentality," López-Levy told IPS in an email
interview.
The congress will begin Saturday morning with a military parade in
Havana's Plaza de la Revolución, to commemorate the 50th anniversary of
the proclamation that Cuba's revolution was a socialist revolution.
According to unofficial figures, the PCC has some 800,000 members, and
the UJC more than 600,000.
The Cuban constitution defines the PCC as "the highest leading force of
society and of the state, which organises and guides the common effort
toward the goals of the construction of socialism and progress toward a
communist society.""
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