Published September 22, 2011
EFE
Havana – Cuba's ANEC economists association is designing a training
program directed at private sector workers so that they can broaden
their knowledge of basic principles of accounting, expenses, costs and
taxes.
Official media outlets reported Thursday that the project takes into
account the "needs" of the private sector, which includes more than
333,000 people and has been growing since in October 2010 the government
of Raul Castro broadened opportunities for self-employment and small
business.
ANEC Vice President Maria Victoria Berrace told the state-run AIN news
agency that the aim of the training course will be "to contribute to the
development and better performance" of people in the expanding private
sector.
Berrace emphasized that entrepreneurs must "understand the laws,
contribute to the state that which is established and achieve dividends
that will return profits to them."
ANEC says that some surveys show that private sector workers face "the
greatest difficulties" at the time they pay taxes, and the group
emphasizes that "Cubans have very little (knowledge)" of those subjects.
The government broadened the scope of private employment last October as
part of a package of economic reforms, a plan that also includes labor
adjustments in the state sector and forecasts in the first phase the
elimination of half a million state jobs to reduce bloated government
payrolls.
As per a decision by the Cabinet, this month the number of activities
that one can pursue privately to earn a living will be expanded to 181,
and the hiring of people in all those areas has already been approved.
According to government figures, currently 10 percent of the workers in
the private sector are employees.
The majority of the business licenses awarded since October have been in
activities such as food preparation, passenger transport and the sale of
"household items."
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