Cuba unveils loan program
By PETER ORSI
Associated Press
HAVANA -- Cuba announced a new credit system Thursday that will offer
loans to small-business owners, independent farmers, and other citizens
beginning next month, advancing promised reforms to the country's
state-planned economy.
Credit will also be available to people looking to purchase building
materials, pay for labor associated with home construction, "acquire
goods for their personal property or satisfy other needs," according to
the government's Official Gazette.
The lack of a lending system has been one of the chief complaints of the
expanding class of entrepreneurs running independent businesses as part
of President Raul Castro's economic overhaul, which aims to right Cuba's
foundering economy and has picked up steam since a landmark Communist
Party summit in April.
Economists have also said credit is necessary if private businesses are
to grow beyond subsistence levels.
"The new credit policy is another step toward the configuration of a
mixed economy integrating state and non-state sectors in a common
national market," said Arturo Lopez-Levy, a Cuban-born economist at the
University of Denver. "This is a significant departure from the
partially reversed changes of the 1990s, when the archconservative 5th
Communist Party Congress conceived the non-state sector as walled off
from business activity."
The island government also established rules for paying private
contractors who do business with the state.
Offering loans for home construction could help address the island's
acute housing shortage and bolster Cuba's brand-new real estate market,
created earlier this month when property sales were legalized for the
first time since shortly after the 1959 revolution.
http://www.miamiherald.com/2011/11/24/2517815/cuba-unveils-loan-program.html#storylink=misearch
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario