sábado, 10 de agosto de 2013

Building a Home in Cuba, Without Bank Loans, Without Legal Supply Markets

Yoani Sanchez Award-winning Cuban blogger



Building a Home in Cuba, Without Bank Loans, Without Legal Supply Markets

Posted: 08/09/2013 5:25 pm



She gets up and has a little coffee. The concrete of the counter is

still fresh. Magaly, her two sons and her husband live in a house under

construction. They've spent seven years like this. Little by little

raising the walls and installing some pipes. Every day that goes by they

get closer to the end of the job, but they also live through another day

of anxiety and risks to get the materials. Today they need stone dust

and washed sand. They get their money together before heading out to the

state supply center, inviting me to accompany them. We arrive at the

central warehouse, but at the door an employee delivers the bad news.

They haven't stocked up, we'll have to wait until next week.



We then dive into the world of resellers of cement fillers. Finding them

is easy; haggling, impossible. The area around the Cristina railway

workshop is the best supplied hardware black market in the whole

country. You just have to walk through the doorways and gates for voices

to call out asking, "What are you looking for?" We're cautious, it's not

recommended to go with the first offer. Swindles are everywhere. One

man, with a little table where he's fixing lighters, looks at us and

whispers, "I have everything for construction." In a conjurer's gesture

he passes us a much-handled sheet that contains a list of prices: gravel

and sand, 1.50 convertible pesos (CUC)* per sack; Jaimanita exterior

stone, 7.00 CUC per square meter; and granite tiles, 10.00 CUC, also per

square meter. "If you buy a large quantity transport is included," he

points out, while dismantling a lighter with an Italian flag drawn on

the plastic.



My friends do the accounting. Acquiring surfacing for the entire floor

would cost their combined wages for 20 months. The costs of the bathroom

fixtures are enough to elicit a little scream from Magaly, but it's

barely audible, covered by the noise of the road. They decide to

prioritize. Today they'll take only some blocks, several sacks of sand,

and two wooden doors. The vendor adds it up and rounds it off to

everything Magaly and her husband earn for half a year's work. "It will

always be a cheaper option than the legal stores," she says out loud to

console herself.



Night falls and everyone's fingers are covered with a gray layer of

cement and dust. The children go to bed in the only room that has a

roof. The counter has hardened and the dirty dishes are left on its

rough surface because there are still no pipes to deliver the water to

wash them. Tomorrow they'll have to go out and get steel and some

electrical switches. One construction day less. Twenty-four hours closer

to having their house finished.



*Translator's note: One Cuban convertible peso (known as a CUC and

convertible only in Cuba), is worth roughly one US dollar (before

exchange fees). The average monthly wage in Cuba is less than $20 US,

and is generally paid in Cuban pesos (CUP); 24 CUP = 1 CUC. Many

everyday items, and most "specialty" items are only sold for CUCs,

including in State stores.



My English language blog has moved to a new site:

http://generacionyen.wordpress.com/

My blog in other languages can be accessed here:

http://idiomasgeneraciony.wordpress.com/



Source: "Building a Home in Cuba, Without Bank Loans, Without Legal

Supply Markets | Yoani Sanchez" -

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/yoani-sanchez/building-a-home-in-cuba-w_b_3734012.html

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