viernes, 28 de marzo de 2014

Cuba's foreign investment invitation may hide potholes

Cuba's foreign investment invitation may hide potholes

Michelle Caruso-Cabrera | @MCaruso_Cabrera

Thursday, 27 Mar 2014 | 6:43 AM ET



Cuba is expected to approve a new law that in theory will draw more

foreign investment to the socialist country. But in practice, critics

argue, it will be insufficient to assuage investor concerns about their

money.



According to the proposed law, a copy of which has been seen by NBC

News, fully foreign-owned firms will be permitted, and taxes will be

either lowered or eliminated for some time. Additionally the taxes will

be streamlined to cover net income rather than labor.



Washington attorney Jason Poblete says Cuba still lacks two of the

bedrocks of investing: rule of law, and protection of property rights.



"You need a stable legal system that protects investor rights and has a

path to resolve disputes," said Poblete, who represents American clients

with claims against Cuba stemming from the mass nationalization of

private property in the early 1960s, after Fidel Castro took control of

the island in a 1959 coup d'etat.



Fully foreign-owned firms



Theoretically, fully foreign-owned businesses have been permitted, but

were never actually approved. Until now, the government insisted on

joint ventures, in which they were the controlling partner with a more

than 50 percent stake. Inability to control an investment has been a

large hurdle to foreign direct investment.



In private conversations in recent years, government officials told CNBC

this would change when the new law was implemented. It remains to be

seen whether or not they will actually allow it to occur.



The law also seeks to dramatically lower taxes. Currently, the few

foreign firms doing business in joint ventures with the government must

pay taxes of 30 percent on all profits and 20 percent on labor. Under

the proposal, the mining profit tax will drop to 22.5 percent from 45

percent. The labor tax would be eliminated and the tax on profits will

drop to 15 percent.



The Cuban parliament will vote on the proposed new foreign investment

law Saturday.



Cuban exiles yes, Cubans no



One provision says Cuban exiles may invest, but Cubans living in Cuba

cannot.



It's not atypical for the Cuban government to create regulations that

treat Cubans differently than non-Cubans. For example, Cubans who live

in Cuba are prohibited from entering certain hotels and restaurants

where foreign tourists are permitted to stay. Poblete says the new law

enshrines "investment apartheid like their tourism apartheid."



Ted Henken of Baruch College sees great irony in the clause: "It creates

second-class economic citizenship compared to the 'evil exiles.'"



Henken believes the clause is designed to incentivize Cuban exiles to

lobby the United States for an end to the embargo. Right now, even if

Cuba allows exiles to invest, the United States prohibits its citizens

from doing any business in Cuba. And while exiles are allowed to send

money to their relatives on the island, the structure of the U.S. law

means that money can't be used to invest. The U.S. started its embargo

against Cuba more than 50 years ago in protest of Castro's communist

polices.



Outstanding claims a problem



Another hurdle is the issue of outstanding claims against the island.

There are still billions of dollars in outstanding claims from the early

1960s when Castro seized every business in the country, eliminated

private property and decided that every citizen would work for the

government. One of the clauses in the U.S. embargo is that outstanding

claims held by American citizens must be resolved.



Poblete says when his firm learns of a foreign company trafficking in or

on a disputed property, he files a claim with the U.S. government.

"What's the European investor going to think? Do I want to fight off the

U.S. State Department?"



Why now?



Since 2010, the Cuban government has made incremental economic reforms.

For example, in certain categories of employment, individuals are now

allowed to work for themselves and not the government. The pace of

reforms increased in the past year, when the government announced

employees could take over failing government operations in certain

categories such as transportation, and try to make a profit, which they

then would split with the government 50-50.



Henken believes it has to do with the unrest and instability in another

socialist Latin American country. "They can't rely on Venezuela for

their ace in the hole," he said. The oil-producing, OPEC nation provides

more than 100,000 barrels of deeply discounted oil per day to Cuba. It's

a crucial subsidy that keeps the lights on and cars on the road. But

recent unrest in Venezuela raises questions about its stability and the

long-term viability of the oil handout.



—By CNBC's Michelle Caruso-Cabrera.



Source: Cuba's foreign investment invitation may hide potholes -

http://www.cnbc.com/id/101531473

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