viernes, 6 de enero de 2017

Can Cuba Overcome the Prejudice against Investment?

Can Cuba Overcome the Prejudice against Investment?
January 5, 2017
by Fernando Ravsberg

HAVANA TIMES — Ending the year, President Raul Castro announced to the
legislature that financial constraints in 2017 "could even get worse in
certain circumstances" but even then we would be able to get the "GDP
growing at a moderate rate around 2%."

One of the key reasons for economic decline in 2016 was insufficient
foreign investment which barely reached 6.5%. This didn't play a
"fundamental role in the country's development," explained Cuba's
Minister of Economy and Planning, Ricardo Cabrisas, to legislators.

Raul Castro recognized the fact that "there had been excessive delays on
a frequent basis in the negotiations process" on behalf of some Cuban
decision-makers and he called on them to "overcome their out-dated
mentality once and for all which is full of prejudice against foreign
investment."

He repeated that "we aren't heading towards capitalism, that is
completely off the table, that is what our Constitution says and will
continue to say," but he added that "we shouldn't be afraid or put
obstacles in the way to what we can do within the country's existing
legal framework.

Cuba is advancing at an incredibly slow rate. Even though reforms were
supported by millions of Cubans in People Assemblies, only 21% of them
have been applied 5 years later, without there being a public
explanation for the causes of such delays.

The Mariel Special Development Zone is the best example of this, only 19
investments have been made in 2 years, while hundreds of foreign
companies are waiting for a response. They act as if the country doesn't
need money, technology, knowledge, markets and jobs.

And this level of slowness is repeated across the entire investment
process, including what happened to a project which had been given
priority due to its social importance. In spite of the fact that this
project had been personally requested for by Raul Castro, bureaucracy
meant it took a year alone just to figure out where it would be located.

Former Economy Minister, Jose Luis Rodriguez, claims that Cuba needs to
grow at "a stable rate above 5% per year, which will inherently imply
that foreign investment needs to be above 20%." However, in an
underdeveloped country, with very few natural resources and in great
debt, the bulk of investment can only come from abroad.

There is a huge need for this investment; however, there is a huge gap
between analyses and decision-making, between the economy's urgency and
the calm nature of bureaucrats who are processing these investments,
between the Cuban people's needs and the limited opening to
self-employed labor or between low productivity and the lack of autonomy
at state-run companies.

Cuba is at the middle of many crossroads, it needs to pay off its
foreign debt if it wants international credit, it needs to change its
energy model so that it doesn't rely solely on oil, it needs to increase
food production, saving on imports and increasing people's buying power
so that they can get by to the end of the month without having to steal.

Because stealing bleeds the economy dry at a surprising rate. According
to Beatriz Johnson Urrutia, a representative from Santiago de Cuba, half
of the oil supples were being diverted and sold on the black market in
her province. She explained that just by controlling the three main
distribution centers increased the availability of oil two-fold.

Ironically, those who "are afraid" of Capitalism being restored on the
island, are the same people who are opening up the way to it. If
socialism isn't able to create wealth to keep what has been earned up
until now and convert Cubans into a prosperous people, people will try
and do this by other means sooner or later.

Even those who ideologically support the Cuban Revolution are
"materializing" it in its social achievements. However, education,
healthcare, culture or sports have extremely high and increasing cost
which needs to be funded by economic sectors which are in desperate need
of investment and modernization.

Without foreign investment, there won't be any economic progress.
Without progress, there won't be any financial resources. Without
financial resources, the Revolution's social achievements won't be
sustained. Without its social achievements, the Revolution will die. And
Socialism will also disappear along with

Source: Can Cuba Overcome the Prejudice against Investment? - Havana
Times.org - http://www.havanatimes.org/?p=122989

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