Cuba Without Castro: A Look Ahead
Fidel's serious illness has led to speculation about what might come
next for the Caribbean's largest nation. Here are some possible scenarios
by Geri Smith
For decades, Cuban Americans living in Miami have toasted each other at 
New Year's by saying, "Next year in Havana!" They'll be doing the same 
this Dec. 31, but for the first time since Cuban leader Fidel Castro's 
successful revolution in 1959, there is a chance their wish may come true.
Castro, 80, who underwent major intestinal surgery in July, has not been 
seen in public since mid-September, leading to rumors that he may be 
near death, suffering from incurable cancer. The government in Havana, 
headed by acting President Raúl Castro, his 75-year-old brother, says 
Fidel is recovering and does not have cancer. Some speculate that he may 
be suffering from diverticulitis, a condition in which the colon becomes 
infected and inflamed, sometimes requiring surgery.
Castro's illness has generated much debate among Cuban exiles and the 
Bush Administration over what would happen on the Caribbean island of 11 
million people if Castro, the world's longest-reigning leader, were to 
die in the coming weeks or months. Here's an analysis of possible scenarios:
Brothers, Not Twins
Who is really in charge now? Raúl assumed Fidel's top job, that of first 
secretary of the Central Committee of the Cuban Communist Party. His 
other posts were distributed temporarily to other top government 
officials including Foreign Minister Jorge Pérez Roque and Carlos Lage, 
the country's top energy official. When Castro fell ill, he said he 
would be back at work in December, but he missed the big public birthday 
celebration staged for him on Dec. 2.
Is Raúl like Fidel? No. Raúl is not as charismatic as his older brother 
is, and he does not command the same kind of loyalty among average 
Cubans as Fidel does. As head of the armed forces and security apparatus 
he earned a reputation for ruthlessness dating from the early days of 
the revolution, when he allegedly ordered hundreds of summary 
executions. Raúl has maintained loyalty among top military officers by 
appointing them to prestigious jobs heading state-run companies.
Would Raúl continue Fidel's economic policies? Raúl has visited China 
and Vietnam and is said to advocate emulating China's strategy of 
opening the market while maintaining heavy state control over the 
economy. When the former Soviet Union collapsed in 1991 and ended its $4 
billion in annual subsidies to Cuba, Raúl was instrumental in 
restructuring the economy during the so-called "Special Period" that 
followed, when energy, food, and other basic goods were in extremely 
short supply. He oversaw the military's assumption of control over an 
estimated 60% of the economy, including such important economic sectors 
as tourism and agriculture.
A Two-Tier Society
Will Cuba's economy collapse? There's no reason for it to collapse. 
Cuba's economy is currently growing at an 8% clip, thanks in part to 
high world prices for its nickel, which accounts for 25% of the 
country's exports. (The price of nickel, used in stainless steel, has 
doubled this year, reaching a record price of $34,950 a ton on Dec. 15.) 
More than two million tourists, mostly from Canada and Europe, visit the 
island annually, spending some $2 billion. And the country has 
discovered significant offshore oil deposits that already provide nearly 
40% of the oil that Cuba consumes. Venezuela's leftist president Hugo 
Chávez sends 100,000 barrels a day of crude oil and refined petroleum 
products to Cuba at sweetheart prices.
But aren't there many shortages on the island? Yes. The average Cuban, 
whether a doctor or a seamstress, earns just $15 to $20 a month and must 
use a government-issue ration book for basic necessities such as cooking 
oil, meat, and soap. Only Cubans with immediate family members living 
overseas are allowed to receive up to $1,200 annually in remittances, 
which they can use to buy other items in special government shops that 
accept only hard currency.
This has created a two-tier society in Cuba. Families receiving money 
from abroad and Cubans who work in the tourism sector and earn tips in 
dollars live relatively well, though not by any means in luxury. Most 
everyone else has to struggle. In the early 1990s the government allowed 
some Cubans to open small businesses, including family-run restaurants 
in their homes, but that partial liberalization was rolled back in the 
late 1990s.
Striking (Lots Of) Oil
In spite of the embargo, some U.S. companies are doing business with 
Cuba, right? Yes. Since 2000, the U.S. government has eased the embargo 
slightly, allowing U.S. companies to export around $1.2 billion in food 
items, chiefly wheat, soybeans, rice, corn, oilseeds, meat and poultry, 
and dairy products, as well as some medicine to the island. In 2005 
alone those exports totaled $361.5 million. Companies must get a special 
license from the U.S. government and Cuba generally must pay for all 
purchases in cash. U.S. government studies have indicated that if the 
embargo is lifted, U.S. agricultural exports to Cuba could exceed $1 
billion annually within five years, making Cuba the second most 
important market for foodstuffs in the hemisphere, after Mexico.
Cuba discovered oil off its northern coast in 2002. How promising is 
that? Very. Studies show that Cuba may have about one billion barrels of 
reserves in coastal areas, and there may be from four billion to six 
billion barrels of unproven oil reserves in deep waters in Cuba's part 
of the Gulf of Mexico, according to Jorge Piñon, a retired Amoco and BP 
executive now at the University of Miami's Institute for Cuban & 
Cuban-American Studies.
Cuba currently produces 68,000 barrels of oil per day. U.S. oil 
companies are interested in participating in Cuba's promising oil 
sector, but for now they must watch from the sidelines while companies 
such as Canada's Sherritt and Spain's Repsol, as well as state companies 
from Norway, China, and India, get most of the business.
When Fidel dies, is there any chance that thousands of Cubans will try 
to flee to the U.S.? Few analysts expect widespread unrest. When Castro 
announced that he was stepping down temporarily July 31, nothing 
happened. The U.S. government, however, has contingency plans in place 
should thousands of Cubans make an effort to flee the island to reach 
Florida or if Cuban American exiles in Miami organize a flotilla of 
boats to pluck remaining relatives off the island, which lies just 90 
miles south of Miami.
Communism Isn't Negotiable
Would Castro's death make it possible for the U.S. to normalize 
relations and lift the 45-year-old economic embargo of the island? Not 
quite. Raúl has called for better ties with the U.S., but has made it 
clear that the country's Communist system is non-negotiable. The 1996 
Helms-Burton law stipulates that Washington cannot recognize a 
transitional government in Cuba until both Fidel and Raúl are out of the 
picture and the country moves toward a free-market democracy.
Under President Bill Clinton, Washington loosened restrictions on 
academic exchanges and on travel to Cuba by Cuban Americans, but 
restrictions were reimposed by the Bush Administration, which restricts 
remittances and now limits visits by relatives to once every three years.
Some believe that Congress, now controlled by the Democrats, may ease 
those restrictions once again in the belief that greater 
people-to-people contact will do more to loosen the Castro brothers' 
grip than isolation. In mid-December, 10 members of the U.S. Congress, 
including six Democrats and four Republicans, made a rare, three-day 
visit to Cuba—the largest U.S. delegation to do so since the 1959 
Revolution.
Can Americans get one last look at Communist Cuba before Fidel departs? 
Not legally. An estimated 80,000 Americans violate the embargo by 
visiting Cuba each year, usually flying in from Canada or Mexico, but 
they are subject to hefty fines if their trip is discovered. For a 
virtual look inside today's Cuba, check out the "Cuba at a Crossroads" 
slide show, which includes photos from a trip to the island taken by 
BusinessWeek's Frederik Balfour, a Canadian citizen.
Smith is BusinessWeek's Latin America correspondent.
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