MARC FRANK
Sunday, June 22, 2008
HAVANA — Four months into the new Cuban government and with multiple 
economic changes already announced, theories abound about where 
reform-minded Cuban President Raul Castro is leading the Caribbean 
island's economy, but the clue to the future lies in his past.
Promising to improve his nation's sluggish state-run economy, he has 
taken small, but symbolic steps such as lifting wage caps and 
restrictions on consumer goods, prompting speculation Cuba may adopt a 
Chinese model of market socialism or something similar.
But based on government actions and statements in the past year, Mr. 
Castro's intent is to keep the Cuban economy firmly in state hands while 
making it more efficient, using a model developed by the military when 
he was defense minister.
Raul Castro led the Cuban military from the 1959 revolution that toppled 
a U.S.-backed dictator until taking over as president in February 2008. 
In July 2006 he had already temporarily assumed the role when his older 
brother, Fidel Castro, was sidelined by intestinal surgery.
As defense minister, the younger Castro set about in the 1980s trying to 
improve the performance of companies supplying the armed forces of the 
communist-run country.
They adopted modern management and accounting practices, granted local 
managers more day-to-day decision making power and tied wages to 
individual and collective performance instead of nationally set 
salaries, with some good results.
The model was applied to new military businesses in the civilian sector 
in the 1990s as Cuba was deep in the economic crisis that followed the 
collapse of its old trade and aid partner the Soviet Union. The armed 
forces entered tourism, urban agriculture and other sectors.
An effort to extend the model to all state companies made little headway 
until Raul Castro took the reins.
Last August, while Raul Castro was still only interim president, Vice 
President Carlos Lage announced his economic policy, called 
"perfeccionamiento empresarial" – roughly translated as perfecting of 
the (state) company system. The two men signed a law mandating that all 
companies adopt the model.
Mr. Lage said Cuba would not copy China's or other socialist countries' 
reforms.
"Their successes and failures should enrich our efforts, but the 
building of socialism in Cuba is only possible as a result of our own 
experience," Lage said.
In a study of the military's economic model, Cuba expert Phil Peters at 
the Lexington Institute in Virginia wrote that "perfeccionamiento 
empresarial has no exact analogy in capitalist economies and is not 
borrowed from other socialist countries' models of reform."
"It is not a free-market reform and it is not privatization. But it 
would benefit Cuba's economy to carry out the process fully," Mr. Peters 
told Reuters.
Frank Mora at the National War College in Washington said the policy's 
aim is to maintain the current one-party political system while defusing 
public discontent about the economy and other matters.
"It is not to turn Cuba into a China or Taiwan in terms of development 
and integration of globalization. In the end, the objective is 
political," he said.
Under "perfeccionamiento," there is some room for partnering with 
foreign companies and for competition between state firms, and for 
limited private initiative in agriculture and other areas on the fringes 
of the retail sector.
A broader push toward liberalization and streamlined management was 
unveiled in February when the government lifted caps on wages for 
companies that had not already completed the process.
This was coupled with what Raul Castro has called a move to lift 
"excessive prohibitions" and with key personnel changes that signal his 
intent to push the reforms through the more than 3,000 companies run by 
the government.
Castro promoted the man in charge of the military's businesses, Gen. 
Julio Casas Regueiro, to defense minister and top party and government 
posts, and, according to sources, has installed Maj. Luis Alberto 
Rodriguez, who ran the businesses day-to-day, as Mr. Regueiro's head of 
staff.
"Casas Regueiro was Raul's right hand man in this process and Luis 
Alberto was the most brilliant CEO since the very beginning," said 
Domingo Amuchastegui, a former Cuban intelligence officer who defected 
to Miami in 1994.
http://www.globeinvestor.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20080620.wcuba0622/GIStory/
 
 
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