Nuanced but unmistakable stirrings of change in Cuba
by Jorge I. Dominguez
President Raúl Castro's principal contribution thus far to the lives of 
ordinary Cubans has been that television soap operas now start on time. 
He often reminds his fellow citizens of this seemingly impossible 
accomplishment, after decades during which his elder brother commanded 
the airwaves and disrupted all public and personal schedules. But he 
alluded to this achievement most cleverly last December, prompting 
laughter with the opening sentence of his remarks before a summit 
meeting of the presidents of the Latin American countries in Bahia, 
Brazil, hosted by Brazilian president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. 
According to Cuba's official press reports, Castro began, "I hope that 
our colleague and dear friend Lula will not complain because I give 
shorter speeches than Chávez's."
The presidential summit was one stop on Raúl Castro's first 
international trip since becoming Cuba's acting president in August 2006 
(when Fidel Castro was rushed to the hospital), and in that one 
sentence, he made several points. To most of the Latin American 
presidents, who did not know him well, and indeed to his fellow Cubans, 
he demonstrated that even a 78-year-old General of the Army could have a 
sense of humor. To the same audiences, but also to the incoming Obama 
administration, he demonstrated some distance and independence from 
Venezuela's president, Hugo Chávez, notwithstanding the tight economic 
and political bonds between their two countries. This was only the most 
recent and most public instance of Raúl Castro's reiterated mocking 
comparison between Chávez's propensity to speak forever and his own much 
shorter and self-disciplined speeches. (Of course, all those in the 
audience also knew that he was poking fun not just at Chávez but at his 
brother, who never met a time limit he did not despise.) And, finally, 
he highlighted, especially for his own people, that he honors and 
respects the time of others.
Raúl Castro's military style of life cherishes punctuality and 
efficiency. Schedules, all schedules, even those for TV telenovelas, 
should be observed. Even during the waning moments of Fidel Castro's 
rule, the time of Cubans was frequently occupied by marches, 
mobilizations, and the need to listen to the logorrheic Maximum Leader. 
There was even a cabinet minister in charge of what Fidel Castro called 
the "Battle of Ideas." Now, marches occur on designated public holidays. 
And the minister in charge of the Battle of Ideas lost his job in 
March--and his ministry was disbanded.
Economic Evolution
The nuances in Cuban public life since Raúl became president in his own 
right in February 2008 are evident as well in the enactment of 
economic-policy reforms that were rolled out immediately following his 
formal installation. Consider some examples. Previously, Cubans had not 
been able to stay at hotels or eat at restaurants designed for 
international tourists, even if they had the funds to pay, unless they 
were on official business; now they were given access to all these 
facilities, so long as they could pay. Cubans had also been prohibited 
from purchasing cell phones and subscribing to such services unless 
officially authorized to do so. They were not allowed to purchase 
computers or DVD players. Now they were able to purchase such products 
so long as they had the funds.
How the Cuban government adopted these changes is important. It could 
simply have announced a general deregulation of prohibitions regarding 
purchases of consumer durables, for example. Instead, the government 
made each of these announcements separately: one week you could stay at 
tourist hotels, the next week you could purchase a computer, the 
following week you could obtain cell-phone services, and so forth. The 
government even announced that some products would be deregulated for 
purchase in 2009 (air conditioners) or 2010 (toasters).
This method of deregulating implied a desire to win political support 
over time, not all at once. It communicated that the government retained 
the right to micromanage the economy, deregulating product by product 
and service by service. The government also signaled that it expected to 
remain in office for years to come, behaving in the same way. Finally, 
most Cubans knew that they could have been purchasing these same 
consumer durables all along, albeit only on the black market. Thus the 
policy of postponed deregulation implied an official tolerance of some 
current criminality (knowing that some Cubans would buy toasters 
illegally in 2008, instead of waiting for 2010), because the government 
valued its economic micromanagement more.
Whom the government sought to benefit was equally newsworthy. In its 
most revolutionary phase, during the 1960s, the Cuban government adopted 
strongly egalitarian policies. Many Cubans came to believe in 
egalitarian values and resented the widening of inequalities in the 
1990s. Consider, then, Raúl's reforms. Hotels and restaurants designed 
for international tourist markets are expensive; so, too, are computers 
and DVD players. When these economic changes were announced in 2008, the 
median monthly salary of Cubans amounted to about $17: that is, the 
average monthly salary was below the World Bank's worldwide standard for 
poverty, which is one dollar per day. To be sure, Cubans had free access 
to education and healthcare and subsidized access to some other goods 
and services. Nevertheless, only a small fraction of Cubans could take 
advantage of these new economic policies, because the purchases of such 
consumer durables and the access to such tourist services had to be paid 
for in dollar-equivalent Cuban currency at dollar-equivalent 
international prices. (Cuba has two currencies; the peso convertible is 
a close equivalent to the dollar, whereas the peso is worth about 
$0.04.) Raúl's government was appealing to the upper-middle-class 
professionals.
Making Difficult Decisions
I have emphasized Raúl's penchant for humor and nuance because 
Washington and Miami have not taken much notice of these traits. At the 
same time, no one should underestimate his capacity for decisiveness. A 
salient feature in his biography is his long-standing role as Cuba's 
equivalent of a chief operating officer. President Fidel Castro made the 
decision to dispatch some 300,000 Cuban troops to two wars in Angola and 
one in Ethiopia from the mid 1970s to the early 1990s, but it was 
Minister of the Revolutionary Armed Forces and General of the Army Raúl 
Castro whose officers recruited, trained, promoted, equipped, and 
steeled these armies for battle. The United States lost the war in 
Vietnam. The Soviet Union lost the war in Afghanistan. Cuban troops won 
the three African wars in which they fought. Cuba's was the only 
communist government during the entire Cold War that successfully 
deployed its armed forces across the oceans. And the "worker bee" for 
those victories was Raúl.
Within the first calendar year of his presidency, Raúl gave another 
example of this decisiveness: the reform of Cuba's pension laws. Cuban 
law authorized and funded the retirement of women at age 55 and of men 
at age 60. In December 2008, the retirement ages were raised to 60 and 
65 respectively. The speed of the change signaled as well a key 
difference between the Castro brothers.
It had long been a matter of public record that Cuban life expectancy 
had lengthened to reach the levels of the North Atlantic countries. 
Cuban demographers had also faithfully recorded that Cuba has been below 
the population replacement rate since 1978. They had developed various 
forecasts that showed that its population would age rapidly, creating a 
vast problem of pension liabilities, and then decline. The demographers 
committed only one error: they expected the demographic decline to set 
in near the year 2020, but the population has already declined (net of 
emigration) in two of the last three years.
Notwithstanding this abundance of information, Fidel chose not to act. 
The fiscal crisis of the state was much less fun than leading street 
marches to denounce U.S. imperialism. But Raúl's prompt and effective 
change of the pension laws, making use of information supplied by social 
scientists, is yet another illustration of the difference between the 
brothers as rulers. And, of course, the one obvious change that was not 
made to the pension laws demonstrates as well that even a powerful 
government senses some limits to its power: although the life expectancy 
of women is longer, the pension reform retained the lower retirement age 
for them. Raúl Castro doesn't dare take a perk like early retirement 
away from Cuban women.
Political Authoritarianism
The Castro brothers' styles of rule of course show important 
similarities on matters that do and should matter in assessing their 
political regime. Cuba remains a single-party state that bans opposition 
political parties and independent associations that may advance 
political causes. The government owns and operates all television and 
radio stations, daily newspapers, and publishing houses. The number of 
candidates equals the number of seats to be filled in elections for the 
National Assembly. The constraints on civil society remain severe, even 
if there has been since the early 1990s a somewhat greater margin of 
autonomy for communities of faith, some of which (including Roman 
Catholic archdioceses) are permitted to publish magazines.
The two brothers have also demonstrated a strong preference for ruling 
with a small number of associates whom they have known for many years. 
For example, when Raúl became president formally in February 2008, he 
had the right to make wholesale changes in the top leadership. Instead, 
the president and his seven vice presidents had a median birth year of 
1936. Raúl went a step further. He created a small steering committee 
within the larger Political Bureau of the Communist Party--and the 
members of the new committee were the exact same seven. Raúl's buddies 
are the gerontocrats with whom he chooses to govern.
Yet there are stirrings of change. Although National Assembly elections 
are uncompetitive, they provide a means to express some opposition to 
the government. The official candidates are presented in party lists; 
each voting district elects two to five deputies from those lists and 
the number of candidates equals the number of posts to be filled in that 
district. The government urges voters to vote for the entire list, but 
voters have been free to vote for some but not all candidates on the 
list, thereby expressing some displeasure. The number of nonconforming 
voters (voted blank, null, or selectively) exceeded 13.4 percent of the 
votes cast in the most recent (January 2008) National Assembly 
elections--1.1 million voters. Both the percentage and the number of 
nonconforming voters were slightly larger than in the 2003 election, 
with the largest expression of nonconformity recorded in the province 
named City of Havana.
Yet another sign of change arises from Raúl's own family. His daughter, 
Mariela Castro, has been for some years the director of Cuba's center 
for the study of sexuality. This center has been principally known, 
however, for its advocacy for, and defense of, the rights of 
homosexuals, including special training for Cuban police officers, 
formulating changes in regulations, and disseminating information 
designed to create safer spaces for homosexuals.
 From the 1960s to the 1980s, the Cuban government pursued very harsh 
policies toward homosexuals. In the early stages of the HIV/AIDS 
epidemic in the 1980s, those who tested HIV-positive were automatically 
compelled to enter a quarantined facility at the cost of their jobs and 
family lives. At the time of the Mariel emigration crisis in 1980, the 
government activated its affiliated mass organizations to make life 
impossible for homosexuals, fostering their emigration under duress. And 
in the mid 1960s, the government had established the "military units to 
aid production" (UMAP). These were concentration camps to which "social 
deviants," mainly but not exclusively male homosexuals, were sent to be 
turned, somehow, into "real men." The commander in chief of the UMAP 
was, of course, Armed Forces Minister Raúl Castro.
It is unlikely that Raúl is a closet liberal, though there is evidence 
that he has been a loving father. It is not impossible, however, that he 
regrets having served as an architect of repression over the lives of 
many Cubans--not just homosexuals--especially in the 1960s, but also at 
other times. His daughter's work during the current decade may be an 
instrument for elements of social liberalism.
U.S.-Cuban Relations
Raúl Castro understood earlier than his brother that the collapse of the 
Soviet Union and European communist regimes implied that Cuba had to 
change more and faster than Fidel wanted. In 1994, in the most public 
difference yet between the brothers, Raúl favored liberalizing 
agricultural markets, allowing producers to sell at market prices, even 
though Fidel remained opposed. Raúl showed more sustained interest in 
the economic reforms of China and Vietnam than did Fidel. And by the 
late 1990s, Raúl began to give the speech that he has now repeated many 
times, most notably this April in response to the Obama administration's 
beginning of changes in U.S.-Cuba policies (authorizing Cuban Americans 
to travel and send remittances to Cuba): his government is ready to 
discuss anything on the U.S. government agenda.
In January 2002, Raúl even praised the Bush administration for having 
given advance notice of the incarceration of Taliban prisoners at the 
U.S. base at Guantánamo Bay. He also praised the professional 
military-to-military cooperation between the two countries' officers 
along the U.S. base's boundary perimeter, as well as between the coast 
guards in the Straits of Florida. In August 2006, his first public 
remarks upon becoming acting president made just two points: he did not 
much like to speak in public, and he was ready to negotiate with the 
United States. And this April, he took the time to make it clear that 
negotiating with the United States about any topic did, indeed, include 
discussion about political prisoners in Cuban jails. He made a specific 
proposal to exchange such political prisoners (estimated by Cuban 
human-rights groups as between 200 and 300 people) for five Cuban spies 
in U.S. prisons.
The Context for Change
The pace of political and economic change in Cuba has been slow by world 
standards. But the pace of social change has been very fast. Cuba's 
people live long lives, thanks in part to good, albeit frayed, 
healthcare services--free of charge. Cuban children go to school and 
many become professionals. Indeed, Cuba's principal area of export 
growth is the provision of healthcare services to the people of other 
countries. Until this most recent development, however, Cuba had 
exemplified how a half-century of investment in human capital could 
generate very poor economic-growth returns. Yet Cubans since the early 
1990s have demonstrated entrepreneurial capacities in creating small 
businesses, whenever the government has permitted them, suggesting that 
with better economic incentives there could be a productive combination 
that would lead to economic growth. Cubans can talk seemingly endlessly 
at officially sponsored meetings, yet they demonstrate in other settings 
a capacity for insight, criticism, and imagination that could readily 
contribute as well to much faster political transformation.
U.S. policy toward Cuba for the bulk of this past decade has assisted 
the Castro government's state security in shutting out information from 
the outside world: the United States banned the shipment of 
information-technology products, instead of facilitating Cuban 
electronic access to the world, and allowed Cuban Americans to visit 
their relatives only once every three years, instead of enabling cousins 
from both sides of the Straits of Florida to speak face to face about 
how a different, better Cuba might be constructed. (The United States 
has even protected ordinary Cubans from the Harvard Alumni Association, 
which could not lead tour groups there.) Perhaps the United States will 
stop being an obstacle to change in Cuba during the century's second 
decade.
Jorge I. Domínguez, who most recently visited Cuba in March, is Madero 
professor of Mexican and Latin American politics and economics, vice 
provost for international affairs, and special adviser to the dean of 
the Faculty of Arts and Sciences for international studies. He shared a 
previous overview of U.S.-Cuba policy with this magazine's readers in 
"Your Friend, Fidel" (July-August 2000, page 35).
Hello from Havana | July-August 2009 (1 July 2009)
http://harvardmagazine.com/2009/07/hello-havana
 
 
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