'We have to think differently' to deal with new reality brought in by 
reforms
NBC News
HAVANA  — Last hired, first fired – one of those golden laws of free 
market economies most workers know by heart.
But not Adrián Chacón and Alejandro Ortega, two young repairmen who 
found themselves on the losing end of the fight for their jobs.
The best friends were knocked off balance when the Cuban government 
changed what had been a hard-and-fast rule for the last 50 years.
Like all Cubans their age, these young men were told all their lives 
that a tough job market had nothing to do with the Cuban reality – that 
only capitalist workers faced layoffs. That, under the island's state 
controlled socialist economy, work was a guaranteed right.
Sure, the state might not pay people enough to put much food on the 
table, but anyone looking for work would always be welcomed at some 
public company or government ministry.
Not so fast …
That promise went out the window last year when Cuban President Raul 
Castro told people to take a hard look around them.
Cuba, he said, must stop being the "only country in the world where it 
is not necessary to work." The only way to heal Cuba's battered economy, 
he insisted, was to start producing more, and with fewer people.
Castro first took aim at Cuba's bloated state payrolls and state-run 
companies failing to turn a profit. Both drain the public treasury, he 
argued, at a time when the country's very survival was at stake.
While promising a wholesale overhaul of Cuba's financial system, Castro 
had the state start by laying off workers in droves. His plan was to cut 
500,000 jobs by the first quarter of 2011 and more than one million by 
2015 – effectively eliminating one in every five jobs.
While that frenetic pace has slowed considerably (perhaps someone 
figured out that throwing so many people out of work in such a 
concentrated time could end up fueling social unrest), thousands of 
younger workers, including Chacón and Ortega, were among the first to go.
Initially, both had similar reactions to the layoffs: anger. Months 
later, the friends have adapted differently to their circumstances.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/42803466/ns/world_news-americas/
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