Cuba – In Search of an »Orderly Transition«
26/09/2012 By Uwe Optenhoegel and Florian Pronold
For the first time since the demise of the Eastern Bloc Cuba's socialist 
rulers are undertaking serious reform. However, the leadership lacks 
courage and trust in the people.
In Cuba, some things work differently. The visit to the island by Pope 
Benedict XVI at the end of March 2012 brought this home once again. The 
Western media tried to engineer a meeting of Cuban dissidents with the 
Holy Father and to get the Pope to commit himself to hauling the Castro 
brothers over the coals for their human rights policy. The Pope did 
nothing of the sort, heeding the advice of his Cuban bishops who had 
preached cooperation. The Catholic Church also knows that the small 
group of regime opponents are not a force at the moment and thus cannot 
be a vehicle of change.
And change is happening in Cuba at all levels: economic, political and 
social. But it is coming primarily from the heart of society, fuelled by 
the ongoing economic misery and recently spurred on by speculation about 
the health of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez. This is because Cuba's 
current economic model depends to a considerable extent on his 
subsidies. Cuban socialism is not a carbon copy of the East European 
version. Cuba is not half as Catholic as Poland. The Cuban trade unions 
remain the Party's »transmission belt« in workplaces, but there is no 
patriotic mass movement with ideas of its own, such as Solidarnosc in 
the 1980s. In Havana there is neither a charismatic workers' leader in 
the same mould as Lech Walesa, nor a civil rights advocate of the 
stature of Vaclav Havel.
The Pope limited himself to vague criticisms of Marxism and talked about 
human rights only in carefully weighed words about Christian charity. 
Instead, before the eyes of the world the Vatican criticised the 50-year 
US embargo as inhuman and gave his blessing to the new line of 
cooperation between the Catholic Church and the Cuban state in the 
transformation process. The basis of this alliance is the fact that the 
Church no longer questions the legitimacy of socialism in Cuba. As 
Cardinal of Havana, Jaime Ortega, has emphasised in numerous talks with 
Western politicians that the Catholic Church regards Cuban socialism as 
the result of a people's campaign for national independence and thus as 
identity-shaping, in contrast to the situation in Central and Eastern 
Europe where in 1945 socialism rolled into most countries mounted on the 
tanks of the Red Army.
The Myth Is Fading
However, Cuba's myth is fading. Social services, once the pride of the 
Revolution, are no longer affordable and are becoming markedly poorer. 
Nevertheless, the regime is holding on to the ambitious social policy of 
the Revolution: in recent years the share of education, health care and 
social security in GDP has increased. Given the poor economic 
performance, however, even these priorities are not enough to maintain 
standards.
The inefficient economy has alienated the people from the government. 
The generation who lived through the Revolution and benefited from it is 
slowly dying out. The unproductive planned economy offers the young 
generation the prospect neither of work nor consumption. The relatively 
homogenous and egalitarian society distinguished by the overcoming of 
social injustices and racial barriers is a thing of the past. Beneath 
the surface of power political stability Cuban society is diversifying. 
Fidel Castro elevated Marx's proposition »From each according to his 
abilities, to each according to his needs« into a maxim. This promise 
has lost credibility. In Cuba social exclusion can be seen once more. 
This development touches a nerve in the Cuban psyche. Anyone without 
access to the »peso convertible« linked to the dollar easily falls into 
poverty. Particularly affected are the growing number of old people 
living alone and Afro Cubans. At the same time, individual origin is 
once again becoming important for educational success.
Even the government of President Raul Castro no longer closes its eyes 
to all this. For the first time since the end of the Eastern Bloc Cuba 
is seriously on the path of reform and trying to modernise the centrally 
run economy. At the beginning of the 1990s, the economic crisis caused 
by the demise of real socialism was still interpreted as externally 
induced. In contrast, the current crisis is seen as a consequence of 
Cuba's lack of its own economic model. No one has expressed this more 
emphatically than Raul Castro himself, who said before the Cuban 
National Assembly in 2010: »Either we change or we go under«. Mistakes 
are admitted and the focus is on putting them right. The time is also 
over in which Cuban officials declare that every problem on the island 
is due to the US embargo. The embargo has long performed a dual function 
for Cuba. It continues to do the country considerable economic damage, 
but at the same time it has a stabilising effect domestically: it makes 
it possible to cultivate the bogeyman of an overbearing imperialistic 
neighbour against whom one can only defend oneself with revolutionary 
discipline and unity.
Chávez Keeps the Ailing Economy Alive
The state of the economy as reform of the economic model gets under way 
is extremely poor. Half a century after the Revolution Cuba has not been 
able to get its planned economy off the ground. Within the framework of 
the division of labour of the Council for Mutual Economic Assistance 
(COMECON) the country was committed to deliver sugar or other foodstuffs 
and raw materials. When the Eastern European economic community and thus 
the Soviet subsidies ceased Cuba had to completely rebuild its economy. 
Fidel Castro passed this task on to his brother and then Defence 
Minister Raul and his »Forcas Armadas Revolutionarias« (FAR). The 
successful completion of this mission marked the entry of the Cuban 
military into the economy, at least in its more modern sectors. Since 
then they have extended their influence and today are the pragmatic 
driving force behind the reforms. Although in this way collapse was 
avoided the economic sectors built up since then – tourism, nickel 
exporting and, to a certain extent, health services and biotechnology – 
have not developed enough to cover the country's need for foreign 
currency. For years Cuba has lived with a structural foreign trade 
deficit, with high foreign debts and, as a result, a shortage of 
liquidity. When Hugo Chavez came to power in Venezuela at the end of the 
1990s Fidel Castro found a new source of subsidies. Although they kept 
alive the ailing planned economy, at the same time they stymied the 
promising reform efforts, a serious wrong decision that cost Cuba a lost 
decade with regard to economic policy.
Meanwhile, the island has an economic structure in which the 
»productive« sectors account for only around a quarter of value added, 
with the service sector accounting for the rest. Cuban economists talk 
of a »dysfunctional tertiarisation« that threatens the healthy 
development of the economy. Since the beginning of the 1990s the Cuban 
economy has not been in a position to ensure the necessary 
recapitalisation, the basis of its very existence. Gross fixed-asset 
investments fell by 47 per cent between 1989 and 2007. In 2006 they 
accounted for only 13.5 per cent of GDP and remain at this level today. 
This is half the level of 1989 and around half of what is regarded as 
necessary for sustainable growth. Thus Cuba lies below the Latin 
American average of around 20 per cent. The country is de-industrialised 
and there are almost no intact value chains, to say nothing of the 
dilapidation of the infrastructure.
The dual currency that followed dollarisation at the start of the 1990s 
continues to have grave consequences for Cuba's wage earners. It became 
the main catalyst of social differentiation. Wages were paid in the 
Cuban peso, which has little purchasing power. Most basic necessities 
are traded in the convertible CUC, however. For this reason Cubans who 
have access to foreign currency are much better off than their fellow 
countrymen who do not. People acquire hard currency either through 
remittances from Cubans living abroad, through tourism or through 
foreign trade. Generally speaking, additional incomes from remittances 
and from the black market or private economic activities significantly 
exceed regular incomes. Thus paid work is becoming increasingly 
unimportant. This system  creates entirely the  wrong incentives. The 
fact that a waitress, a taxi driver or the cleaners at a tourist place 
earn four times as much as a doctor or a teacher is leading to the 
inversion of Cuba's social pyramid. Consequently, many young people are 
asking themselves whether it's worth getting a good education. And more 
and more highly qualified professionals are emigrating to places where 
they can earn good money even without qualifications.
The search for a new development model
Against this background the government has been introducing economic 
reforms since summer 2010 which became official policy with the adoption 
of the "Guidelines on Economic and Social Policy" at the Sixth Party 
Congress of the Communist Party in April 2011. The Guidelines represent 
a »roadmap« for seeking a new sustainable development model. A debate is 
going on concerning the future balance between the state, cooperative 
and private sectors. There is no doubt that the reforms are intended to 
rescue socialism and not to weaken or abolish it. The turnaround is 
supposed to be brought about by privatisations in crafts and small 
businesses, as well as private production and marketing of foodstuffs on 
land leased from the state on a long-term basis. Furthermore, the 
decentralisation of decision-making and budget components to provinces 
and municipalities as well as more autonomy for state enterprises is 
under discussion. The distribution of land has already been going on for 
around two years. Besides this, Cuba is strengthening the cooperative 
sector and is cutting back the widespread social subsidies, for example, 
food ration cards and canteens in state-owned workplaces.
But the bulk of the economy will remain under central planning and the 
most important means of production will remain in state ownership. The 
guiding principle of the reforms is farewell to a paternalistic state. 
The goal of this agenda is to reduce wage costs by making people 
redundant in the state sector and to raise the extremely low labour 
productivity in state-owned companies. The private sector now being 
created and the cooperatives are supposed to absorb those made redundant 
and improve the availability of goods and services. The new 
self-employed are supposed to improve state finances through their 
taxes. In agriculture the measures are supposed to lead to a rapid 
increase in production in order to substitute imports of agricultural 
products (Cuba's food import rate is around 80 per cent) and to give the 
state some financial room to manoeuvre.
Where Are Job Seekers Supposed to Find a Job?
The labour market is characterised by massive underemployment and low 
productivity. Already by April 2011, 500,000 state employees were 
supposed to be laid off, rising to 1.3 million by 2015. Given a working 
population of 4.9 million this is a very ambitious goal. But this reform 
measure has barely taken off. Even Cuban experts were unclear as to 
where the army of job seekers were supposed to find jobs. The list of 
professions set free for self-employment seemed as though it was from 
the nineteenth century, not the twenty-first. It is now slowly being 
extended to include modern professions. However, labour market reform is 
proceeding, albeit more slowly than planned. According to the trade 
unions, in 2011 around 800,000 employees were affected by implementation 
or restructuring processes.
The expansion of crafts and small businesses has been more successful. 
According to official data the number of »cuenta propistas« – »employees 
on their own account« rose from around 145,000 in 2008 to around 360,000 
at the end of 2011. In part, this is likely to be the result of the 
legalisation of what were previously black market businesses. Pensioners 
are also coming back into the labour market. By 2015 the sector is 
supposed to account for around 35 per cent of employees and a similar 
share of GDP.
The obstacles to the success of this reform measure are in the small 
print, in the realisation of accompanying or preparatory measures to 
enable the new micro and small businesses to operate in the first place. 
This includes the setting up of credit lines, regulations on tax and 
social security, import and export provisions, structural reform in the 
banking system and so on. This process has proceeded sluggishly so far. 
It remains to be seen whether the incentives made available so far are 
sufficient to persuade the population to use their scarce resources and 
the organisational and improvisational capacities honed on the black 
market within a legal framework. Bureaucratic irresponsibility and the 
primacy of political control could also stymie people's initiative and 
willingness to take risks.
But even if the reforms were a total success the effects would largely 
be limited to the domestic market and the labour market. For Cuba it 
would be a major step forward to improve the supply situation and give a 
permanent place to private initiative and responsibility. But the 
leading Cuban economists also know that this would be merely one step on 
the long way to a more sustainable economic model. The agenda of further 
structural reforms is long: a new policy is needed with regard to 
foreign direct investment, a company and macroeconomic innovation 
policy, a reorientation of foreign economic policy, establishing a 
functional tax system, integration of the two currencies and a growth 
strategy that finally gives the state a certain financial leeway.
Summarising how things stand at the moment one could say that although 
the modernisation process is moving slowly and is too tightly 
controlled, at least it is continuous. And it is rather a matter of 
trial and error than a master plan. In terms of overall economic growth 
the effect of the reforms was still negligible by 2011; in previous 
years growth was between 2.5 and 3 per cent. However, one thing is 
clear: if the roadmap is implemented it will change Cuban socialism 
fundamentally.
While economic reform is already under way, the transformation of the 
political system that many expect has been much slower. The government 
is well aware of the difficulties and the President never gives a speech 
without mentioning the necessary »change of mentality«, although with 
limited effect. Not least the numerous middle ranking cadres of the 
Party have a whole host of power and privileges to lose if there is more 
transparency, part privatisation of economic sectors and 
decentralisation. Raul Castro has repeatedly addressed the opponents of 
reform and has called on sceptics in the Party and in the political 
leadership to change their mentality or step down. There are many 
indications that Cuba is on the way to a two-speed state: economically 
the Party congress's reforms are being implemented, while politically 
some sections of the Party reject rejuvenation and adaptation of 
structures to the new realities.
Whether the Party bureaucracy will do itself a favour by maintaining a 
blockade is doubtful. This is because economic reforms are already 
taking on their own momentum. The economic changes are not only being 
steered by other groups in the leadership who are less ideologically 
entrenched, but in individual reform areas policy is being discussed 
with experts from outside the government, a novelty in Cuba that is 
making the political process somewhat more transparent to the public.
Should Europe Go for Change through Rapprochement?
The EU and its member states are following the Cuban reform process with 
interest without being able to develop a sustainable stance. Instead, 
they are creating obstructions of their own. Official policy is 
continuing to follow the »Common Standpoint« inspired by the 
conservative Spanish government under Jose Maria Aznar in 1996. The 
point of this is to link an improvement in economic relations to 
progress with regard to human rights. This policy has not achieved its 
aims, however, and it has been clear for some time that it has failed. 
In the meantime many EU member states have concluded bilateral 
cooperation agreements with the island, thereby circumventing the policy.
To date, the human rights situation has been a sensitive issue in 
relations with the European Union. Amnesty International also continues 
to point out violations in its reports. However, there is reason for 
hope. In spring 2011 through the mediation of the Catholic Church not 
only were all political prisoners released who were sentenced after the 
conflict with the EU in 2003, but dozens of other cases were dealt with. 
»The European Union, which had made the arrest of 75 opponents of the 
regime a key issue in bilateral relations, must acknowledge their 
release if it doesn't want to lose credibility«, writes Bert Hoffmann of 
the GIGA Institute for Latin American Studies. Given the proven 
ineffectiveness of the »Common Standpoint« the question arises for 
European policy of whether it should finally emancipate itself from 
backing the US embargo policy and rather fall back on a tried and tested 
European policy, »change through rapprochement«.
Going Its Own Way
The reform process that is now under way has taken on proportions 
comparable to the beginning of reform in China or Vietnam. Like the 
Asian reference model Cuba is setting out on this path under the 
leadership of the Party. However, to date the economy has not been 
opened up to anything like the same extent as happened in Asia in the 
mid-1980s. At the current stage of globalisation the classic path of 
catch-up industrialisation is probably blocked for Cuba. Opportunities 
could be opened up by establishing a cluster economy, developing niches 
on the world market, which appears to have been done successfully in 
biotechnology. The production factor needed for that is the only one 
that Cuba has in abundance, a well educated population.
Havana is banking on a »transición ordenada«, an orderly transition. 
Only in this way can the Revolution be saved, according to the 
»comandantes«. There should be no attempt to copy a model but rather to 
seek the country's own strategy to overcome the crisis. Whether the 
pragmatic path propagated by Raúl Castro is pursued consistently remains 
open. Even if the reform measures succeed further structural challenges 
remain. However, on the basis of the good educational level and with a 
combination of Cuban composure and improvisational skills acquired 
during hard times the reforms could provide a way out of the economic 
agony. To date, it sometimes looks as if the leadership lacks courage 
and trust in its own people to put forward bolder reforms. The key to 
success lies in Cuba alone. However, transformation without any risk 
whatsoever and entirely under control will scarcely be an option. And 
only the future will show whether it will be possible to continue the 
course taken »without haste but without pause« (Raul Castro) in the face 
of Cubans' dissatisfaction with their economic situation.
The original German version of this column was published in Berliner 
Republik (Issue 3+4, 2012)
http://www.social-europe.eu/2012/09/cuba-in-search-of-an-orderly-transition/
 
 
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