Lining a Dictator's Pockets
No good would come of lifting the embargo on Cuba.
By Jorge Benitez Feb. 27, 2014
Based on a new poll it commissioned on U.S. relations with Cuba, the 
Atlantic Council issued a report recently calling for a "policy shift" 
that would end the U.S. embargo on the Castro regime. But when asked to 
respond to the statement that "after more than 50 years of no U.S. 
relations with Cuba the Castro regime remains in power," 51 percent of 
those polled want to keep the current policy in place.
Nevertheless, the key issue is not whether the embargo is popular. 
Rather, the main question is, would dropping the embargo better serve 
the interests of the United States? The answer to this question remains 
a strong "no," because ending the embargo would be bad business, 
strengthen an oppressive government and abandon American values.
The U.S. should not normalize trade with the Castro regime for the plain 
and simple reasons that his ventures lose money and his government is an 
international "deadbeat." Any economic partnerships with authoritarian 
regimes are morally suspect, but making deals with the Castro government 
is pouring billions of dollars down the drain. In 1986, Cuba defaulted 
on its multibillion dollar debt to the Paris Club of nations. That debt 
is now estimated to be around $37 billion and the Castro government 
refuses to pay it. A couple of months ago, Russia had to write off 90 
percent of Cuba's $32 billion debt. That's almost $29 billion dollars 
that Castro will never pay back to Moscow. In November, Mexico wrote off 
$340 million of Cuba's debt to its development bank, Bancomext. It is no 
wonder that, according to Moody's, Cuba's credit rating is Caaa1, which 
means worse than highly speculative and a "substantial risk" to investors.
It makes no business sense to drop the embargo for the sake of trading 
with a government that reneged on so many loans its credit rating is now 
at the subprime or "junk bond" level. Yet, loans are what would be 
necessary to "normalize" relations with Cuba. The embargo allows for 
U.S. food and humanitarian supplies to be sold to Cuba. In fact, the 
U.S. is currently the fifth largest exporter to Cuba. The big difference 
is that, according to the embargo, the Castro government must pay for 
all U.S. imports with cash, no credit allowed.
[See a collection of political cartoons on the economy.]
This brings us to the most overlooked and dangerous factor in trading 
with Cuba. Most of the Cuban economy is owned by the Castro government 
and all foreign trade is channeled through agencies that support the 
regime. For example, all foreign companies must pay wages in hard 
currency (dollars or euros) to the Cuban government, and from those 
wages the state pays in local currency (Cuban pesos) a small percentage 
to the individual employees. As a report by the Brooking Foundation 
described it: "If the firm pays the employment agency $500 a month and 
the employment agency pays the workers 500 pesos, over 90 percent of the 
wage payment disappears in the currency conversion; the effective 
compensation is instantly deflated to $21 per month." Brookings said 
this may be "the world's heaviest labor tax." Or as one Cuban worker 
disclosed: "In Cuba, it's a great myth that we live off the state. In 
fact, it's the state that lives off of us."
This is why decades of trade between Cuba and market economies in 
Europe, Canada and Latin America have only lined the pockets of the 
Castro government and not produced any of the promised political or 
economic benefits for the people of Cuba. This is what "normalized" 
relations with Cuba looks like. If the U.S. dropped the embargo, our 
companies would join those from around the world that pay dearly to the 
Castro regime as it exploits the Cuban people. It is this corrupt 
system, not the embargo, which deprives the people of Cuba of the 
benefits of trade and the skill of their labor. As the U.S. argued in 
the United Nations, "the Cuban Government's own policy was the largest 
obstacle to the country's own development, concentrating political and 
economic decisions in the hands of the few and stifling economic growth."
Ending the embargo on the Castro regime would be a blow not only to 
American wallets, but also to American values. The American people want 
"free trade with free people," not manipulated trade that strengthens an 
authoritarian government's oppression of its people. The Castro regime 
is on its last few breaths and the Cuban Spring will soon come to 
millions who will remember that for decades the U.S. chose solidarity 
with the Cuban people instead of business partnerships with the dictator 
in Havana.
Jorge Benitez is director of the NATOSource blog and a senior fellow at 
the Atlantic Council.
Source: Lifting the U.S. Embargo on Castro's Cuba Would Be a Mistake - 
US News - 
http://www.usnews.com/opinion/blogs/world-report/2014/02/27/lifting-the-us-embargo-on-castros-cuba-would-be-a-mistake
 
 
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