Cuba’s Domestic Reforms Surge Past Immobilized U.S.
by Christina Curtin and Paula Lopez-Gamundi
September 28, 2011
• Cuban President Raúl Castro announces five-year plan for free market reforms.
• Cuba’s South-South foreign policy cannot entirely compensate for domestic policy inadequacies.
• Although Cuba is willing to consider change, Washington refuses to open up to rational dialogue and meaningful
debate.
Decades after its inception, the United States maintains its barely modified Cold War embargo against Cuba. It seems
unlikely that this blockage—legally engrossed by the 1996 Helms-Burton Act—will be repealed in the near future due to
Congressional bickering and the animosity of the pro-embargo Cuban-exile lobby. Further south, Havana has announced
economic reforms that could eventually allow free market policies to take root in Cuba, exposing the irrationality of
Washington’s aging and outdated stance toward Havana.
An Unconventional Five-Year Plan
At its August 1 biannual session, the Cuban National Assembly passed an economic reform dubbed the “Guidelines of the
Economic and Social Policy of the Party and the Revolution” (Lineamientos de la Política Económica y Social del Partido y la Revolución), which had been originally approved by the Communist Party in April. The bill encourages private sector growth by
curtailing federal involvement in retail, agriculture, construction, and transportation. It will simultaneously loosen
restrictions on small businesses, cooperatives, property leasing, and the buying and selling of personal items, such as
cars and homes. In an effort to reduce unsustainable government spending, and other retrogressive administrative
policies, state subsides on food and utilities will be incrementally eliminated over the next five years. Intended to
jump-start the stagnating economy, these reforms will not be without negative repercussions; cuts in government spending
will naturally result in the reduction of state bureaucracy, and over one million state employees are scheduled to lose
their jobs.
Raúl Castro also publicly announced a revision of outdated federal tax codes and travel and emigration procedures. Much
to the chagrin of human rights advocates, Cuban citizens have traditionally been required to acquire permission from the
government before travelling to a foreign country. The new policy will presumably allow Cubans to travel abroad while
maintaining their citizenship status.
While these socioeconomic reforms show a dramatic shift toward a free-market economy, the bill hardly complies with the
vague and demanding requirements listed under the Helms-Burton Act, which allows for the annulment of the embargo on the
condition that Cuba is run by a democratic “transition government.” Considering the conservative spell that has been
cast on Capitol Hill and the super-charged pro-embargo lobby, it is unlikely that Congress will be quick to recognize
any strides towards enhanced civil liberties, democracy, or a free-market economy in Cuba.
Wading Against the Pro-Embargo Tide
While many Cubans are celebrating this progressive state policy, anti-Castro Cuban-Americans are starting start to
sweat. The Cuban Adjustment Act (CAA) of 1966 allows Cuban immigrants to apply for permanent residency after living in
the U.S. for only one year. Moreover, illegal Cuban immigrants can work legally and receive free medical care,
government welfare, and unemployment benefits due to their “political exile” status. Director of the New America
Foundation’s U.S.-Cuba Policy Initiative, Anya Landau French, believes that the new travel and emigration policy will
make it more difficult “for Cuban-American hardliners in the U.S. to argue that Cuban emigrants are political exiles and
need continued special status under the Cuban Adjustment Act.” Reforming the CAA would be a blow for anti-Castro Cubans,
and therefore to the pro-embargo lobby as a whole.
The Limitations of Cuba’s South-South Strategy
Since the country’s revolution, Cuba has traded and formed amicable diplomatic ties mainly with developing nations.
Through this “South-South Strategy,” Cuba has engaged with emerging markets that, while not necessarily located in the
geographic South, share the island’s commitment to multilateralism and anti-hegemony. As a result, Cuba has cultivated
friendships with a diverse circle of nations including China, Russia, and Venezuela. However, South-South Strategy does
not explicitly preclude Cuban dealings with capitalist countries. For example, the largest private foreign investor in
the Cuban economy is the Canadian energy corporation Sherritt International, which extensively drills for and refines
oil, extracts gas, and mines nickel and cobalt on the island.
In order to keep the Cuban economy afloat, Cuba’s South-South allies are willing to incur sizeable trade deficits. In
these partnerships, ideology often trumps economics. For instance, in exchange for goods and services, Cuba receives
nearly 90,000 barrels of crude oil from Venezuela daily, at preferential prices. Nonetheless, experts are blunt about
the limitations brought on by South-South Strategy, and adamant about the policy’s inability to substitute much-needed
domestic economic reforms. Cuba chronically has a monstrous trade deficit, but not for a lack of trading partners.
Rather, it produces very few marketable goods for export, and will have to spend USD 1.5 billion this year alone, to
import 60 to 80 percent of the food its people will consume.
Constructive Policy Change from Washington
In his August 1 address to the Cuban National Assembly, President Raúl Castro admitted, “[w]ithout a change of
mentality, we will not be capable of accomplishing the changes needed to guarantee the sustainability… of the socialist
nature… of the political and social system enshrined in the Constitution of the Republic.” Whether the Cuban state will
enact the promised reforms remains to be seen, but Castro has at least acknowledged that his nation’s domestic policies
must change.
Even more so, U.S. policy toward Cuba desperately needs a make-over, especially in the context of recent Cuban
flexibility. The futile and antagonistic economic embargo against Cuba has prevented both countries from reaping
significant economic advantages. Certainly, were the embargo to be lifted, Cuba would benefit from waves of “Yankee”
tourism, and could eventually become a USD one billion agricultural export market for the U.S. Despite its hard-headed
refusal to openly trade with Cuba, the U.S. has no qualms about covertly intervening in Cuban politics. According to a
well-informed source whom preferred to remain anonymous, U.S. Government-Organized Non-Governmental Organizations
(GONGOs), which are remnants of the second Bush administration, still attempt to “promote democracy” and instigate
regime change in Cuba. Private and government funds intermingle to endow these GONGOs in Cuba, resulting in blame
shuffling and an utter lack of transparency. Clearly, U.S. policy toward Cuba is neither rational nor honorable, and
requires a dramatic transformation.
President Castro is moving the Cuban Revolution toward free market policies which inevitably will benefit his country in
the future. Conversely, hypocritical initiatives emanating from Washington, that are ever-derisive of the Cuban state,
have left a series of U.S. administrations with their feet firmly planted in the past.
ENDS