Shortages plague Cuba as U.S. sanctions sharpen economic
woes
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[May 28, 2019]
By Sarah Marsh
HAVANA (Reuters) - Israel Hidalgo and his
wife left home around 7:30 a.m. to reach a supermarket across Havana
because they heard it might be selling chicken, a staple of the Cuban
diet increasingly scarce on the shortage-plagued island.
After Cuba started limiting sales this month, partly blaming tightened
U.S. economic sanctions on the Communist-run island, the couple wanted
to buy as much as possible and lined up for three hours under the
Caribbean sun to get tickets guaranteeing them their rations.
Inside, they lined up again to collect two bags of chicken thighs each,
as fellow shoppers elbowed one another in pursuit of their own rations,
and headed for the checkout feeling like they had won the lottery.
"We were born in this revolution and are used to rough times," said
Hidalgo, a 61-year old blacksmith. "We are bracing ourselves for it to
get worse."
Long lines outside shops with mostly bare shelves are increasingly
common in Cuba, and the government has indeed signaled that things are
going from bad to worse.
Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel, in a speech last month, accused the
Trump administration of engaging in an “asphyxiating financial
persecution that makes the import of goods and resources of primary
necessity particularly difficult.”
The degree to which new U.S. sanctions, due in part to Cuba's support
for Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, have compounded its economic
woes is open to debate.
The economy had already stagnated in recent years in tandem with the
implosion of strategic ally Venezuela, resulting in cuts in fuel and
energy use by state entities and this year shortages of basic goods such
as bread, chicken and eggs.
But the increase in sanctions, which have hit the key tourism sector and
added to investor and bank jitters about dealing with Cuba, has some
economists predicting the economy will slip from stagnation into a
full-blown recession later this year.
The economy has averaged 1% annual growth over the last three years,
compared with the 5% to 7% rate economists say is needed to recover
fully from the depression caused by the fall of its former benefactor,
the Soviet Union, in 1991.
"While the crisis will not be as bad as in the 1990s, it will have a
worrying social impact on the most vulnerable households, which are
already on subsistence salaries," said Pavel Vidal, a former Cuban
central bank economist who teaches at Colombia's Universidad Javeriana
Cali.
Bracing for harder economic times, the government has resorted to what
it knows best to manage the crisis and prevent social unrest: more
control.
Interior Commerce Minister Betsy Diaz said two weeks ago the government
would "temporarily" ration sales of a handful of basic products like
eggs on a monthly basis, using ration books distributed after the 1959
Revolution, and limit the sale of others like chicken to ensure everyone
gets their fair share.
"A CRITICAL MOMENT"
Some Cuban economists say the developing crisis stems fundamentally from
an inefficient centrally-planned economy that imports more than two
thirds of its food needs. Calling rationing little more than a
short-term solution, they say the government must open up to a series of
market-oriented economic reforms before the crisis deepens.
"This could be a critical moment that generates the consensus necessary
to apply changes," said Vidal. "The government needs to give more space
to the private sector and investment."
Cuba has enacted some economic reforms in recent years, including
expanding the private sector from 2010 onward and introducing a new
foreign investment law that cut taxes by around 50% in 2014.
But local economists like Omar Everleny say the reforms undertaken have
been too cautious so far. The government has backtracked on overhauls of
areas like agriculture and the dominant public sector remains deeply
inefficient.
Cuba was already behind on an estimated $1.5 billion (£1.1 billion) in
short-term commercial debt and warning of austerity before U.S.
President Donald Trump started the latest round of tightening of the
decades-old U.S. trade embargo.
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People buy chicken in a
supermarket in Havana, Cuba May 13, 2019. REUTERS/Sarah Marsh
Aid from Venezuela, in the form of subsidized oil, had long masked the true
extent of Cuba's economic problems, but it started to fall from 2015 when a drop
in oil prices roiled that OPEC nation's economy.
Venezuela's crude shipments to Cuba are now about half what they were four years
ago, and they could soon fall further. Last month, the United States also began
targeting vessels and companies that ship oil to the island from Venezuela for
sanctions, threatening the energy grid and transportation.
U.S. sanctions against its old Cold War foe are also hitting the two bright
spots in the otherwise glum economy: tourism and foreign investment. Both had
boomed briefly after the announcement of a Cuba-U.S. detente in 2014.
Tourism revenues dropped by 4.6% in 2018, according to official data released
last month. The announcement in 2017 of tighter travel restrictions on U.S.
citizens played a role.
"At one point U.S. visits dropped more than 40 percent," Cuban Tourism Minister
Manuel Marrero told Reuters, adding he still hoped tourism would grow this year.
Meanwhile the Trump administration has activated a long dormant law under which
Cuban-Americans can sue foreign companies that profit from their properties
nationalized during the first years of the 1959 Revolution.
Western diplomats and businessmen have called the threat of potentially costly
U.S. court battles another clear disincentive for banks and outside investors to
do business with Cuba.
The United States has also threatened to further tighten restrictions on travel
and to impose a cap on cash remittances to Cuba, measures that could hit the
economy hard.
SIEGE MENTALITY
Cuba's government has said it will continue moving down the path toward reform.
But it has failed to respond so far to calls from the island's entrepreneurs for
basic changes such as the creation of wholesale markets for the private sector,
and the right to import and export.
Instead of opening the economy further, some Western diplomats and analysts say
there is risk Cuba's leadership will adopt a siege mentality in the face of
increased U.S. hostility. That could mean turning to allies like Russia, Vietnam
and China for help to muddle through while keeping its stranglehold on economic
life.
"The U.S. sanctions could be counterproductive," said one diplomat who asked not
to be identified. "Cuba has historically closed up at times like these."
Cubans are not going hungry like they did during the so-called "Special Period"
after the collapse of the Soviet Union. But they are increasingly connected to
the rest of the world via the internet and foreign travel, and many have grown
weary of government attempts to blame the U.S. embargo for the bulk of their
country's woes.
"We are in total freefall," said Hidalgo's wife, Carmen Lozano, 55, clinging to
her two bags of rationed chicken. "They should have allowed free production and
sales from the beginning of the revolution."
Inequality has risen in recent years in Cuba and many believe the economic
crisis could have a more disproportionate impact now than it might have in the
past.
In a country where the government's claim to legitimacy rests to a large extent
on ensuring a certain level of equality, the authorities seem well aware that
most people lack the cash to stock up on whatever basics they need on the black
market.
"The government’s new rationing program is trying to address that simmering
discontent by making the small quantities of goods that are in stock more widely
available," said William LeoGrande, a professor of government at American
University.
"The government understands that discontent over the economy is their biggest
political vulnerability so they will do everything they can to maintain supplies
of basic goods."
(Reporting by Sarah Marsh; Additional Reporting by Marc Frank and Nelson Acosta;
Editing by Daniel Flynn and Tom Brown)
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