Cubans await promised government intervention as peso slides further
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[March 13, 2024] By
Marc Frank
HAVANA (Reuters) - The Cuban government has promised to take decisive
action this month to halt a slide in the peso that has wiped out savings
and left Cubans struggling to afford basic goods, but economists Reuters
spoke to were skeptical of a quick fix.
The black market peso has slid 20% far this year against the dollar, and
has less then 10% of the purchasing power it had in 2019.
Last month, Deputy Economy Minister Mildrey Granadillo de la Torre told
a cabinet meeting that measures to tackle the weakening peso were
planned for March, including an "adjustment of the exchange rate,"
according to state media.
Prime Minister Manuel Marrero said in December a major monetary reform
would take place this year. Neither official gave further details.
But five Cuban economists Reuters spoke with said that changing course
would be difficult.
Cuba has three effective exchange rates. The government has a fixed rate
of 24 pesos to the dollar, plus a "discretionary" fixed rate of 120
pesos, used for example for services for tourists and gasoline. And then
there is an informal one, which was trading at around 320 pesos to the
dollar on Tuesday, according to a tracker provided by independent news
outlet El Toque.
Marrero has said taking back control of the monetary system is part of a
plan to set the stage for recovery from a crisis that has left gross
domestic product 10% below its 2019 level.
The government often lambasts the informal rate as illegal, speculative
and part of a U.S. effort to cripple the state-dominated economy.
"This practice that from another country someone using a computer sets
the exchange rate must go," Marrero said in December.
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Cuban Prime Minister Manuel Marrero Cruz attends a meeting with
Russian President Vladimir Putin at the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia
June 14, 2023. Sputnik/Mikhail Metzel/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
But the informal rate is the one that best reflects the true value
of the peso, the economists said.
"In reality the informal exchange rate is a reflection of the
imbalances in the economy, and it is not the main cause of the
problems," former central bank economist Pavel Vidal said in an
interview.
He said the peso's plummet this year was on the back of a record
fiscal deficit, falling production and the absence of a clear
stabilization program and reforms he said were needed.
"The exchange rate will continue to depreciate between 5% and 9%
each month," predicted Vidal, who teaches in Colombia and is the
most widely read critic of Cuban monetary policy.
For Cubans who have lived through two previous adjustments that did
nothing to dampen inflation, demand for dollars is unlikely to
decline as imported goods prices rise and people seek to leave the
island or a safe haven for their savings.
"I don't have much hope," said Rafael Oliva, a 28-year old who works
in the private sector.
"As long as the demand for dollars remains high ... the exchange
rate will never go down."
(Reporting by Marc Frank; additional reporting by Anet Rios and
Mario Fuentes; editing by Dave Sherwood and Rosalba O'Brien)
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