Monday, August 19, 2019
Cuban Situation :: Cuba Politics Economy Economics Essays
Cuban Situation Cuba needs cows. In January of 2004, a Cuban delegation visited Florida to inspect beef and dairy cows to repair Cubaââ¬â¢s languishing cattle industry. Moreover, under the auspices of the U.S. Trade Sanctions Reform and Export Enhancement Act in 2000, the United States exported $350 million dollars worth of American agriculture products to its island neighbor in 2000 (Bussey 1). This budding trade relationship is symptomatic of a broader move by Cuba to fully re-insert itself in the global economy. Deprived of the protective cocoon of Soviet trade agreements and faced with economic crisis and stagnation, Cubaââ¬â¢s leaders have responded with limited economic reforms. It is clear, however, that Cuba will not emulate the rapid liberalization of much of Eastern Europe and Latin America. A brief review of Cubaââ¬â¢s economic performance since the fall of the Soviet Union reveals a trend of liberalization bred of necessity. Nevertheless, the mixed performance of the Export-Pro cessing Zones and the governmentââ¬â¢s grudging acceptance of tourism reveal a tension between Cubaââ¬â¢s need for foreign currency and direct foreign investment and a desire to insulate and preserve Cubaââ¬â¢s existing domestic apparatus. This tension underlies Cubaââ¬â¢s ongoing economic transition and has prevented wholesale market liberalization. Cubaââ¬â¢s future movement towards market reforms will be carefully managed by the Castro government to protect Cubaââ¬â¢s revolutionary legacy and to maintain control of political opposition. The fall of the Soviet Union devastated the Cuban economy. Cubaââ¬â¢s GDP contracted by 35-50% from 1989-1993 (LeoGrande quest 5). As a percentage of total Cuban trade, the Soviet Unionââ¬â¢s share fell from 66% in 1990 to 15% in 1994 (5). Moreover, Russia reneged on its oil agreement, and fitful exports caused energy shortages in Cuba. Production and consumption plummeted. From 1986-1991, Castro undertook a rectification campaign to stabilize the economy as the Soviet Union decreased its support and eventually collapsed. The plan ââ¬Å"focused on re-centralizing economic planning authority, dismantling the [Soviet-sponsored socialist management system] and market mechanisms, abolishing the free farmers markets launched in 1980, and combating corruptionâ⬠(4). In addition, Castro tried to address the massive trade imbalance by reducing imports and reinvigorating the export sector. This program was a resounding failure. More domestic and far-reaching reforms were necessary to save the economy from crisis. Economic disaster had erected a serious challenge to Cubaââ¬â¢s socialist program. In 1991, Castroââ¬â¢s announcement of a ââ¬Å"Special Period in a Time of Peaceâ⬠marked the beginning of Cubaââ¬â¢s new era of liberalization.
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