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Raul Castro's reforms might still be a dream

by PL <pl.nospam@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Apr 28, 2008 at 03:23 PM

Raul Castro's reforms might still be a dream
April 28, 2008
By José Azel

What is Raul Castro up to with the announced reforms to Cuba's economic 
system? Will these changes lead to a genuine free market economy and 
more im****tantly to a democratic Cuba?

Given the character and nature of Cuba's regime, the measures we are 
witnessing are not, as some suggests, baby steps toward a legitimate 
transition. For starters, changes such as allowing Cubans to purchase 
computers (without Internet access), DVD players, cell phones, microwave 
ovens and other electronic appliances appear to be designed primarily to 
extract hard-currency remittances from the Cuban exile community
worldwide.

The Cuban population, with an average annual per capita income of 
approximately $200, cannot afford to pay for these items at the highly 
inflated prices dictated by Cuba's military-industrial complex. Nor can 
Cubans afford to stay at a resort hotel where a one night stay requires 
a year's earnings. Almost by definition, the funds for these purchases 
will have to come from exile remittances to family members in the 
island. It is indeed a clever and cost-free way for the Cuban government 
to extort hard currencies from exiles anxious to improve the lives of 
family members in the island.

That said, it can still be reasonably argued that these changes signify 
a meaningful opening in the rarefied context of Cuba's totalitarianism 
and centrally planned economic system. But let us consider the 
concomitant evidence. At the same time that these measures are being 
introduced, Cuba is moving to annul the licenses of over 150 foreign 
firms, prohibiting them from operating in the island. Restricting market 
choices while requiring Cubans to purchase exclusively from the 
monopolistic military-industrial complex at exorbitant prices they 
cannot possibly afford, bares no resemblance to even an embryonic market 
mechanism much less baby steps.

Most im****tantly, there are no indications that the Cuban government is 
planning to introduce political reforms toward democratic pluralism. In 
the absence of political reforms and the building of self-governing 
regulatory institutions such as an effective and independent legal 
system, economic changes will not lead to democracy. Economic reforms in 
isolation of serious political reforms will not lead sequentially and 
inexorably to democracy in Cuba. In fact, the most likely outcome of 
these changes is a transfer of wealth from the state to the ruling 
military / party elite. Without the effective protection of society by 
democratic institutions and the rule of law, the end result is likely to 
be not democracy, but a form of kleptocratic governance where the 
economy is subordinated to the interests of the kleptocrats.

José Azel is a senior research associate at the Institute for Cuban and 
Cuban-American Studies, University of Miami.

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/cuba/sfl-forum28cubasbapr28,0,7162187.story?track=rss
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
Raul Castro's reforms might still be a dream
PL <pl.nospam@[EMAIL P  2008-04-28 15:23:00 

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tan12V112 Sun Oct 12 14:23:51 CDT 2008.