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Cuba debates
economic path ahead
under Raul Castro
By Marc Frank
Reuters
The
Washington Post
Infosearch:
José Cadenas
Analyst
Bureau Chief
USA
Research Dept.
La Nueva Cuba
February 8, 2007
HAVANA (Reuters)
- Cuban economists are busy studying ways to rev up one of the world's
last communist-run economies, a step encouraged by acting President
Raul Castro since he took over from his ailing brother six months
ago.
The debate is
focused on how to make Cuba's inefficient command economy more productive
and take advantage of newfound financial buoyancy in foreign exchange
earnings.
"There
is consensus on our goals: more popular participation, the country's
development and a better material and spiritual life," China
expert and economics professor Evelio Vilarino told Reuters this
week at a globalization conference. "Where there is no consensus
is on how best to achieve that."
In a series
of end-of-the-year speeches, Raul Castro expressed frustration with
bureaucracy, demanded answers to declining food output, urged Cuba's
press to be more critical and authorized a study of socialist property
relations.
Cuban economist
and agriculture expert Amando Nova said agriculture reforms of the
early 1990s -- when Cuba divided state farms into worker cooperatives
and legalized private produce markets -- stopped halfway.
"We need
farmers to participate more in production and price decisions, to
be able to purchase inputs and in general enjoy more autonomy from
the state," said Nova, who is involved in a report on agriculture
commissioned by the government.
Similar reports
are being prepared on other sectors of the economy where the state
dictates most output and prices in exchange for inputs and credits.
Many experts
view Raul Castro, 75, as more pragmatic than his brother and believe
he could steer Cuba's 90 percent state-run economy toward one that
resembles the more open Chinese model.
ADAPT, DON'T
ADOPT
Luis Marcelo
Yera of the National Economic Research Institute, a member of the
panel looking into property relations, said Cuba is taking a path
closer to one of his favorite Japanese sayings.
"Adapt,
don't adopt -- we can adapt the best experiences but not adopt another's
model," he said.
Marcelo said
the panel was "looking at better defining property under socialism
... because experience has demonstrated it has many problems functioning."
Cuba's foreign
exchange earnings have nearly doubled over the last two years, thanks
mainly to the export of medical and other services to Venezuela
and record-high nickel prices.
Economic growth
has sped up to three times its pace at the start of the decade when
Cuba was pulling out of the economic collapse that followed the
collapse of its former benefactor, the Soviet Union, in 1991.
Nevertheless,
the state has run into problems investing the revenues through its
more than 3,000 state-run companies. The economy also suffers from
chronic disorganization, bad accounting, poor quality, lax discipline
and graft.
The head of
parliament's economic commission, Osvaldo Martinez, told Reuters
the debate over economic policy probably would be taking place even
if President Fidel Castro were not too ill to govern.
"We are
not talking about the Chinese model, but a Cuban model, the best
way forward given Cuba's possibilities, realities, resources and
problems," Martinez said.
Some Cuban economists
believe that only by adopting China's model of a capitalist market
under communist political control, or at a minimum by decentralizing
and developing private cooperatives and markets in nonstrategic
sectors, can internal production be improved.
Others say any
opening would provide the United States with a chance to topple
the socialist system.
Agriculture
specialist Nova said taking steps to loosen the economy would not
threaten his sector.
"Decentralization
and more autonomy would result in more production and food security,
consolidating our economy and making us less vulnerable," he
said.
© 2007
Reuters
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