From Reuters:
“In Cuba, the old foe's currency
makes a comeback”
State-run stores in Cuba began
selling some food and hygiene products in U.S. dollars on Monday as the
import-dependent country faces a grave shortage of tradable currency to
purchase goods abroad. Cuba last had to open such dollar stores for basic goods
in the 1990s when the fall of the Soviet Union plunged the Communist-run island
into a deep economic depression. This time it is the coronavirus pandemic,
which has shuttered tourism and hit other revenue earners, worsening an
existing liquidity crisis due to the implosion of ally Venezuela’s economy and
the tightening of U.S. sanctions on old foe Cuba. Lines formed in front of the
stores on Monday and Cubans packed banks to obtain the bank card needed to
purchase dollar goods although most residents resigned themselves to obtaining
the basics in local currency. “Not all Cubans can buy there, we don’t all have
family abroad,” Lazara Rodriguez, 43, a dancer who lives near one of the
stores, said. The government said 62 stores were opening across the country
with more to follow in the coming months. Some 80 outlets selling domestic
appliances, car parts and other items such as motorbikes opened late last year,
and used cars went on sale for greenbacks earlier in 2020. The Cuban state
monopolizes retail and foreign trade but pandemic fallout has worsened
shortages of food, medicine and other goods and there are long lines at retail
outlets. Consumers said the dollar stores provided an option amidst scarcity
for some, but complained they still lacked many products. "Its good, the
prices are acceptable, but it does not have many products like detergent, oil
and ham,” retiree Guillermo Antigua said, exiting a store in Havana. Cuba is
reopening with no new cases of COVID-19 reported on Monday, but private
eateries with no access to wholesale markets have been finding it difficult to
put together an offer.
The new stores are an option for
some: "This is good. We have options to keep
working. At least they are selling us products," cafeteria owner Daniel
Gonzalez said as he packed cheese and other items into his car. Cuba legalized
the dollar after the fall of the Soviet Union but it was taken out of
circulation in 2004. Since then, there have been two currencies, the peso and
the convertible peso, which is valued at 24 pesos, circulating although
possession of the dollar and other tradable currencies remained legal. Cubans
who patronize the dollar stores need a dollar-denominated bank card from an
account opened with tradable currencies which may be obtained through offshore
remittances or other means such as exchanging local pesos on the street. The
government claims the convertible peso is equal to the dollar, but imported
goods, when available, have huge mark-ups as they are purchased in tradable
currencies. The peso and convertible peso have no value abroad. "As in the
1990s, national currencies have lost their convertibility and do not allow
companies to pay debts and import inputs," Pavel Vidal, a former Cuban
central bank economist who teaches at Colombia’s Universidad Javeriana Cali,
said. "To ensure that at least some sectors and markets work, they have to
dollarize them."
^ As usual a Communist country
can not fulfill on its main promise of a classless and equal society. There are
the have’s (those with access to American Dollars) and the have nots (those who
only have access to Cuban Pesos.) Dollar Stores (or Hard-Currency Stores) were
found in every single Communist country
- including China and the Soviet Union – because their Communist Dictatorship
Governments would not provide the needed consumer goods to its citizens, but
still needed US Dollars, British Pounds, West German Marks, etc. to keep themselves
in power. Communism is and has only been good on paper and never in practice. No
Communist country (past or present) has been able to fulfill on its main
promises – mainly a classless and equal society. Communist countries (past and
present) has only ever been able to stay in power through torture, imprisonment
and tight control of every single aspect of a person’s life (from birth to
death.) Most Communist countries were and are Communist in name only and not in
practice. While they are all tight Dictatorships most have to resort to using
Capitalism and trading with Capitalist countries like the United States to fund
their Dictatorship. With regards to Cuba, they had Soviet support from 1959
until Communism collapsed in the USSR in December 1991. Even with Soviet
support the island Dictatorship never really achieved anything. It simply
struggled through the years. Since 1991 and the death of Castro in 2016 Cuba
continues to struggle through with no real achievement. Cubans have strict
rationing of basic things like food and only those with Capitalistic
connections (ie US Dollars) can have a decent, but not good, life. Maybe one
day the ordinary Cuban will see that their Communist Dictatorship Experiment
has failed and will work to bring real lasting reforms that will open the
country to the outside world. When that day happens the US Embargo will end and
Cuba will have a chance of finally achieving rather than simply struggling on a
day-to-day basis. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/cuba-old-foes-currency-makes-173845197.html
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