From AFP:
“Dollar
makes a comeback as Cuba readies currency devaluation”
The US dollar
is making a comeback as the favored currency in communist-run Cuba as the
country prepares to devalue the peso to relieve pressure on a battered economy.
Cuba has a unique system whereby two official currencies have existed
side-by-side for nearly three decades, the Cuban peso and convertible peso, the
CUC. Long lines outside food stores are a common sight in Havana amid chronic
shortages of basic goods, and with the government planning to call time on the
CUC shopkeepers are already rejecting the currency, driving a rush to dollars
for those who can get them. "CUC not accepted" reads the sign at the
entry to one Havana shop. The island's
economy, buffeted by ever-tightening US sanctions, has been hammered by the
coronavirus pandemic, which has left Cuba without much-needed foreign revenue
provided by its Caribbean beach tourism. The UN Economic Commission for Latin
America forecasts GDP to plummet 8.0 percent this year. In July, Havana opened
dozens of state-run "dollar stores" in an effort to rake in foreign
currency. The relatively well-stocked
stores are a magnet for well-off Cubans and those with dollar remittances sent
from US-based Cubans.
- Dollar
debit cards - Customers first have to open a dollar-denominated bank
account, then use a debit card to pay for the goods in the stores. Economists
warn of the creation of a two-tier economy -- for the haves who can afford to
buy in dollars, and the have-nots in the normal domestic economy. “Of
the 11 million inhabitants, if one million can buy in dollars, what about the
other 10? If I don't have family abroad, to send dollars home, I don't have
that opportunity," said Aleskis Rodriguez, 31, as he lined up to buy
coffee at a Havana market still accepting CUC. Economy Minister
Alejandro Gil denied the move would herald "economic apartheid" in
Cuba. Instead, he said, it will satisfy the demands of people with the most
purchasing power, and add to state coffers. Economists like Pavel Vidal,
a specialist on Cuba from Colombia's Javeriana University, have long argued
that the dual-currency system is unwieldy, particularly for exporters.
- Muddled
reform - Vidal says Cuba's embrace of the dollar is an admission of failure
by the authorities, a consequence of reforms that are "incomplete and well
below expectations." The long-mooted monetary reform is coming
"at the worst possible moment," Vidal said. "Because this is monetary reform that
implies a significant devaluation of the official currency against the dollar.
Something that has never been done." The government in Havana has
for years maintained the CUC artificially pegged to the dollar, as a shield for
the vulnerable Cuban currency. "I spent $30.90 and look at what I
bought! Some packages of juice, five packages of spaghetti and five packets of
tomato puree, really nothing," said Niurka Romera, 50, outside a dollar
store. Whatever the currency, one
thing is a constant in Cuban life: the long lines outside shops. "I've been here since 5.15 in the
morning. It's 11.30 now, but they're already closing the shop and I have to
come back tomorrow to buy my coffee," said Magalis, a 52-year-old teacher.
She said the government was not doing enough to limit the size of the lines
during the pandemic. "If
Commander Fidel Castro was still alive, he would have done something beautiful
for the people."
^ This latest
move only reenforces the fact that Communism has never and will never work.
There has never been a Communist country that was able to stay in power non-violently,
that didn’t need to resort to Capitalism to survive and that didn’t have a rigorous
system of inequality between the haves and the have-nots. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/dollar-makes-comeback-cuba-readies-090217311.html
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