From the DW:
“How Cubans earn a living from
standing in line”
Unending lines in front of stores
are a typical phenomenon in Cuban commerce. But, during an economic crisis that
has led to shortages of basic supplies, some Cubans have made lining up a
lucrative profession. Long lines outside Cuban stores are the result of limited
merchandise that rarely responds to the needs of the population. Shopping for
groceries has long been a nightmare for most Cubans. Although buying basic food
has slightly improved recently, Ricardo Barragan told DW that "everything
is difficult" when it comes to providing his family with the fundamentals
of daily life. "If you want to buy chicken, it can well happen that you
need to line up for seven or eight hours," he said, adding that 200 or 300
people lining up outside grocery stores is nothing unusual. Cubans often spend
hours or entire days to get a sack of rice or a chunk of meat.
Like all protagonists in this
article, Ricardo Barragan is not the real name of the 59-year-old Cuban,
because none of them wanted to see their names published. An artisan by
profession, Barragan used to do arts and craftworks to earn a living. But since
the COVID-19 pandemic hit Cuba, his market, mostly tourists, has crumbled,
forcing him to do casual jobs to sustain his family. The Cuban economy is in dire straits hit by
the COVID-19 pandemic and US sanctions.
Hard currency: A must-have in
Cuba In Cuba, the virus pandemic has aggravated an already precarious
economic situation marked by low growth and a widening financial crisis.
Tourism as a main money spinner for the island's communist government has
virtually collapsed and remittances from exiled Cubans have almost ceased to
flow in the wake of tighter US regulations for money transfers to Cuba. Earlier
this year, the government in Havana tried to stem the economic decline with
wage and price reforms, including a currency reform that scrapped the so-called
convertible peso (CUC), leaving the nonconvertible Cuban peso (CUP) as the only
legal tender. As the freely convertible CUC has ceased to exist, the US
dollar has become the currency of choice for both Cubans and their government.
In October 2019, the communist rulers opened hard currency stores where you can
buy household appliances and car parts with dollars. Since June last year,
Cubans can also buy their groceries and sanitary products there provided they
have a foreign currency account with a bank and a debit card. At the
same time, shops charging only in nonconvertible CUP are struggling amid
falling supply — and as lines have been getting longer and longer, they've
become graphic reminders of Cuba's worsening economic situation. "Today
it's chicken meat, the next it's cooking oil — standing in line never
ends," says Barragan.
The coleros alternative Waiting
for hours to be able to do your daily shopping is a hassle especially for the
elderly. In times of a pandemic it is downright dangerous, increasing the risk
of spreading the virus. Since Cubans are used to dealing with economic
hardship, some of them have turned a problem caused by the government into a
private business model, becoming coleros by profession — people who provide
others with a service in exchange for a remuneration. The colero, which
is the derogatory term used by the government, sells a place at the front of
the line, which assures the buyer that he can get what he wants. But in order
to formalize this transaction, the colero has to claim the space by spending
the night outdoors in the line and sacrifice hours of his leisure time. Marco
Jimenz is a colero. He told DW that he once was employed at a state-run
optometric laboratory where he earned 280 CUP ($11.67, €9.79) a month. He
sometimes sold spectacle glass on the black market to improve his salary, he
says, until he was laid off because "there wasn't any glass anymore and we
were all sent home." "We received salaries for another two
months, and that was it." One day a friend had come up with the idea of
standing in line for other people to earn some money, he told DW. What
may look like a short line can suddenly swell bigger upon opening hours of
stores.
Cuban lines grow upfront During
the pandemic, social distancing rules require shopkeepers to allow only two
people into their stores at the same time, further swelling the ranks of those
waiting outside. A night curfew limiting opening hours had made matters worse,
said Jimenez. From 5 a.m. in the mornings, people are allowed to leave
their homes, and the first thing they do is mark down their place in the line
and leave again, he said. "When the stores open at 9 a.m., they
return to the marked spot, so that lines grow upfront. It can well happen that
suddenly you find 70 people in front of you instead of the 10 who actually lined
up when you came." Reserving a place for someone else earns a
colero 50 CUP per client, said Jimenez, which is quite a small income for the
time they spend. This is why he's decided to buy the groceries himself and
resell it for double the original price. "I buy chicken, minced meat,
mayonnaise, spaghetti — whatever is available," he says, noting that about
80% of the coleros, meanwhile, are resellers. People stand at the door
of their houses that were cordoned off amid quarantine measures in a restricted
area of Havana. Cuban authorities imposed sweeping measures to control a
surge of the coronavirus
Dismal job The communist
rulers have imposed stiff fines to curb the practice of reselling basic food
and sanitary products. Under a new law, shopkeepers are obliged to scan buyers'
personal ID documents to prevent people from lining up twice or more times
over. Jimenez claimed that he only went on his shopping sprees
"twice or three times a week maximum" to avoid raising the interest
of the authorities. He's got a list of fixed clients that reduces the risk of
getting caught, he said. The job earns him between 750 CUP and 1,000 CUP
a week — the equivalent of a little over $40 (€33). He had enough money to make
ends meet, he said, given that a government job he started about two months ago
added a little more to his overall income. He's been hired as a pesquisa —
someone who knocks on people's doors to find out if quarantine rules and
stay-at-home rules are adhered to. However, all he's hoping for is to return
to his former job as soon as possible. "Standing in the line at shops has
helped him survive," he argued, but he's grown tired of doing it, and
"won't miss standing in line" once these trying times are over.
^ Shortages and long-lines have
been and always will be a stable of a Communist Command Economy. The Communist
Dictatorships do not have to worry in the consumers face hardships or shortages
since they (the Dictatorship) will simply come down hard on anyone who complains.
Cuba and the Cubans only have one real choice to get rid of their shortages and
long-lines: transfer from a Communist Dictatorship to a Democracy. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/how-cubans-earn-a-living-from-standing-in-line/a-57175668
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