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https://foreignpolicy.com/2019/07/15/the-end-of-cubas-entrepreneurship-boom/

The End of Cuba’s Entrepreneurship Boom

 

BY CAROLINE KURITZKES

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Between 2014 and 2017, just as then-U.S. President Barack Obama was working to thaw over 50 years of frozen relations between Cuba and the United States, the Havana lawyer Alfonso Larrea Barroso and his two business partners were busy making a fortune. In a span of three years, the annual revenue from Scenius, their financial services cooperative, multiplied by a factor of 10,000, skyrocketingfrom $280 to $2.8 million in total revenues. Cuban ministries and state-owned firms hired it to balance top-secret budget ledgers, U.S. Congress members and State Department officials courted them in Washington.

The good times didn’t last. In June 2017, U.S. President Donald Trump curtailed Cuba-bound travel and banned U.S. commerce with enterprises owned by the Cuban military. Later that summer, Cuban authorities abruptly shut down the thriving cooperative.

 

The closure was prompted by the government’s accusation that Scenius had provided unauthorized financial services. Larrea believes the charges are baseless. In the fall of 2017, the association sued the Ministry of Finance, the regulatory body that ordered the shutdown, and drew up an appeal that was eventually rejected. “When we asked to see the ruling in writing, they denied our request. They barely answered us. It became clear that it was fundamentally a political issue,” Larrea said.

The closure of Scenius was part of a more adversarial approach to nonstate enterprise that the Cuban Communist Party has adopted the last two years, after almost a decade of private-sector development. The same month Larrea and his partners lost the cooperative, the government of Raúl Castro, Cuba’s then-president, froze the issuing of new licenses for the nation’s small business owners. The move put the brakes on 2011 policy guidelines that had sparked a sizable yet regulated private-sector boom, generating an estimated 18 percent of Cuba’s gross national income.

Entrepreneurs are facing a two-front attack from a U.S. executive branch resistant to commercial and travel ties to the island, and from Cuban officials.

Castro left office in April 2018, but Cuba’s new president, Miguel Díaz-Canel, seems just as determined to decelerate the island’s economic opening. As U.S. tourism and trade recede, the Communist Party has in turn abandoned diplomatic goodwill and escalated its own private-sector crackdown, leaving small-business owners scrambling. Entrepreneurs are facing a two-front attack from a U.S. executive branch resistant to commercial and travel ties to the island, and from Cuban officials who have come to perceive the country’s small businesses less as partners in Cuba’s opening than as competition to state-owned firms.

Before the permit freeze, between early 2013 and 2017, Cuba had approved 439 nonagricultural cooperatives, authorizing these privately managed associations to provide construction, retail, transportation, and other key economic services for the first time in 50 years. Meanwhile, the number of Cuban entrepreneurs exploded by more than 37 percent, and nonstate businesses came to account for almost a third of national employment, according to government figures. The true increase was even more substantial, as thousands of Cubans not counted in official estimates also flocked to the private sector without licenses. U.S. tourism to Cuba soared from 92,000 to 618,000 annual visitors during the three-year detente, and by 2016, private businesses were raking in about one-third of the island’s annual tourism revenues, according to the Brookings Institution.

As U.S.-Cuban relations soured, so too did the Cuban government’s attitude toward the fledgling nonstate businesses. “We will take concrete steps to ensure that investments flow directly to the people, so they can open private businesses and begin to build their country’s great, great future,” Trump said in Miami during his June 2017 Cuba policy announcement. But tightening the U.S. embargo and travel controls has had the opposite effect. Though private guesthouses, boutique hotels, restaurants, and bars had multiplied to absorb the unexpected tourism deluge, once U.S. travel restrictions were back on the books, the inflow of visitors seemed likely to decline. The Cuban government backpedaled, stalling the country’s economic liberalization.

Ultimately, Larrea’s cooperative got caught in the policy turnaround. He believes the Cuban government viewed his organization’s success as a “strong threat” to the state-run economy. “Economically, we were demonstrating that there was another way of doing things … that the private sector is more efficient than the state sector,” he said.

“Economically, we were demonstrating that there was another way of doing things … that the private sector is more efficient than the state sector.”

Things grew even worse for business owners like Larrea in July 2018, when Díaz-Canel hiked up performance standards, penalties, fines, and red tape for the country’s estimated 580,000 entrepreneurs. His administration also expanded the discretionary powers of executive agencies to inspect, punish, and curtail Cuban entrepreneurship.

 

The measures were issued as part of Díaz-Canel’s first policy proclamation, though many were approved under his predecessor. They reduced the number and scope of occupations authorized for private-sector activity. Private real estate brokers, sports coaches, and art, music, and language instructors are explicitly forbidden from hiring employees and forming academies or agencies. Entrepreneurs must open bank accounts with three months’ worth of taxes on deposit and provide affidavits and other paperwork demonstrating the sources of their investment.

“The new legislation is complicated, to the extent that it’s almost impossible to comply. … No one understands why you need to maintain a quota of three months’ taxes eternally in the bank,” an Airbnb landlord in Havana’s upscale neighborhood of Vedado told me. Yet for those who fail to meet the requirements, the punishments are steep. Local ministries, not courts, now have the power to seize private property and confiscate licenses. They can also levy fines of thousands of dollars.

Stringent record-keeping mandates could also wipe out supply chains or push underground entrepreneurs who, due to routine shortages, stock their businesses through friends and relatives abroad, often in violation of Cuban restrictions against the resale of foreign imports. Entrepreneurs found their wholesale supply further constricted in April, when the Trump administration announced new controls on remittances to the island, on top of a second round of travel restrictions and a cruise ship ban in June that will only further eviscerate a dwindling U.S. tourism base. U.S. sanctions blocking oil shipments from Venezuela, Cuba’s longtime patron, have made matters even worse. Already pressed for hard currency, Havana has been forced to cut back imports of foodstuffs and other essentials in order to purchase fuel from new trading partners.

The effects are visible. Food scarcity became so acute this May that Cubans waited in five-hour lines for rationed chicken and went weeks at a time without eggs. Bakeries and cake shops were shuttered for lack of flour from early December through New Year’s Day. In Havana, locating basic provisions often involves a trek of 100 blocks or more. Such trials are onerous not only for the self-employed, but also for state-sector workers, who are forced to compete for consumer goods in the same stores as entrepreneurs stocking their businesses.

“Sometimes there’s no toilet paper. Suddenly, without flour, there is no bread; there’s no ham, cheese, or milk. But when you find any of this, it’s very expensive too,” said the Airbnb landlord, describing how she procures breakfast for her clients amid chronic supply shortages. “By the time you arrive at the store, it could be gone.”

There is some reason for hope. A controversial July 2018 restriction limiting entrepreneurial activity to one license per person was scaled back in December after public outcry. The move showed that the government was somewhat responsive to popular pressure and recognized that the private sector will continue to play a necessary, though tightly regulated, role in the Cuban economy.

Parts of the legislation that were kept in place include important employee rights and protections and anti-discrimination clauses, a response to public misgivings that the private sector’s revival has also exacerbated income inequality and racial prejudice. “Taxes, the control of funding for your business, the control of contracts … that’s something you can call a benefit of the new legislation,” Seida Barrera Rodríguez, a commercial lawyer, professor, and researcher at the University of Havana, told me. “License owners are complaining that it’s more work for them. But it protects their workers, who are the weakest right now.”

Still, with Venezuelan oil sales on the decline and new austerity measures and rationing schedules on the books, shortages are intensifying by the week, and the future looks rather bleak for the country’s self-employed. Now more than ever, entrepreneurs and public employees alike depend on small businesses for living wages and vital staples. Outrage swept the island this spring when a high-profile commander proposed on national television raising ostriches, Caribbean rodents known as hutias, and crocodiles for human consumption, rather than building up private-sector alternatives to staggering production shortfalls.

Yet on balance, Cuban officials seem less fazed by public discontent than they are by the prospect of entrepreneurs amassing outsized financial and political power.

Cuban officials seem less fazed by public discontent than they are by the prospect of entrepreneurs amassing outsized financial and political power.

Small-business owners are finding it increasingly difficult to withstand government-led opposition to private-sector activity. “The challenge of running [a nonstate business] in Cuba, fundamentally, is self-preservation, let alone growth,” said one of Larrea’s co-founders at Scenius. “Growth is always dangerous. … Because there’s always restriction, because there’s always control. … The challenge is to stay alive.”

So long as U.S. officials continue their stranglehold on travel and trade, Cuba can expect a future where reactionary sectors of government are given greater influence, and the country’s financial recovery is collateral damage to the party’s survival. With a sense of foreboding and unmet urgency, Cubans can only wait while the lines get longer and the accordion of reform and counter-reform plays on.

Reporting for this story was supported by Yale University’s Gordon Grand Fellowship and Henry Hart Rice Foreign Residency.

Posted

It's all a cycle, and it's horrible. We've had 50 years of sanctions which proved a complete failure and actually perpetuated communism. Subsequently, we had 6 years of released tensions. Since these six years, private business has begun to show up in major cities

  Now that sanctions restarted, these private enterprises are closing down and justifying the crappy communism to continue. 

I visit Florida often and It's funny to see even ex Patriots want sanctions citing "no progress" from the past six years, but then watching the past 50 years and asking for "more of that". Free trade leads to private business, and capitalism. That is a fact and supported by real data from around the world. It is Austrian/Chicago school principle, and one that transcends... (I'm leaving it at "transcends" because if I finish that thought, I'm breaking forum rules).

In the years before renewed sanctions, we saw more free market progress in the country than ever.

Some cities and villages did not enjoy this, but that's because it never was given a chance to spread. Economics does not just happen instantly. If you see free market tendencies in a country stay the course, it will happen with more time. To go back to a policy that led to nothing but more of the same is ridiculous. 

 

  • Like 4
Posted
9 hours ago, BoliDan said:

It's all a cycle, and it's horrible. We've had 50 years of sanctions which proved a complete failure and actually perpetuated communism. Subsequently, we had 6 years of released tensions. Since these six years, private business has begun to show up in major cities

  Now that sanctions restarted, these private enterprises are closing down and justifying the crappy communism to continue. 

I visit Florida often and It's funny to see even ex Patriots want sanctions citing "no progress" from the past six years, but then watching the past 50 years and asking for "more of that". Free trade leads to private business, and capitalism. That is a fact and supported by real data from around the world. It is Austrian/Chicago school principle, and one that transcends... (I'm leaving it at "transcends" because if I finish that thought, I'm breaking forum rules).

In the years before renewed sanctions, we saw more free market progress in the country than ever.

Some cities and villages did not enjoy this, but that's because it never was given a chance to spread. Economics does not just happen instantly. If you see free market tendencies in a country stay the course, it will happen with more time. To go back to a policy that led to nothing but more of the same is ridiculous. 

 

To blame the US President and his policy for Cuba's failed socialist economy is ridiculous IMO. In order for a communist govt to survive, it needs total control and domination over it's people. A free market economy filled with private entrepreneurs is a conflict of interest. Please refrain from blaming our country for the situation in Cuba and it's government policies. 

  • Like 2
Posted

I can’t imagine trying to run a business or start a business under these terms.  As a small business owner I’m inundated with monthly/quarterly reporting for the various states we conduct business in but I have comfort in knowing that as long as we comply with the regulations and requirements in place, we’ll be allowed to compete for business in those states.  A free market economy leads to prosperity.  

  • Like 2
Posted
2 hours ago, NYgarman said:

Just to be clear my country (USA) did not place Castro and his ideology into power 60 odd years ago. 

Actually we did.  Paved a clear path for that.  We couldn't have done a better job putting Castro into power.

  • Like 4
Posted
4 hours ago, Cold Smoke said:

Well, either the US embargo has had an effect or it hasn't,

The embargo is stupid and has failed miserably.

It is inhumane and counterproductive and largely laughed at by the other nations of the world.

The US should drop the embargo and stop embarrassing itself.

 

The embargo is probably the only thing that has kept the Castro's in power. As the story said entrepreneurship is dead AGAIN. Let the people see the life on the other side it will change!

  • Like 3
Posted
4 minutes ago, jackupster said:

The embargo is probably the only thing that has kept the Castro's in power. As the story said entrepreneurship is dead AGAIN. Let the people see the life on the other side it will change!

Fear has kept the Castro's in power. Cuba has over 11 million people. Are you telling me that isn't enough to stage a coup d'état and over throw one dictator and a small military? Of course it is. But if you keep the citizens in fear and poverty, it is not possible for government change.

  • Like 1
Posted
1 hour ago, NYgarman said:

Fear has kept the Castro's in power. Cuba has over 11 million people. Are you telling me that isn't enough to stage a coup d'état and over throw one dictator and a small military? Of course it is. But if you keep the citizens in fear and poverty, it is not possible for government change.

So you're missing my point. If they start to get a taste of something better...they will be motivated to fight for it. So yes the embargo has helped keep them in poverty! 

 

  • Like 2
Posted
17 minutes ago, jackupster said:

So you're missing my point. If they start to get a taste of something better...they will be motivated to fight for it. So yes the embargo has helped keep them in poverty! 

 

NYgarman in the past has had some interesting viewpoints of the people of Cuba in general, as well as the country as a whole..  Best to just let him be.

Posted

Let's just be thankful that Cuba has not really experienced the internet and how many corporations are now selling direct to end users.

Can you imagine it? Cubatobaco selling via a website with orders fulfilled by Amazon?

 

Posted
2 hours ago, NYgarman said:

. Are you telling me that isn't enough to stage a coup d'état and over throw one dictator and a small military?

......you could only say that if you haven't spent some serious time there. 

It is far more complicated than that. 

The Cuban Govt is to blame for the the current economic mess. US foreign policy on Cuba can only be blamed for keeping this depotic junta in power. 

  • Like 4
Posted
3 minutes ago, El Presidente said:

......you could only say that if you haven't spent some serious time there. 

It is far more complicated than that. 

The Cuban Govt is to blame for the the current economic mess. US foreign policy on Cuba can only be blamed for keeping this depotic junta in power. 

Valid point. Agreed.

Posted

A ? For those in the know. What would happen if the embargo was lifted, trade was allowed, and we ignored Cuba's government and let them do as they want? Would the people be better off, would the government pull back restrictions or tighten it grip?

Posted

Cuba could be a tremendously successful country without America...if the Cuban govt would allow a capitalist economy to really get going.  The crony govt would have infinitely more power and influence if they did because they’d be in control of so much more money.

Posted
11 hours ago, dowjr1 said:

Cuba could be a tremendously successful country without America...if the Cuban govt would allow a capitalist economy to really get going.  The crony got would have infinitely more power and influence if they did because they’d be in control of so much more money.

I don’t know—I suspect without the embargo Castro would have been swapped out for two or three other dictators by now. One of the ways the US kept Castro in power was that we let all the agitators who would have overthrown him move to the States. The next would-have-been Machado/Batista/Castro probably owns a thriving business in Tampa right now.

Actually, you could make the case that the embargo created a great outcome for the US at Cuba’s expense. Because so many motivated and restless and angry Cubans left Cuba, we got a lot of solid Americans out of the deal.

Posted
16 hours ago, El Presidente said:

The Cuban Govt is to blame for the the current economic mess. US foreign policy on Cuba can only be blamed for keeping this depotic junta in power

So is it really that simple, if Russia and Venezuela had not keep Cuba afloat would the embargo have actually had its desired effects. Mute point now but my guess is China will step in as it has all over Latin america, take all the cigars and prop up Cuba for another 50 yrs. Or maybe Trump will wander down and explain to them how Cuba could be a shinning star and both the people and government would be way better off with alittle capitalism and really screw up the cigar market. The embargo does seem to be having a bit more effect, maybe it's time to give diplomacy another try. The question is could the current leaders let go of their oppressive hold over the people and move to a more supportive, enriching environment. Their current attitudes dont seem to be working for the people or gov. 

Posted
3 hours ago, GWG said:

The question is could the current leaders let go of their oppressive hold over the people and move to a more supportive, enriching environment.

The answer is : No.

  • Like 1
Posted

For about a year now there has been timed shortages. No cooking oil for a while, then rice, then bread, eggs. The beer has been super suspect in that time frame as they don't have the raw materials to manufacture. So the locals try to "inventar" some cerveza for local consumption. Bad quality, no alcohol, horrible taste. Lately I just take down my own beer from the US. For about a month in May-June there wasn't anything sold in the bodegas through the ration card system. My wife went down with suitcases of food to give to her family a few weeks ago. Lines, with hundreds in front of a food store waiting to get in. Then all of the sudden some food started coming back through the ration system and chicken was available in good amounts. Then something else becomes scarce, I remember not too long ago there was no salt and everyone was asking me to bring salt from the US. If you don't have family abroad you're not doing well. John

Posted
33 minutes ago, JohnnyO said:

For about a year now there has been timed shortages. No cooking oil for a while, then rice, then bread, eggs. The beer has been super suspect in that time frame as they don't have the raw materials to manufacture. So the locals try to "inventar" some cerveza for local consumption. Bad quality, no alcohol, horrible taste. Lately I just take down my own beer from the US. For about a month in May-June there wasn't anything sold in the bodegas through the ration card system. My wife went down with suitcases of food to give to her family a few weeks ago. Lines, with hundreds in front of a food store waiting to get in. Then all of the sudden some food started coming back through the ration system and chicken was available in good amounts. Then something else becomes scarce, I remember not too long ago there was no salt and everyone was asking me to bring salt from the US. If you don't have family abroad you're not doing well. John

I was in discussions with a mate there on Monday. He has been there for 29 years  and right now is the worst that he has seen it. 

  • Sad 1

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