Cuba Liberalizes Economy as Economic Crisis and Protests Grow
The island’s communist government announced it would allow foreign investors to enter its nationalized retail industry as it faces shortages, blackouts, and new protests.

In a major departure from established economic policy, the Cuban government has announced it will allow foreign investors into Cuba's retail and wholesale industries for the first time since Fidel Castro nationalized those industries in 1969.
The move comes as Cuba faces one of its worst economic crises and a new wave of protests against the communist government in Havana. Though the communist government had recovered much of its political footing since unprecedented protests broke out all over the island last July over quality of life and repression of artists and musicians, the regime has seen its standing slip over the last month. Protests have emerged across the country as Cubans have voiced their discontent with days-long blackouts that have hit rural and interior areas of the island. Notable videos have circulated on social media of protests in Santiago de Cuba, Cienfuegos, and Holguin provinces as Cuba have taken to the streets in the dead of night.
#ULTIMAHORA en #Cuba nueva noche de protestas. Ahora en #SantaCruzdelNorte. El pueblo #cubano está cansado. #CubaEstadoFallido pic.twitter.com/BSWPJIOu2E
— Daniel Benítez (@danielbnews) August 10, 2022
These protests have targeted the Communist Party elite in particular. On August 5th, protestors in Holguin province torched a state-owned restaurant geared towards tourists. One resident of a neighboring town who spoke to the Cuban exile media outlet CiberCuba claimed it was connected to a nearby film festival strongly supported by the state. "Since we in Gibara aren't getting our power cut, because of the film festival, Freyre's losing the electricity it needs, plus the amount we need," the anonymous source said.
Concerns about blackouts have only increased after a massive fire destroyed eight oil storage tanks at a fuel depot in Matanzas province. At least two people died and hundreds were injured in the disaster. Five thousand people were also evacuated from the depot's vicinity.
https://twitter.com/KbreraMia/status/1556532689179533313
These tanks, which stored hundreds of thousands of gallons of oil, were a critical lifeline for the Cuban regime. In the immediate aftermath, Cuba's state electric company has projected significant electricity deficits in the coming weeks as demand remains high.
Inflation and shortages have also hit Cubans hard. Though Cuba is expected to see 3.4 percent GDP growth this year, inflation is approaching 30 percent as the Cuban peso has experienced sharp devaluation and rising costs for fuel and other imported goods.
Cuba's tourism industry, another key lifeline for the Caribbean nation, has also suffered in recent months. Western sanctions against Russia due to the war in Ukraine have stunted demand for tourism. Additionally, a major luxury hotel in Havana, the Hotel Saratoga, exploded during a gas leak back in May, killing over 40 people. The hotel was slated to open after being closed for two years, marking a huge blow to the state-run tourism industry.
This economic crisis is fueling a wave of migration from the island unseen in recent history. A study of Coast Guard and Customs and Border Patrol data published by the Center for Democracy in the Americas found that more Cubans have fled the island in the last year than fled during the entirety of the 1980 Mariel Boatlift and the 1994 Balsero Crisis.
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They could also just stop being socialist.
Freedom makes us rich, so it's no surprise that Cuba is dirt poor.
https://simulationcommander.substack.com/p/how-freedom-enriches-us
You're looking at it totally wrong. Stop with stupid facts and go with emotion. Freedom makes us rich, yes, but it also created inequality. That results in envy, which makes people feel bad. In case you haven't been following the news, inequality is the greatest challenge facing the country right now. The solution to this is socialism, which results in everyone being equally poor. When everyone is poor there's no one to envy. That's a lot better than wealth inequality.
You have even more inequality in a socialist country. The leaders and party members are rich and everyone else is dirt poor.
Lefty shits are immune to facts and evidence; 100 years of commie failures? Well we need to try harder!
There's an old joke of the Soviet Union where a ticket collector on a Moscow tram says, "tickets please, ladies and gentlemen" and a young woman says, "don't you mean, 'tickets please, comrade'?" and the ticket collector says, "are you kidding? Comrades drive around in big black shiny cars".
Communist Cuba, for the umpteenth time since 1990, announces to foreigners that it's giving them permission to invest.
Like all the other times, Cuba will, in a few years, renationalize the investments of the chumps.
What? Shortages, blackouts, party elites, in a workers paradise? This has to be the first time ever!!! #realsocialismneverbeentried
Everyone who has ever argued that "true communism has never been tried" never effectively addresses the rebuttal, "well then, as every attempt at getting to true communism so it can be tried has failed, according to you, that strongly suggests that in the real world it can't even be implemented". It's as realistic as the Second Coming, with about the same amount of rational underpinning.
Those regimes all say they were socialist as a way of preparing the people to eventually adopt communism. So maybe you'd have to say, "True socialism has never led to communism."
LOL yes. Another old Soviet joke. The Academy of Sciences is engaged by Brezhnev to develop a supercomputer forecaster. Eventually it's ready and ol' Leonid is given the honour of asking it the first question, and he asks, "how long will it be before the Soviet Union is truly communist?" The computer screen displays, "8,000 kilometres." Brezhnev is about to lose it big time with this nonsensical response until a junior programmer hurriedly says, "Explain" to the computer. The computer responds, "Comrade Leonid, after every new initiative, you say, 'we are now one step closer to true communism'".
Worth noting that China only started to boom once they liberalised their economy and even let self-admitted capitalists join the CCP.
Even the argument that Communism might not scale up for huge economies but may nevertheless be effective for smaller ones (easier to manage a centralised economy and address the pricing problem when it's a small economy) fails - because Cuba isn't that large an economy.
Whether Cubans themselves understand and accept that in a more capitalist environment, though the rewards be greater, the possibility of failure grows as well, that's another matter.
China's boom had little to do with economic system and everything to do with demographics. The Soviet Union had a similar boom without becoming capitalist.
And China is not a free market economy; in fact, much of China's economy is a sham these days.
China's boom had little to do with economic system and everything to do with demographics.
Not sure that's entirely correct.
https://www.imf.org/EXTERNAL/PUBS/FT/ISSUES8/INDEX.HTM
And China is not a free market economy.
Nor did I say otherwise. But it is freer than it was prior to the reforms mentioned in the paper above.
They'll cry for "Safety nets!"
Quite possibly! Not all safety nets are bad, however. Some safety nets may encourage entrepreneurship by making it less risky to set up one's own business, for example.
"Libertarian moment" ... in Cuba ... according to Reason.
Hey. Socialism will certainly work right this time.
So America was correct to impose sanctions - too bad the rest of the world didn't agree. Imagine what Cuba would be by now. Thriving economy; sealed borders; jobs based on merit not diversity.
Well, the US was wrong to treat Cuba as hostile immediately after the Castro takeover - but those electoral votes in Florida...
The fire did not destroy 8 tanks. Crucially, it destroyed 4 of the 8 tanks at the Matanzas farm. This is ALL NUMBERS, People. The fire was not a knockout blow, as it might have been had the whole farm gone up in flames.
La Revolucion struggles on, there as here.
Fuck the Cuban government. The USA should not do ANYTHING to help them with cash flow and would be nice, if they used their sizable power to prevent others from keeping them afloat. The CUBAN government and the CASTRO crime syndicate needs to fail.
It might be interesting to see how the "elites" live compared with the average Cuban resident.
A Canadian friend was telling me about his visit to Cuba a few years back and remarked that from a tourism standpoint, there just wasn't much there to spend money on. He got himself a nice hat, some rum, and maybe a few cigars, but for the most part he had lots of dollars that just didn't have goods to buy.