9/24/2010

Cuba Finally Opens To New Economic Reforms



Cuban Entrepreneurs Open For New Business
Cuban small businessman can now repair broken items on a street in Havana with the full support of the Cuban government. Cuba is launching a series of major economic reforms that will effect the livelihood of all Cubans, including approving a number of small business licensees. Cuba elite communist ministers mapped out a dramatic shift in the new arena of free enterprise in Cuba by approving a huge list of small businesses, allowing ordinary Cubans to hire employees and even promising financing to a new breed of entrepreneurs.

The reforms were printed in the most popular Cuban Newspaper in a three-page spread in the Communist Party-daily Granma which seemed to create a society of haves and have-nots in the island of Cuba that has spent half a century doing everything possible to create an equal utopia.

Last week's announcement that the government will lay off 1,000,000 employees by the end of March is equal to one-tenth of the entire country's workforce and the biggest change in Cuba's economic system since opening of the Cuban economy.

For the first time, Cubans in 98 private businesses will be allowed to hire people other than their relatives, and they will be able to sell their services to the state as private independent contractors.

Accountants in Cuba
Accountants, currently only permitted to work for the state, can set out on their own, keeping the books for these new businesses. Cubans who want to rent their homes to travellers will no longer have to live on the premises and can hire staff. Even islanders authorized to live overseas though apparently not exiles can take part in the economic changes by renting out the cars and homes they leave behind.

Cuba's Central Banking Minister is analyzing a variety of ways to grant small-business financing and  forgivable loans that are crucial to any growing free-market system but which would have been unimaginable in Cuba just a few short weeks ago.

The decision to open up and change the economic rules on private employment in Cuba's economy is one of the steps the country has taken in the redesign of its economic policies in order to cut expenses and increase production and efficiency. Cuba's top newspaper, Granma reported that Economy Minister Marino Murillo Jorge and a vice-minister of labour and social security would oversee the transition of the new cuban economy in the hopes of a brighter future for all Cubans.
FOREIGN INVESTORS IN CUBA
Foreign investors welcomed the news and its another step in the right direction for the Cuban investment climate. Cuban, European and even American investors are now studying the new laws to see where the best opportunities may be uncovered. Other investors sa that its best to get in now right out of the gate to ensure that your future profits are locked in. Either way its going to be a very interesting opportunity for Cubans as they get there first taste of Capitalism and to take hold of their own economic future for the first time in over 4 years.

No comments:

Post a Comment