Jamaica Gleaner

Cuba modifies some regulation­s unpopular with private sector

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CUBA’S GOVERNMENT has modified a series of measures unpopular with the country’s private sector, including lifting restrictio­ns on the number of business permits a person can have and the number of chairs there can be in restaurant­s, a top official said on Wednesday.

In July, authoritie­s announced tighter controls on selfemploy­ment, including that Cubans would no longer be able to run more than a single business, and high-earning businesses would pay new taxes, among other measures.

The controls were meant to prevent tax evasion, abuses and the accumulati­on of wealth after openings on the communist-run island had fuelled the rise of a prosperous upper-middle class.

Labour and Social Security Minister Margarita Gonzalez said the authoritie­s decided to modify some of those regulation­s as a result of months of meetings with representa­tives of the private sector to hear their complaints. The rules, with the revisions, take effect Friday.

Under the initial regulation­s announced in July, Cubans could have only one business permit – they couldn’t be a manicurist, rent a room and sell arts and crafts, for example. They can now have more than one permit as long as they are reasonable, Gonzalez said.

Another change removes an unpopular regulation that had limited the number of chairs allowed in privately owned restaurant­s to 50.

Self-employment “is a complement to state activity,” Gonzalez said, defending it as a source of employment, taxes and improvemen­ts for the population, while acknowledg­ing that “irregulari­ties have also been observed.”

One of the world’s last communist nations, Cuba has made minimal reforms in comparison with economic high-performers like China and Vietnam. But the changes it has made have allowed the number of licensed ‘self-employed’ workers to rise sharply since 2010, when Cuba began opening to more categories of private business. Thousands more Cubans work full- or parttime in private activities without a licence, though the large majority or Cubans still work in the state sector.

The new prosperity, often funded with capital from Cuban emigres overseas, has prompted resentment and complaints from the hundreds of thousands of Cubans who still live on state salaries averaging $30 a month.

 ?? AP ??
AP

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