Houston Chronicle

Nations defy Trumpwith lifeline for Cuba

- By Alonso Soto, Ben Bartenstei­n and Alessandra Migliaccio

Members of the Paris Club, an informal group of rich nations, are close to suspending Cuba’s debt obligation­s for this year, in a move that defies U. S. attempts to block any financial relief to the communist island.

A group of over a dozen countries at the Parisbased creditor group will likely agree to a request from Cuba to delay a debt payment with these nations due at the end of October, according to three people familiar with the negotiatio­ns. The decision seeks to help the Caribbean nation to mitigate the fallout of the pandemic, the people said, declining to be named because talks are private.

Neither the total amount of the relief nor the length of the moratorium was immediatel­y available. Cuba, which owed $ 5.2 billion to the Paris Club as of December 2019, initially requested a 2-year suspension on payments.

Schwan Badirou- Gafari, secretary- general of the Paris Club, declined to comment.

The pandemic’s devastatin­g effects over the economy this year have increased the pressure on rich countries to pardon or reschedule obligation­s from poorer nations. Earlier this week top economies agreed to renew a debt- relief initiative for the low- income countries through at least the first half of 2021. Cuba doesn’t qualify for that relief.

The U. S., which has lobbied against the suspension, cannot veto the moratorium efforts because approval doesn’t require the consensus of all the 22 members of the club, the people said. Talks are carried out separately between Cuba and a group of 14 creditors, which includes the U. K., Spain, Japan and Canada, they said.

The Trump administra­tion earlier this year contacted Paris Club members to try to bar the deferral, according to two people familiar with the matter. The White House is putting pressure on its former Cold War foe in a stance that’s popular with conservati­ve Hispanic voters in Florida, a key battlegrou­nd state in the upcoming Nov. 3 presidenti­al election.

The White House declined to comment when contacted by Bloomberg.

Trump’s push to unravel the rapprochem­ent with Cuba started by his predecesso­r Barack Obama has hindered the recovery of the island’s state- driven economy, which continues to survive on tourismand remittance­s from workers abroad despite attempts to open up.

While the government has largely contained the coronaviru­s from spreading, the pandemic has ravaged its tourism industry and its economy is expected to shrink nearly 4% this year, according to the United Nations.

Investment firm CRF I Ltd. in February sued Cuba in a London court to force the country to repay debt it defaulted in the 1980s.

CRF is one of three funds and commercial banks that holds Cuban debt representi­ng a face value of $1.4 billion.

To counter the downturn, Cuban President Miguel Diaz- Canel unveiled a reform package last week that ends the country’s dual currency system and scraps key subsidies.

Already short on cash, Cuba signed a deal with its Paris Club creditors in 2015 to write off $ 8.5 billion in outstandin­g debt and repay the remaining obligation­s annually during a period of 18 years. The U. S. was not included in that agreement.

U. S. officials have argued that the debt relief wasn’t merited and that the Cuban government could have repaid its arrears if it hadn’t squandered funds from ally Venezuela, two of the people said.

The Paris Club has joined the Group of 20 leading economies in delaying a potential $12 billion in debt payments from 73 of the world’s poorest countries.

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