Miami Herald (Sunday)

In Cuba, a sharp gas-price hike arrives amid blackouts and shortages of milk and bread

- BY NORA GÁMEZ TORRES ngameztorr­es@elnuevoher­ald.com

Gasoline in Cuba will cost five times more starting Friday, a measure likely to drive other prices up amid news that the government can no longer distribute milk for young children or bread for the population without help from internatio­nal organizati­ons and the emergent private sector on the island.

Following swift criticism from the public, Cuban officials postponed the price increase for a month, citing a “cybersecur­ity incident.” But the minister of finance and prices, Vladimir Regueiro Ale, said on state television in the past week that the government had no other choice if it wanted to “correct economic distortion­s” and adjust the price of gas to the internatio­nal market.

He also acknowledg­ed that the price hike is likely to worsen galloping inflation.

“We know that this has consequenc­es on the cost of production. The measure in itself has an inflationa­ry impact; however, a group of decisions mitigate its impact,” he said, citing lower prices for private taxis that are a source of transporta­tion for a significan­t number of passengers in cities like Havana, where availabili­ty of public transporta­tion has declined.

The government will also start selling gas in dollars in a couple of dozen service stations around the island, hoping to capture foreign currency it says it will use to buy oil.

Cuba’s population is suffering hours-long electricit­y blackouts, a situation officials blame on the higher price of oil. The state electricit­y company said to expect blackouts on Friday night because it will not be able to meet over a third of the projected demand.

But a recent analysis by Reuters of oil shipments to the island raises questions about the government’s narrative, concluding that generation and distributi­on problems on the island may be the main causes for the crisis instead of supply.

On Friday morning, gas stations were closed, a measure the government said was necessary to update the systems with the new prices.

As expected, the price of the dollar rose, another four Cuban pesos Friday, and reached 314 pesos to the dollar. That leaves the average monthly state pension, 1,528 pesos, worth less than $5.

Inflation and an everrising cost of foreign currencies have left most of the population living on poverty wages. The dramatic collapse of agricultur­e and food production in the past few years has made matters worse, increasing fears about hunger and malnutriti­on on the island.

Agricultur­e Ministry officials said that in 2023 the country produced a billion fewer eggs and 122 million fewer liters of milk than the previous year.

Last week, officials said the government could not buy the flour needed to provide the single bread roll given to Cubans daily with their food ration cards. They blamed the “financial restrictio­ns” of the U.S. embargo — even though the sanctions authorize the sale of food by U.S. producers to the island.

Though the price of wheat flour has decreased almost 30% year over year, shortages of bread have been ongoing for months in provinces like Guantanamo and Sancti Spiritus, prompting the local government­s to partner with private enterprise­s that can buy the flour abroad.

Emerio González Lorenzo, the president of a stateowned food production conglomera­te, said last week that the government was “trying to buy” all the flour imported by private enterprise­s to cope with the current crisis.

Maria Gallar, a spokespers­on for the United Nations’ World Food Program, said Cuba has requested support to provide powdered milk to children.

Cuba does not produce enough milk to make it available to the entire population. Only children under age 7 and patients with some chronic diseases and dietary needs receive powdered milk monthly through the ration card. Officials said the government needs 2,000 tons of powdered milk each month to meet those needs.

Gallar declined to comment further, but according to the Spanish news agency EFE, which first reported the request to the U.N., this is the first time the island’s government has asked for food deliveries from the World Food Program. The agency said the government asked for aid at the end of last year and the program sent 144 tons in February.

On Friday, the Communist Party newspaper Granma said that the delivery of milk to children under 7 would be possible “in the coming days” thanks to a shipment of 375 tons of powdered milk from Brazil. The paper also said the government bought more milk in Brazil, Canada and other countries, including the United States.

“Five hundred tons of milk have been contracted with the United States, under the exceptions establishe­d by that government to sell certain products to the island,” the paper said in a rare acknowledg­ment of exceptions in the embargo to allow U.S. exports of food to the island.

Nora Gámez Torres: 305-376-2169, @ngameztorr­es

 ?? RAMON ESPINOSA AP file ?? Drivers wait their turn to fuel their vehicles at a gas station in Havana in July 2022. The cost of gasoline is expected to explode soon, causing costs of other commoditie­s to also rise because those supplies must be transporte­d by trucks to consumers. Meanwhile, the Cuban government will start selling gas in dollars to get needed foreign currency to buy oil.
RAMON ESPINOSA AP file Drivers wait their turn to fuel their vehicles at a gas station in Havana in July 2022. The cost of gasoline is expected to explode soon, causing costs of other commoditie­s to also rise because those supplies must be transporte­d by trucks to consumers. Meanwhile, the Cuban government will start selling gas in dollars to get needed foreign currency to buy oil.
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