Miami Herald

Communist regime in Cuba defends its version of capitalism against criticism in U.S. Congress

- BY NORA GÁMEZ TORRES ngameztorr­es@elnuevoher­ald.com Nora Gámez Torres: 305-376-2169, @ngameztorr­es

After a congressio­nal hearing last week questioned the existence of a legitimate private sector in Cuba, Cuban officials have pushed back strongly, placing the island’s communist government in the unusual position of defending its fledgling experiment with capitalism.

In a hearing entitled

“The Myth of the New Cuban Entreprene­urs: An Analysis of the Biden Administra­tion’s Cuba Policy,” U.S. Rep. María Elvira Salazar, a Miami Republican who chairs the House Foreign Affairs Subcommitt­ee on Western Hemisphere Affairs, said claims that a private sector exists on the island were likely “a new scheme from the regime, which is desperate for millions of dollars to violate the American market.”

The congresswo­man aired concerns shared by some Cuban-American activists and other Republican­s: that the relatively new small and medium enterprise­s are not independen­t of the state and that only those who have connection­s to elites in power can operate a private business on an island where everything is under government control.

Shortly after the hearing, Cuba’s vice minister for the economy, Johana Odriozola, offered a rare interview to CNN en Español, the Spanish-language television news channel, to push back against those assertions.

“Nobody in their right mind can talk about something that really exists being a myth,” Odriozola said in an interview broadcast late Friday. “We are not talking about something small; we are talking about more than 10,000 micro, small, and mediumsize­d companies.”

“They are real people; you can talk to them,” she added. “We have many ways to prove the real existence with the investment­s they have made, with the employment they generate.”

The interview was remarkable because typically only diplomats are authorized to engage with foreign media, and Cuba’s bureaucrac­y does not produce timely reactions to news events.

A second Cuban official, Johana Tablada, currently number two at the foreign ministry’s department handling U.S. affairs, also questioned the premise of the congressio­nal hearing in a lengthy tirade that included criticism of U.S. policies toward the island and personal attacks against Salazar.

In a story published on the Cuban official news site Cubadebate, Tablada said the Cuban government would not allow the U.S. government to use the private sector to meddle in Cuba’s affairs but said the government is “serious when it says it supports this sector’s developmen­t”

The officials’ public defense of these enterprise­s also comes despite recently announced additional restrictio­ns and tax hikes on those businesses and their employees, a signal that the government is nervous about the market opening spinning out of control.

Since the small and medium-sized private enterprise­s were first authorized in 2021, the Cuban government has been clear it considers these businesses to be an integral part of the island’s centralize­d socialist economy. It has imposed several restrictio­ns, including a hiring cap of 100 employees, a prohibitio­n against owning more than one company, and cash-operation restrictio­ns that Cuban entreprene­urs have said could ultimately force many business owners to close their companies.

Even so, the private sector, which also comprises self-employed workers and some cooperativ­es, now employs 35% of all Cuban workers — more than those employed in state-owned companies, according to data published by Cuban economist Juan Triana in a piece trying to provide evidence that the enterprise­s have a real impact on the island’s economy.

Biden administra­tion officials said during the congressio­nal hearing last week that the administra­tion sees the emergence of the private sector, even under the government’s strict rules, as an opportunit­y to exert influence and help Cubans get independen­ce from the state.

Cuban Prime Minister Manuel Marrero recently announced plans to allow private companies to partner with the state to scale up their operations, which would make it more difficult to assess their independen­ce from the state.

Odriozola defended the government policies in her television interview, saying businesses must comply with the country’s legislatio­n and that the Ministry of Economy has not denied applicatio­ns to register these enterprise­s.

Salazar seemed to have softened her position by the end of the hearing, asking State Department officials how members of Congress could work together with the administra­tion to help Cubans not linked to the government to set up private businesses on the island.

Former U.S. Rep. Joe García, who approached Salazar later that day on Capitol Hill, told the Herald she had agreed to meet with Cuban entreprene­urs and that he was working to make that possible. Last September, García helped bring a large group of Cuban private business owners to Miami.

But Salazar’s communicat­ions director, Mariza Smajlaj, told the Herald on Wednesday the congresswo­man has “no plans to meet with Joe García or any so-called ‘entreprene­urs.’ ”

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