The Mercury News

Cuba lifting freeze on tourism business

- By Michael Weissenste­in and Andrea Rodriguez

HAVANA >> A 16-month freeze on new private restaurant­s and bed-and-breakfasts will end in December when Cuba’s communist government implements new regulation­s meant to prevent tax evasion and the accumulati­on of wealth, state media said Tuesday.

Cuban officials who announced the change said that the private sector had become a necessary part of the island’s state-dominated economy but required tighter controls.

A surge in tourism after the 2015 normalizat­ion of U.S.-Cuba relations fueled the rise of a prosperous Cuban upper-middle class whose businesses often depended on small-scale bribery and the purchase of goods stolen from state-run enterprise­s.

The new prosperity, often

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

Under the measures announced Tuesday, Cubans will no longer be able to run more than a single business and entreprene­urs will be required to conduct all transactio­ns through accounts

in state-run banks, officials told state media. High-earning businesses will pay new taxes and entreprene­urs who put enterprise­s in the names of friends or relatives face permanent cancellati­on of business permits.

“I was hoping that they’d respect those of us who have had more than one license for a long time,” said Camilo Condis, who owns an apartment that he rents out nightly and works in a private restaurant. “This is sort of thing only leads to irregulari­ties and corruption.”

One of the world’s last communist nations, Cuba has made minimal reforms in comparison with economic high-performers like China and Vietnam. The government today is cashstrapp­ed, crippled by low productivi­ty, theft and absenteeis­m and struggling to reduce the public payroll despite maintainin­g salaries at levels that are barely livable for many, despite free education, health, housing and subsidized food.

The number of licensed “self-employed” workers, a catch-all category including everyone from a restaurant owner to a janitor, rose from 157,351 in 2010, when Cuba began opening to more categories of private business, to 591 456 in May.

Tens, perhaps hundreds of thousands more Cubans work full or part-time in private activities without a license.

 ?? DESMOND BOYLAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES ?? Cuba has made minimal reforms compared with economic high-performing communist nations like China and Vietnam.
DESMOND BOYLAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES Cuba has made minimal reforms compared with economic high-performing communist nations like China and Vietnam.

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