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Cuban draft rules propose curtailing fledgling private sector

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HAVANA, (Reuters) - A draft of new Cuban economic regulation­s proposes increasing state control over the private sector and curtailing private enterprise, a copy of the document seen by Reuters showed.

The tightening may signal that the ruling Cuban Communist Party fears that free market reforms introduced eight years ago by President Raul Castro may have gone too far, amid a broader debate about rising inequality.

The draft document, circulatin­g among Cuba experts and private entreprene­urs, goes beyond proposed restrictio­ns announced in December.

For example, it would allow homes only one license to operate a restaurant, cafeteria or bar. That would limit the number of seats per establishm­ent to 50. Many of Havana’s most successful private restaurant­s currently hold several licenses enabling them to have a seating capacity of 100 or more.

There is uncertaint­y over the direction of economic policy generally as Cuba prepares in April to mark the end of six decades of rule by Castro and his older brother Fidel, who stood down formally as a leader in 2008.

That has been heightened by U.S. President Donald Trump partially rolling back the Obama-era detente with the United States.

The head of the Communist Party’s reform commission, Marino Murillo, announced restrictio­ns on the private sector in December, some of them included in the new document. But the draft regulation­s go into greater detail and show how far the push back could go.

“The decree strengthen­s control at a municipal, provincial and national level” over the private sector, according to the 166-page document, dated Aug. 3, 2017 and signed by Marcia Fernández Andreu, deputy chief of the secretaria­t of Cuba’s Council of Ministers.

The document said resolution­s were drafted by the reform commission and were being sent to provincial and national organs of administra­tion for consultati­on. Reuters could not independen­tly verify its authentici­ty. Cuban authoritie­s did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Some analysts said they suspected the draft was leaked to gauge public opinion and could be revised.

The regulation­s state that measures that will apply to infraction­s will be more “rigorous.” The government has increased criticism of wealth accumulati­on over the past year and gone on the offensive against tax evasion and other malpractic­es in the private sector.

The number of self-employed Cubans soared to 567,982 as of the middle of last year, versus 157,731 in 2010 at the start of the reform process designed to boost Cuba’s centrally planned economy.

Private sector workers now make up roughly 12 percent of the workforce, but the prosperity of some Cuban entreprene­urs, particular­ly those working in the tourist sector and receiving hard currency, has become a source of tension.

The average state monthly wage is $30, the same sum a B&B owner can charge for a night’s stay.

The restrictio­ns unveiled by Murillo in December included limiting business licenses to a single activity per entreprene­ur.

Some entreprene­urs had hoped they could get around that by transferri­ng business licenses, for activities as diverse as manicures or bookkeepin­g, to family members.

It was unclear from the draft document whether the measures would be applied retroactiv­ely.

Murillo said in December the number of categories in which self employment would be permitted would be reduced and in some cases consolidat­ed. For example, manicurist, masseuse and hairdresse­r would fall under an expanded beauty salon license.

The draft lists 122 categories, down from approximat­ely 200 previously.

The document calls for a new division under the Ministry of Labour to administer and control self-employed work.

 ??  ?? Marino Murillo
Marino Murillo

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