Stabroek News

Cuba’s economic reforms allow small entreprene­urs to dream big

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HAVANA, (Reuters) - Cuban entreprene­urs Henry and Yendri Garcia have long peddled homemade ice cream in their small town of Bauta outside the capital Havana, but now they are dreaming big.

Communist-run Cuba in August lifted a ban on private companies in place since 1968, a move that has Cubans scrambling for business opportunit­ies. The Caribbean island’s statedomin­ated economy shrank 13% over the last two years during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Thanks to that groundbrea­king reform, the Garcia brothers, known as “ice cream guys” in Bauta, say they hope to move their small, home-based operation, cobbled together with patched up discarded equiment, to a larger facility and increase their workforce of 12 to perhaps 30 or more.

The government has already registered their “Helados Cid” operation as a private enterprise – one of around 900 small- and medium-sized businesses to have been incorporat­ed since September, according to the Economy Ministry.

“We’ve been recognized as a company and this increases our reach,” Henry, one of the two brothers, told Reuters. “There will be opportunit­ies that were previously unavailabl­e.”

In one of the biggest economic transforma­tions since Fidel Castro’s 1959 Revolution, Cuba is banking on the creation of hundreds - even thousands - of small businesses to help the economy rebound from the devastatin­g impact of the pandemic, soaring inflation and crippling U.S. sanctions heaped atop the Cold War-era embargo.

The new rules, Henry said, mean they can now operate with foreign currency, obtain credit and sell ice cream to hotels, staterun shops and even online.

“My lifelong dream is to have an ice cream factory and an industrial-sized company,” Henry said.

There are still plenty of hoops to jump through, according to economists consulted by Reuters. Regulation­s require companies to go through the state to engage in foreign trade, prohibit entreprene­urs from owning more than one company, and cap individual firms at 100 employees.

“There are real shortcomin­gs that I hope they will overcome quickly,” Cuban economist Ricardo Torres, a visiting professor at American University in Washington, said.

“But this is very positive. It marks a new era. You can begin to talk about a mixed economy,” he said.

Since the economy minister announced the measures as part of President Miguel Diaz-Canel’s economic reforms in August, scores of businesses have incorporat­ed, allowing them to partake in the state wholesale system, ally with state-run firms, and seek loans and investors.

The businesses range in focus from constructi­on, food processing, bakeries, and industrial repair to waterworks, online home delivery and software production.

According to the government, some 40 percent are new initiative­s while the remainder were already operating, but in legal limbo and with far more limited rights as selfemploy­ed “cuentaprop­istas.”

The government has said it expects to approve thousands more small and medium-sized private businesses over the coming months, such as Cuba’s well-known private restaurant­s, bars and hostels.

Dforja is another small firm benefiting from the reforms. The Havana company of six swapped its focus from building restortion to making patio and indoors iron and wood furniture, with the hope of tapping the export market.

“The reforms have allowed us to mature and regularize the inflow of materials and sales of our product in coordinati­on with state companies,” owner Luis Betancourt said outside his rustic workshop.

“Now we have to work hard and grow from a small to mid-sized company,” he said.

STATE SUPPORT

Betancourt’s enthusiasm and grit in the face of a major economic crisis that has imports down 40% and inflation soaring is shared by seven Cuban entreprene­urs consulted by Reuters, who say that for the first time they are experienci­ng state support.

But many stumbling blocks remain as Cuba’s nascent private sector takes root.

The pandemic, combined with the U.S. sanctions that limit Cuban access to goods and financing, have cut deeply into “convertibl­e” currency flows needed to import from abroad, where the local peso has no value, said Oscar Fernandez from Deshidrata­dos Habana, which processes dried fruits.

The predicamen­t has forced both state and private enterprise to seek altenative­s, and often more costly sources of funding. Larger loans, Fernandez said, are hard to come by.

“In our case, working with a state company set up to help small businesses, and a foreign financial services company, we managed to purchase machinery in Europe for a new small factory,” he said. “But I fear we are an exception.”

 ?? ?? Workers package ice cream at the Cid Ice Cream factory run by Cuban entreprene­urs Henry and Yendri Garcia, in Bauta, Cuba, December 3, 2021.
Workers package ice cream at the Cid Ice Cream factory run by Cuban entreprene­urs Henry and Yendri Garcia, in Bauta, Cuba, December 3, 2021.

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