The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Cuba says economy shrank this year in tandem with Venezuela crisis

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HAVANA: Cuba’s economy shrank 0.9 per cent this year in tandem with the crisis in key trading partner Venezuela, President Raul Castro told the National Assembly in a closed-door speech, predicting a slightly brighter outlook for 2017.

The figure suggests sharp economic contractio­n in the second half after the cash-strapped government slashed imports, investment and fuel in response to lower exports and a drop in cheap oil deliveries from Venezuela. It had reported 1 per cent growth for the first half.

“Restrictio­ns in cash and in the provision of fuel worsened in the second half,” Castro said, according to excerpts published by official media outlet Cubadebate.

“Financial tensions and challenges that might intensify again in certain circumstan­ces will persist, but we hope that gross domestic product (GDP) will grow moderately, by around two per cent (in 2017).”

Cuba’s centrally planned economy has struggled for decades with the US economic embargo and mismanagem­ent at home.

Market-style reforms and, more recently, a detente with the United States that has boosted remittance­s and the tourism sector, helped the economy grow on average at close to 3 per cent each year between 2011 and 2015.

Still, the long slump in global fuel prices is hurting many of Cuba’s top trading partners such as Angola, Venezuela and Brazil, and revenue from the sale of profession­al services to those countries has dropped.

Key ally Venezuela has slashed its provision of cheap oil and the drop in global commoditie­s prices is punishing Cuban exports of nickel, refined oil products and sugar.

Some experts fear that future growth from thawing relations with the United States may also be at risk since Republican Donald Trump’s victory in the US presidenti­al election.

Trump, who takes office Jan. 20, has vowed to ‘terminate’ President Barack Obama’s engagement with Cuba unless Havana gives the United States what he calls a ‘better deal.’

According to published excerpts of his speech, Castro did not comment on the future of Cuban-US relations, except to recall the negative impact of the embargo.

The president, who has promised economic reforms, did say foreign investment is one area that could improve.

Since approving a law to bolster foreign investment more than two years ago, Cuba has approved just US$1.3 billion worth of projects. It aims to take in US$2 billion annually, making investment an important growth driver.

Castro said it was necessary to “overcome the obsolete mentality, full of prejudices towards foreign investment.”

“We are not going towards capitalism, but we cannot be afraid of, or put obstacles in the way of, that which we can do within our laws,” he said, adding that investment in the energy sector was key.

A fiscal boost to production and investment should help fuel growth next year, according to the assembly’s Economic Commission. The fiscal deficit will rise to 12 per cent of GDP. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Yazuli Lloret, 15, poses for a photograph­er at the Cathedral Square in Havana, Cuba. Cuba’s economy shrank 0.9 per cent this year in tandem with the crisis in key trading partner Venezuela, President Raul Castro told the National Assembly in a closed-door speech, predicting a slightly brighter outlook for 2017. — Reuters photo
Yazuli Lloret, 15, poses for a photograph­er at the Cathedral Square in Havana, Cuba. Cuba’s economy shrank 0.9 per cent this year in tandem with the crisis in key trading partner Venezuela, President Raul Castro told the National Assembly in a closed-door speech, predicting a slightly brighter outlook for 2017. — Reuters photo

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