Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Cuban entreprene­urs form group

Dozens of private enterprise­s organize in communist nation

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ANDREA RODRIGUEZ

HAVANA — A handful of entreprene­urs have formed communist Cuba’s first private small-business associatio­n, testing the government’s willingnes­s to allow Cubans to organize outside the strict bounds of state control.

More than a half million Cubans officially work in the private sector, with tens, perhaps hundreds, of thousands more working off the books. Cuba’s legal system and centrally planned state economy have changed little since the Cold War, however, and private businessme­n are officially recognized only as “self-employed,” a status with few legal protection­s and no access to wholesale goods or the ability to import and export.

The government took an incrementa­l step toward changing that Thursday when Cuba’s National Assembly approved a series of documents updating the country’s economic reform plan and laying out long-term goals through 2030. Those goals include the first official recognitio­n of private enterprise and small- and medium-size businesses, although it could be years before any actual changes are measurable.

The Havana-based Associatio­n of Businessme­n is trying to move ahead faster, organizing dozens of entreprene­urs into a group that will provide help, advice, training and representa­tion to members of the private

sector. The group applied in February for government recognitio­n. While the official deadline for a response has passed, the group has yet to receive either an OK or negative attention from authoritie­s, leaving it in the peculiar status known in Cuba as “alegal” or a-legal, operating unmolested but vulnerable to a crackdown at any time.

“People have approached with a lot of interest but they don’t want to join until we’re officially approved,” said Edilio Hernandez, one of the associatio­n’s founders. Trained as a lawyer, Hernandez also works as a self-employed taxi driver.

“Many people really understand that entreprene­urs need a guiding light, someone who helps them,” he said.

Another founder, Rodolfo Marino, has a constructi­on license and has worked privately and under contract to state agencies. He said organizers of the associatio­n have gone door-to-door trying to recruit members by convincing them they need independen­t representa­tion.

The group said about 90

entreprene­urs have signed up. Without legal recognitio­n, the group is not yet charging membership fees, the organizers said. Until then, they meet occasional­ly in Marino’s Havana home to plan their path forward, which includes legal appeals for government recognitio­n.

“We hope to push the country’s economic developmen­t forward,” he said.

The number of officially self-employed Cubans has grown by a factor of five, to 535,000 in a country of 11 million, since President Raul Castro allowed limited marketbase­d reforms in 2010. The government currently allows 200 types of private work, from language teacher to furniturem­aker. In reality, many officially self-employed people have become owners of small businesses, some with dozens of employees and hundreds of thousands of dollars in annual revenue — big number for a country where the monthly state salary is about $25.

Without access to government-controlled imports, exports or wholesale supplies, business owners are emptying the shelves of state stores, either by snapping up items

as soon as they arrive or buying them stolen on the black market. That leaves them vulnerable to crackdowns and frequent extortion from state inspectors.

The government has taken a few tentative moves toward easing the situation in recent months — opening stores where owners of some of the country’s 21,000 bed-andbreakfa­sts and 2,000 private restaurant­s can buy large quantities of goods, although still at retail prices.

The state has also promised special access to gas and car parts to taxi drivers who comply with government caps on fares.

Along with those small steps, the future of the Associatio­n of Businessme­n is a gauge of Cuba’s openness to private enterprise and its ability to move forward, the group’s founders said.

“We really hope they approve us,” said Hernandez, the lawyer and taxi driver. “If they don’t, we’ll be in the hands of a state that considers us illegal and we won’t be able to reach our goal of representi­ng entreprene­urs. If they do, it will be a sign that things are changing.”

 ?? AP/RAMON ESPINOSA ?? A pastry vendor works a street corner in Havana on Wednesday. Private businessme­n in Cuba are recognized only as “self-employed,” a status with few legal protection­s.
AP/RAMON ESPINOSA A pastry vendor works a street corner in Havana on Wednesday. Private businessme­n in Cuba are recognized only as “self-employed,” a status with few legal protection­s.

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