Wednesday, August 07, 2013

The Average Salary of Cubans

The Average Salary of Cubans
August 6, 2013
Isbel Díaz Torres

HAVANA TIMES — The "Average Salary in Figures" report for 2012,
published by Cuba's National Statistics and Information Bureau (ONEI)
this past June, reveals that the current average salary of Cubans is 466
pesos (CUP) a month.

This is roughly the equivalent of 20 CUC (US $22), the hard currency
which affords Cubans any real purchasing power on the island (though no
State employee is paid in it).

The report offers two series of statistical data. The first lists the
country's average monthly salary per province. Here, we find out that
Ciego de Avila (at 515 CUP) currently reports Cuba's highest salary,
while Santiago de Cuba (at 433 CUP) is at the bottom of the list.

The second set of statistics is considerably more interesting. It
reports the average monthly salaries of different "types of economic
activities". The results presented were:

Agriculture, hunting, forestry and fishing – 513 CUP
Mining and quarry work – 566 CUP
Manufacturing industry – 466 CUP
Electricity, gas and water – 522 CUP
Construction – 580 CUP
Retail, restaurants and hotels – 376 CUP
Transportation, storage and communications – 460 CUP
Financial establishments, insurance, real estate and services for
companies – 432 CUP
Garbage collection, social and personal services – 425 CUP

In this section, construction work reports the highest salaries, while
retail, restaurants and hotels come out last.

Concealment Strategies

According to the report's "methodological definitions", the second set
of indicators do not take into account incomes earned on the basis of
profit distribution or other payments made to workers in cash or kind.

Nor do they include earnings in convertible pesos, stemming from certain
types of payments and work incentives, which, if considered, would bring
up the average for "Retail, restaurants and hotels" ostensibly (to
mention only one case).

The arbitrary and absurd use of such "categories" – wholly divorced from
Cuban reality – is one of the ways in which the State conceals useful,
comparative information.

The difference between the average salaries earned in the State sector,
private foreign firms based in Cuba (with Cuban employees and managers),
cooperatives and the self-employed sector is the kind of information
that would have been useful to us.

It would also have been interesting to find out what differences exist
between that part of the population which comprises Cuba's "cadres,
leaders and officials" and all other employees (without administrative
or political duties).

In addition, the statistical "average" is deceitful in another, more
basic sense. For instance, if you have nine people earning 200 CUP a
month, and only one person earning 3000 CUP, your average would be 480
CUP, an acceptable figure which conceals a significant disparity within
the group.

The statistical figure that would have offered us truly revealing data
is not the "average" but the "mean", which reflects the variable which
occupies the central position in a series of organized data, or, in
other words, the figure around which the greatest number of values tend
to cluster.

In the previous example, the mean would be, accurately enough, 200 CUP –
useful information, if we're at all interested in knowing the real wages
of Cubans.

Disparities Within Classes

A computer expert employed by a municipal office of the Ministry of
Culture, earning a monthly salary of 345 CUP, would fall under the
category of "Garbage collection, social and personal services." The
question is: who else would fall under that category? Performers who
make 35,000 CUP for a single concert?

We come across a similar situation in other sectors, such as Public
Health. A little over 80 percent of the employees at a State workplace
in Havana (whose name I will not reveal) earns a lower-than-average
salary, while the salary of the top-earning manager is 3.3 times that of
the lowest-earning employee.

That individuals holding bureaucratic, non-productive positions should
earn the highest wages at State companies is not uncommon. Such are the
historical distortions of Cuba's labor system which, in this particular
regard, is no different than any private enterprise system around the world.

A substantial wage increase for Cuba's science and technology sector
(3,000 CUP, on average) was recently announced. This is the result of
structural changes taking place within State institutions that have been
transformed into "companies."

What Cuba's average monthly salary of 466 CUP probably conceals is that
fact that there are a handful of people earning huge amounts of money
while the immense majority is being paid miserable wages. This is
something that Raul Castro himself had to acknowledge some years ago,
when he stated that such salaries aren't even enough to guarantee daily
subsistence.

Not long ago, Vice-President Marino Murillo declared, before Parliament,
that the administrative barriers in the way of wage payments would be
eliminated next year, provided companies had the profits to pay such
unregulated salaries.

So, what will become of subsidized Cuban entities that have no
"profits", such as cultural, health, garbage collection and education
entities? It is reasonable to suspect that a less than decorous plan is
in store for these, though this, of course, isn't being announced.

These institutions, however, are precisely those that have earned the
Cuban revolution such a "noble" image at the international level. They
are also the areas referred to as "achievements of the revolution"
during the recent debates surrounding the Party's new Guidelines, when
we were told cutbacks would be made in other sectors of the economy in
order to maintain these.

The fact of the matter, however, is that these sectors show suspicious
signs of stagnation, with the possible exception of medical services
rendered abroad, while more and more conditions for the expansion of
private enterprise are being slowly developed (even though officials
insist that the "socialist enterprise" will be the most prevalent within
the country's economic system).

The statistics office also reports that the average salary has been on
the rise in recent years.

This information, however, is also misleading, owing to the fact that
this rise in wages has been accompanied by a surreptitious rise in the
price of basic products such as soap, cooking oil, rice, toilet paper,
beans and others, and the elimination of a number of subsidized products.

This entails, of course, a drop in the purchasing power of the CUP
which, in practice, means a drop in the salary earned by workers, who
are the victims of these fluctuations, wholly at the mercy of the State.

Source: "A look at the "average" salary paid to Cubans" -
http://www.havanatimes.org/?p=97506

No comments: