Sunday, February 04, 2007

Raul Looks to the East

Raúl Looks to the East
Fidel is still around, and officially in charge. But his brother Raúl
may be about to ditch Cuba's Soviet economics in favor of Beijing's
free-market model.
By Joseph Contreras
Newsweek International

Feb. 12, 2007 issue - After months out of the public eye, Fidel Castro
was suddenly back last week, appearing on Cuban TV for a meeting with
Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez. Though he's put on some weight since
his last appearance, the mumbling Cuban dictator was an apt symbol for
the island he's led for 48 years: too sick to function properly but not
quite dead. Castro is like an ailing dinosaur; his Cuba remains stuck in
the mud, with an antiquated government and a stagnant Soviet-style
economy. On the surface, little seems to have changed in the six months
since the 80-year-old Fidel ceded power to his brother Raúl.

But look beneath Cuba's petrified façade, and you'll find changes afoot
that foreshadow what will come when Fidel finally expires. Under the
75-year-old Raúl's quiet stewardship, the country has begun to take a
hard look at the many problems plaguing its 11.4 million inhabitants.
And some Cuba analysts believe the younger Castro may have picked a new
model to emulate: Beijing, where the Communist Party has maintained an
absolute grip on political power while loosening the economic reins,
encouraging foreign investment and private entrepreneurship—and making
China an economic superpower in the process.

The most noticeable change so far can be seen in the way Havana has
begun questioning its old methods—challenges that were unheard of in
Fidel's day and that have fanned expectations that Raúl aims to reorient
the country. During a two-day meeting of Cuba's rubber-stamp Parliament
at the end of last year, a stern-faced Raúl blasted the "bureaucratic
red tape" that was delaying prompt payment to farmers for their crops
and described the public-transportation network as "practically on the
point of collapse." "We are tired of excuses," he growled.

This followed a scathing exposé of theft, consumer rip-offs and
incompetence at government-run enterprises that was published by
Juventud Rebelde, the Communist Party's youth newspaper. Under the
headline the big old swindle, the newspaper reported that beer mugs at
bars were routinely underfilled, restaurant sandwiches were light on ham
and cabdrivers charged passengers four times the official fare. If
employees really followed the rules, gave customers what they asked for
and charged government-mandated fees, it continued, a large number of
state-run businesses and services would go bankrupt. The newspaper was
blunt about what was to blame for this mess, quoting a government
economist who lamented the country's "skewed" Soviet model.

Raúl, meanwhile, has been studying the Chinese alternative ever since he
first traveled to Beijing in 1997, where he met Zhu Rongji, the prime
minister credited with many of China's most important economic reforms.
Raúl later invited one of Zhu's top advisers to Cuba to meet hundreds of
officials and executives from state-run enterprises, and the visits have
continued ever since. "The Chinese model ... has most impressed and
influenced the current leadership in Cuba," says former Cuban
intelligence official Domingo Amuchástegui. "In the last 15 years, about
85 percent of the civilian and military leader[s] have gone to China."

These trips are starting to bear fruit. Officially, Havana still insists
it must maintain state ownership of more than 90 percent of the economy,
and Raúl has never publicly endorsed Chinese-style "market socialism."
But his actions tell another story. Under his rule, the military has
become the most important player in Cuba's economy, running about a
dozen companies that capture an estimated 60 percent of all tourism
revenues and two thirds of hard-currency retail sales. These for-profit
deals mirror those conducted by China's Army in the 1980s and 1990s.

Other signs also point toward a shift to more market-friendly
strategies. For example, a group of once influential economists who
advocated the legalization of small and medium-size private businesses
in the early 1990s—and were forced out of their jobs at a Havana think
tank as a result—has recently resurfaced.

Raúl has plenty of reasons to look to Beijing. Many of the problems
facing Cuba today parallel those that gripped China after the death of
Mao Zedong in 1976. Like Mao, Fidel Castro stubbornly clung to
egalitarian, anti-market principles that stifled individual initiative.
This created problems in Cuba so severe that even some Chinese started
noticing. At the conclusion of a visit to Cuba in 2003, Xu Shicheng of
the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences warned that Cuba must "establish
the mechanisms of the socialist market economy ... and smash
egalitarianism."

Xu was right about the need for change. Under Cuba's Soviet system, the
economy has failed to meet basic needs. The country faces a housing
shortage of 700,000 units, and despite free health care, education and
rent, government employees struggle to survive on salaries averaging $17
a month. Many resort to stealing goods from their government workplaces
and reselling them on the thriving black market. That has accelerated
the deterioration of public services. Some experts say Raúl understands
that to stay in power, he must ensure better living standards, which
means opening up important sectors of the economy. Raúl's message is: "
'Wake up, we've got to be honest and find ways to resolve these serious,
systemic problems,' and that's all part of the Chinese model," says
William Ratliff of the Hoover Institution. "People won't put up with
this kind of squalor under anybody except Fidel, and [Cuban officials]
know they've got to do something."

Skeptics warn that all the talk about reform will come to naught unless
the regime finds ways to curb corruption and boost efficiency. The heads
of a state-run computer-supply firm and the telecommunications company
ETECSA were recently sacked for scandals involving kickbacks and chronic
incompetence. But the more deep-seated scourge of corruption involving
Cubans from all walks of life won't go away until they are given
tangible inducements to work harder and stop raiding the government
warehouses that employ them.

One option would be to allow members of agricultural cooperatives to
choose their own crops and sell produce to whomever they want at prices
set by the market. "They will have to move to what you have in China and
Vietnam, and privatize agriculture," says University of Pittsburgh
economist Carmelo Mesa-Lago. "If they do that, there will be a
phenomenal incentive for cooperative members to increase production."

But as someone who has spent his entire life in the shadow of his
charismatic, domineering brother, Raúl Castro seems unlikely to take
bold action as long as Fidel keeps breathing. "[Fidel's] illness has
[left] the country semi-paralyzed," says Héctor Palacios, a dissident
who was released from jail in December—the only political prisoner Raúl
has had the courage to free. In the meantime, "there is a vacuum of
power," says Palacios, "and people are awaiting the measures that will
get us out of this situation." Until Raúl finds the political will to
take these long overdue steps, Cuba will remain in an economic ice age,
waiting for its last dinosaur to die.
© 2007 Newsweek, Inc.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/16959221/site/newsweek/

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