Cuba announces major private sector expansion
Cuba’s Prime Minister Manuel Marrero announced a series of economic reforms on Thursday that significantly expand the role of private and foreign capital in the country. The measures include allowing private and foreign entities to purchase and sell fuel, creating private corporate banking, and permitting private business owners to own more than one company and hire more than 100 workers. The reforms also open agriculture and tourism to private businesses, allow tourism property sales on a case-by-case basis for Cubans resident in the country and abroad, and let foreign investors hire workers directly. Foreign investment is now permitted in Old Havana and other tourist spots, as well as in state telecom ETECSA data centers, mobile networks, and other digital infrastructure. The government is also seeking to transfer management of the country’s zoos and aquariums to private hands. According to the source, these changes come six decades after Cuba’s communist leaders forbade all private business and adopted a centrally planned economy model that the article describes as having ruined the country and caused a severe humanitarian crisis.
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Sources: marginalrevolution.com
