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View Full Version : Worker Lunch Benefits on the Way Out in Cuba



KurtFF8
29th September 2009, 00:11
Source (http://www.havanatimes.org/?p=14421)


By Circles Robinson
http://www.havanatimes.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/09/1-mayo-2-300x261.jpgThe end of subsidized hot lunches for workers is a government cost-cutting measure.

HAVANA TIMES, Sept. 25 - Cubans are used to getting a cheap hot lunch at work which, while nothing fancy, the meal is considered a benefit to their across-the-board low salaries in most offices and businesses.
In a cost-cutting effort and a move a way from subsidies, the government of Raul Castro is hoping to eliminate the low-priced lunch, substituting it with a monetary supplement whereby workers can either bring their sack lunch or try to buy something on the street, reported the Cuban press on Friday.
Workers would receive 15 regular Cuban pesos a day (US $0.75) to either buy or bring their lunch. The measure would be cost cutting because the government spends considerably more to produce a hot lunch for each employee.
An estimated 3.5 million Cubans currently receive lunch at work and pay an average of one peso (four US cents) for the meal. The first places where the measure will go into effect as of October 1st are the ministries of Labor, Finance, Internal Commerce and Economy and Planning and then be gradually extended to the entire State administration and business economy.
Minister of the Economy and Planning, Marino Murillo, said another reason for the move is the millions of dollars of food products that are stolen from the food preparation facilities and which feed the black market.
Murillo’s sees workers’ dining areas sprouting up around major workplaces and also notes that some centers will rent out their kitchen facilities to food providers who would then sell meals to the employees.
The Cuban system has operated for decades without taxes for the salaried working class, paying low wages averaging around US $20 a month but heavily subsidizing public utilities, entertainment and a quantity of basic food products as well as providing free health care and education at all levels.
President Castro has repeatedly stressed his preference to gradually eliminate the subsidies and have the worker’s salary take its place as the leading incentive.


Not sure what I think about this one, doesn't seem good though.

the last donut of the night
29th September 2009, 03:21
Cuba isn't socialist. End of question.

khad
29th September 2009, 03:29
You know what, this is another nail in the coffin for all you people who called me crazy to think that Raul was a Dengist:

Cuba's real estate plans for rich foreigners:
http://www.revleft.com/vb/cuba-goes-capitalist-t110435/index.html

Raul calls egalitarianism exploitation by the lazy:
http://www.revleft.com/vb/cuba-abandons-equal-t115094/index.html?p=1518015#post1518015


I will be vindicated.

proudcomrade
29th September 2009, 06:42
I was beginning to wonder when this would hit the English-speaking world (I am a Spanish speaker & heard about it a few nights ago). Raul seems to me a venal careerist politician who loves a good bottle of whiskey, and everything else the bourgeois life has to offer. I have heard of some his lavish vacations to Italy, as well as of Vilma Espin's (his late wife) legendary shopping sprees. I share your doubts about his sincerity to his elder brother's ideals, as well as his ability to govern the island without shredding the revolution to pieces in the process. And the last damned thing in the world that Cuba needs is another influx of more fat Eurotrash tourists hot on the trail of those twelve-year-old jineteras.

I guess that time will tell, though.

cyu
30th September 2009, 19:40
I was beginning to wonder when this would hit the English-speaking world (I am a Spanish speaker & heard about it a few nights ago).


Off topic, but can you help translate the stuff here?
http://www.tvpts.tv/enhondurasnopasaran/?m=200909

...or at least the ones you think are particularly important?

gorillafuck
30th September 2009, 20:13
That doesn't sound good at all.

Is this supposed to lead to people having their pay raised to be able to buy food or something? I'm not sure if I fully get the reasoning behind this.

PRC-UTE
30th September 2009, 22:12
from the op article:


In a cost-cutting effort and a move a way from subsidies, the government of Raul Castro is hoping to eliminate the low-priced lunch, substituting it with a monetary supplement whereby workers can either bring their sack lunch or try to buy something on the street, reported the Cuban press on Friday.
Workers would receive 15 regular Cuban pesos a day (US $0.75) to either buy or bring their lunch. The measure would be cost cutting because the government spends considerably more to produce a hot lunch for each employee.It seems from this that they're merely cutting the costs of making hot lunches- not actually cutting out the subsidies for lunch itself.

which is up for criticism, but isn't quite the same thing as the title of this thread suggests.

What concerns me isn't this change in policy, but whether or not the masses are part of this decsion making process. In the past, issues from national debt to the constitution were made by mass organisations of the working class and its allies. This process worked quite well. This strikes me as something Raul is attempting to push through without discussion; hope I'm wrong about that.

Not a workers struggle though, moved to Politics.

RedSonRising
1st October 2009, 01:41
Cuba's relatively low salary are a big issue that Raul has stated he will confront. I think that if it will reduce the costs to the State and be placed directly into the hands of working individuals so that they may choose their own lunch, how is that bad? Controlling production doesn't mean you have to mandate consumption.

Comrade B
1st October 2009, 05:42
We can't change what happens. I only hope that Raul doesn't fuck his people over. I can't imagine that his ideology could be that far off from his brother's.

proudcomrade
3rd October 2009, 04:34
No problem; I'll take a look through it this weekend.

Yehuda Stern
3rd October 2009, 12:43
The bottom line is, if it's cost cutting, it seems to me that the subsidy workers will receive must be lower than the value of the hot lunch they received so far. Which means that yes, the Cuban state is cutting subsidies.

I suppose then that in a way Raul Castro is a "Dengist." Raul, Deng, Mao, and the rest of the Stalinist rulers were all heads of state capitalist regimes which gave concessions to the masses who they used to come to power and then began taking them away when those masses were defeated and demoralized. So Deng is no different in essence from Mao; Raul Castro is not different in essence from Fidel Castro.