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The Vegan Marxist
29th September 2010, 07:09
Cuba: The Drive for Efficiency within Socialism
Wednesday, 22 September 2010

‘Accordingly, the individual producer receives back from society – after deductions have been made – exactly what he gives to it’ (Marx, 1875)

‘wages today are clearly insufficient to satisfy all needs and have thus ceased to play a role in ensuring the socialist principle that each should contribute according to their capacity and receive according to their work…the Party and government have been studying these and other complex and difficult problems in depth, problems which must be addressed comprehensibly and through a differentiated approach in each concrete case.’ (Raul Castro, 2007)

‘[we have] the dream of everyone being able to live on their salary or on their adequate pension…’ (Fidel Castro, 2005)

The announcement by the Cuban Trade Union Confederation on 13 September 2010 about plans to reduce the state sector workforce by half a million was greeted by jeering headlines from journalists outside the island. Cuba is rarely of interest to the bourgeois press unless they believe there is some crisis to celebrate or that new measures can be interpreted as evidence of a shift from socialism to capitalism. Their reports have been based on a set of misleading assertions that: 1) This is an urgent measure to deal with a flailing economy; 2) Workers will be ‘laid off’, abandoned by the Cuban state as it moves from paternalism to market efficiency under Raul Castro; 3) The changes confirm the failure of the socialist ‘model’ under the idealist Fidel Castro. In reality, workers are not being made unemployed they are being moved from unproductive surplus posts in the state sector to productive ones in the cooperative and self-employed sector as part of the drive for efficiency within the socialist system.

The current measure is part of a process underway since the mid-2000s to improve the efficiency of Cuban socialism, undermined by economic and political pressures generated during the Special Period of economic crisis in the 1990s. This resulted from the collapse of the Soviet bloc, Cuba’s principal trading partner, and leading to the fall of Cuban GDP by one-third. Since material recovery from the early 2000s a number of significant measures have been introduced in this process: the recentralisation of finances, de-dollarisation, the raising of salaries and pensions, an energy efficiency campaign, the nationwide implementation of an enterprise management system to improve efficiency, the distribution of idle land in usufruct (rent-free loan) and the reduction in imports. The type of major adjustment currently proposed in the employment structure could not be risked in a period of vulnerability.

Since 2007, the Cuban government has promoted debate and discussion in the effort to achieve national consensus about the need for such changes. Cuba’s recovery has slowed since 2008, with growth below 2%, reflecting the global economic crisis and the cost of three devastating hurricanes which struck in late 2008. However, rather than a knee-jerk reaction to economic problems, it is likely that employment changes were in fact postponed until the present period in which prospects are improving and certain preconditions have been established.

Cuba’s workforce is around 5.2 million, of whom 800,000, or 15.4%, already work in the non-state sector. Most of these are in agricultural cooperatives whose production features in the central plan; they sell a proportion to the state. Just 140,000 Cubans or 2.7% of the total workforce are self-employed. Official unemployment is low at 1.7%, but this figure excludes those who work in the informal economy, where earnings are often higher and no tax is paid, and those who have no work to do but remain on payrolls, receiving a reduced salary.

The CTC statement said: ‘It is known that there are more than one million people working in surplus posts in the budgeted and enterprise sectors. Our state cannot and should not continue maintaining enterprises, productive, service and budgeted entities, with inflated payrolls, and losses that hurt the economy’. The first stage of restructuring will take place within government ministries. Trade union representatives are meeting with management to determine which posts are expendable. In some areas, where there are labour shortages, no workers will be removed. The 500,000 workers who will be transferred from the state-sector by March 2011 will be given various options: take up employment in agriculture, construction or industry, join cooperatives or enter self-employment. 118 activities have been identified for self-employment. They include musical instrument tuners, arts and crafts, electricians, plumbers, spectacle repairs, and so on. The revolutionary government’s commitment to extend free access to university education has generated shortages in numerous skilled and semi-skilled trades.

However, for all the talk about the market economy, a minority of these workers are likely to become self-employed. They will be heavily taxed and carefully regulated. The result will be to increase provision of goods and services in certain areas leading to price reductions and falling incomes for those operating in the informal sector. This, along with a continued rise in state-sector salaries, will reduce the relative benefit for individuals operating outside the formal sector. Accompanying the employment changes is a restructuring of the education system to decrease the number of university students and increase technical training.

While the intention is to forge the concept of work as a social duty, the government will not abandon those unable to contribute. In August 2010, Raul Castro announced: ‘no-one will be abandoned to their luck. The socialist state will offer the support necessary for a dignified life through a system of social assistance to those who really are not able to work…We have to eradicate forever the notion that Cuba is the only country in the world in which you can live without working.’

The principal complaint from Cubans during the popular consultation of 2007 was the existence of the dual currency and its impact on society. However, this cannot be resolved without an increase in domestic production, productivity and efficiency. These are also the precondition to reducing imports, improving the balance of payments and foreign debt, raising salaries, controlling inflation, and reducing dependence on the ‘ration book’ (a basic basket of goods provided to all Cubans by the state at highly subsidised prices), which is a major drain on government resources. These developments cannot be understood from a purely ideological or political perspective. They have to be understood as pragmatic measures introduced by the revolutionary leadership as part of its search for the solution to the problem of building socialism from a position of underdevelopment, in a trade-dependent island, blockaded and attacked. They are not disguised as theoretical advances or political improvements.

The move towards greater efficiency was articulated in an important speech by Fidel Castro, then President of the Council of State, back in November 2005. Analysing that speech we said: ‘There is a complex, multifaceted and fascinating process underway in Cuba. Revolution is a process and a socialist society must be self-consciously constructed by those who live within it. There are many issues to resolve: the balance of responsibility for provision between the individual and the state; how such class antagonisms as remain under socialism are mediated; ensuring discipline with resources and at work; how the wealth of socialist society should be distributed; how much control and centralisation is appropriate; whether the socialist revolution is reversible. These questions are being addressed in Cuba in the face of a brutal blockade and terrorist attacks…Capitalism uses fear of unemployment to control workers. Under socialism, only a highly-developed collective consciousness can prevent self-interest jeopardising the social project. Creating this consciousness is the challenge of the present ‘revolution’ in Cuba.’

The structural changes will be examined in greater detail in the following issue of Fight Racism! Fight Imperialism!

http://www.revolutionarycommunist.org/index.php/cuba/1904-cuba-the-drive-for-efficiency-within-socialism.html

RadioRaheem84
29th September 2010, 07:42
The word 'efficient' was always a charged word to me. Personally, it always conjured up images of a Northern European third way positionist clamoring about introducing more technocratic bile into government to make it more like the market, i.e. more "efficient" or an excuse to privatize certain sectors.

Vladimir Innit Lenin
29th September 2010, 13:26
Sounds like an excuse for the undoubtedly privatising measures being introduced by the Cuban government.

One key point identified in the article however, and one which is often glossed over in Socialist intellectual circles relating to Cuba, is the dual currency. It's a nightmare for ordinary Cubans and really needs to be resolved. Ideally, the CUC would be abolished and the National Peso re-pegged to somewhere closer to the dollar. Of course, this would damage Cuba's export industry (medicine, food etc.), hence the need for increased productivity across the economy to support lower margins in the export industry.

For me then, privatisation is the wrong way to go, if the above paragraph is the case. Allowing people to run barbershops and employ people to cook dinners out of their homes (the paladares) is neither profitable for the individual (when you have dual currency) nor an increase in productivity for the state. Really, what needs to be done is a mass overhaul of the economy - a cradle-grave provision for workers (including more subsidies on food, rents etc.) in exchange for higher productivity. Less bureaucracy and greater power to the CDRs (in the form of a more Council-communistic democracy) would help to achieve this. It would, for instance, be helpful for local mayors and politicians to hand over some local economic planning responsibility to people, via the CDRs, so that economic power is devolved to as low a level as possible. This will in fact push Cuba on the offensive towards communism.

Cuba is a country which, if it could establish favourable trading conditions with enough partners, could make the move to a virtually classless society. It is a small nation surrounded by sea (and therefore food). It has a small population, it has space to build on and urbanise and it has a fairly mature Socialist economic and political system. It just needs tweaking in terms of the devolution of political democracy, and an aggressive move towards devolution of economic power, not towards privatisation.

RED DAVE
29th September 2010, 13:47
Sounds like an excuse for the undoubtedly privatising measures being introduced by the Cuban government.

One key point identified in the article however, and one which is often glossed over in Socialist intellectual circles relating to Cuba, is the dual currency. It's a nightmare for ordinary Cubans and really needs to be resolved. Ideally, the CUC would be abolished and the National Peso re-pegged to somewhere closer to the dollar. Of course, this would damage Cuba's export industry (medicine, food etc.), hence the need for increased productivity across the economy to support lower margins in the export industry.

For me then, privatisation is the wrong way to go, if the above paragraph is the case. Allowing people to run barbershops and employ people to cook dinners out of their homes (the paladares) is neither profitable for the individual (when you have dual currency) nor an increase in productivity for the state. Really, what needs to be done is a mass overhaul of the economy - a cradle-grave provision for workers (including more subsidies on food, rents etc.) in exchange for higher productivity. Less bureaucracy and greater power to the CDRs (in the form of a more Council-communistic democracy) would help to achieve this. It would, for instance, be helpful for local mayors and politicians to hand over some local economic planning responsibility to people, via the CDRs, so that economic power is devolved to as low a level as possible. This will in fact push Cuba on the offensive towards communism.

Cuba is a country which, if it could establish favourable trading conditions with enough partners, could make the move to a virtually classless society. It is a small nation surrounded by sea (and therefore food). It has a small population, it has space to build on and urbanise and it has a fairly mature Socialist economic and political system. It just needs tweaking in terms of the devolution of political democracy, and an aggressive move towards devolution of economic power, not towards privatisation.Don't hold your breath on the good stuff you advocate, like cradle to grave provisions and a devolving of power downward.

This is the first step down the China, USSR route: state capitalism leading to private capitalism.

RED DAVE

pranabjyoti
29th September 2010, 14:55
In my opinion, more efficient means more productive. Barbershops and individual food centers can be exception because that more depends on individual skill. But, on large industries, making them more efficient means introduction of new, improved technology to increase productivity. I am curious to know how this can be done?
Cuba has so far very good track record in medicine and medical research. But, I have no idea about its track record in large scale engineering and production and also in other aspects like electronics, electrical or many such facets of science and technology, including agriculture and genetics.

AK
30th September 2010, 03:33
I remember a Youtube video of a Marxist economist (or professor, who knows) being posted here a few days ago. What was it called again? Something along the lines of Efficiency is Bullshit.

The Vegan Marxist
30th September 2010, 03:56
I remember a Youtube video of a Marxist economist (or professor, who knows) being posted here a few days ago. What was it called again? Something along the lines of Efficiency is Bullshit.

Well that be one out of many Marxist economists. I've heard nothing about efficiency being bullshit by any other. So my conclusions out of that would be his statements is bullshit.

GreenCommunism
30th September 2010, 03:56
can you name it?

AK
30th September 2010, 04:21
can you name it?
"What was it called again? Something along the lines of Efficiency is Bullshit."

Sir Comradical
30th September 2010, 04:25
So why are they planning to cut 500,000 jobs? Is there a budget crisis?

ckaihatsu
30th September 2010, 05:22
Really, what needs to be done is a mass overhaul of the economy - a cradle-grave provision for workers (including more subsidies on food, rents etc.) in exchange for higher productivity.




One key point [...] is the dual currency.




Ideally [...] the National Peso re-pegged to somewhere closer to the dollar.





Don't hold your breath on the good stuff you advocate, like cradle to grave provisions and a devolving of power downward.

This is the first step down the China, USSR route: state capitalism leading to private capitalism.








Now, however, the PCC is unmistakably driving Cuba toward capitalist restoration while shutting down even potential opposition. This became clear for FSP members at a party convention in July through reports by recent visitors to the island and by members who closely studied events of the last few years. After intense discussion, FSP members concluded that the only possible way to save the Cuban Revolution is to create a new party willing to fight for a socialist program and contend for state leadership.

While it is still premature to call for political revolution, the crying need is to build an alternative leadership.

Brought to the brink. Inevitably, an anti-capitalist state exists precariously in a capitalist-dominated world. Cuba’s lot became far more difficult after the collapse of the USSR. Desperate for hard currency and technology — needed to keep people from starving — the government courted foreign investment.

Two decades later, the PCC no longer warns of market methods as treacherous necessities, but touts them. The incursion of capital is eroding stellar achievements in education, healthcare, literacy, and housing. Gossamer threads hold together the core of a workers’ state economy: nationalized property, control of foreign trade, and central planning. (For a full analysis, see "Cuba: Imperiled and Defiant — Can the Revolution Survive?")

Privatization is quickening.


TO SAVE THE CUBAN REVOLUTION, A NEW SOCIALIST PARTY IS NEEDED:
<http://www.socialism.com/drupal-6.8/?q=node/1458>








Cuba: The Drive for Efficiency within Socialism
Wednesday, 22 September 2010

[...]

In reality, workers are not being made unemployed they are being moved from unproductive surplus posts in the state sector to productive ones in the cooperative and self-employed sector as part of the drive for efficiency within the socialist system.

The current measure is part of a process underway since the mid-2000s to improve the efficiency of Cuban socialism, undermined by economic and political pressures generated during the Special Period of economic crisis in the 1990s. This resulted from the collapse of the Soviet bloc, Cuba’s principal trading partner, and leading to the fall of Cuban GDP by one-third. Since material recovery from the early 2000s a number of significant measures have been introduced in this process: the recentralisation of finances, de-dollarisation, the raising of salaries and pensions, an energy efficiency campaign, the nationwide implementation of an enterprise management system to improve efficiency, the distribution of idle land in usufruct (rent-free loan) and the reduction in imports. The type of major adjustment currently proposed in the employment structure could not be risked in a period of vulnerability.

[...]

The principal complaint from Cubans during the popular consultation of 2007 was the existence of the dual currency and its impact on society. However, this cannot be resolved without an increase in domestic production, productivity and efficiency. These are also the precondition to reducing imports, improving the balance of payments and foreign debt, raising salaries, controlling inflation, and reducing dependence on the ‘ration book’ (a basic basket of goods provided to all Cubans by the state at highly subsidised prices), which is a major drain on government resources. These developments cannot be understood from a purely ideological or political perspective. They have to be understood as pragmatic measures introduced by the revolutionary leadership as part of its search for the solution to the problem of building socialism from a position of underdevelopment, in a trade-dependent island, blockaded and attacked. They are not disguised as theoretical advances or political improvements.

[...]

http://www.revolutionarycommunist.org/index.php/cuba/1904-cuba-the-drive-for-efficiency-within-socialism.html





In my opinion, more efficient means more productive. Barbershops and individual food centers can be exception because that more depends on individual skill. But, on large industries, making them more efficient means introduction of new, improved technology to increase productivity. I am curious to know how this can be done?
Cuba has so far very good track record in medicine and medical research. But, I have no idea about its track record in large scale engineering and production and also in other aspects like electronics, electrical or many such facets of science and technology, including agriculture and genetics.


I'm seeing an overall disconnect here, between Cuba's situation sinking down into neo-colonial status, and calls -- except for the FSP -- for Cuba to "get its shit going again" (my wording).

While the state infrastructure has reportedly implemented some *administrative* and *technical* efficiencies, these are all on the side of the government apparatus and don't speak to the realities being faced by the population -- particularly the workers -- of Cuba, including its portion of Cuba's overall productivity / economy, as through wages and social services.

It's difficult to even *compare* Cuba's mostly service-oriented and autarkic economy to that of any other, as through currency exchange ratios -- it's really apples-and-oranges when there's such a disparity in size between the U.S. economy and Cuba's. It's just as ludicrous to *extend* the "trade" paradigm and talk about high-tech manufacturing or other capital-intensive industries when Cuba is nowhere near that level of development. Comparisons to developed economies only invite talk of measures to "prepare" a smallish and backward economy for essentially market-competitive measures, thus implicitly calling for austerity to be imposed on the population as a whole and speeding its pace towards being re-colonized completely.

It's like telling someone who has tripped and tumbled down to the bottom of a large hill that they should begin work immediately on building some kind of aircraft so as to get back up the hill.

It should be clear by now that Cuba's Stalinist bureaucracy is *already* engaging in this kind of world-market, world-competitive language at a time in world economic history when capitalism is imploding *all over* the globe -- it's the *worst* time imaginable to be lying down and turning over.





[T]he institution of bureaucracy has to collectively animate its own will to existence and forward motion. Since it necessarily has to fall within the umbrella of the [state], the overarching national policy substitutes quite readily for the single-minded forward motion of a singular fictional supernatural deity -- bureaucrats within this umbrella must sacrifice individuality and free-thought for the sake of the organizational cohesion of the bureaucratic entity, even if one's own personal credo is thus replaced by careerism, materialistic acquisition, quasi-mystical reverie, or any other preoccupation that prevents distraction from the organizational unit.

In short, group-think for the sake of the state.

RadioRaheem84
30th September 2010, 11:45
I remember a Youtube video of a Marxist economist (or professor, who knows) being posted here a few days ago. What was it called again? Something along the lines of Efficiency is Bullshit.

That's pretty much every Marxist economist out there!

DWI
30th September 2010, 13:04
Giving everyone the produce of their labour is pretty much the Lockean private property scheme. Maybe with differences in land-ownership, but it's not like land is even a major source of income anymore in the developed world. Certainly not like in Locke or even Marx's day.

The Vegan Marxist
30th September 2010, 18:01
That's pretty much every Marxist economist out there!

No it's not. I haven't heard a single Marxist economist state that efficiency is bullshit.

bailey_187
30th September 2010, 18:30
I remember a Youtube video of a Marxist economist (or professor, who knows) being posted here a few days ago. What was it called again? Something along the lines of Efficiency is Bullshit.

Rick Wolff says this, dont know if its the video ur on about though. (I disagree though.)