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View Full Version : Leftists Applaud Fidel Castro's Spring Cleaning



resisting arrest with violence
8th June 2005, 20:20
http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/news/...ba/11831830.htm (http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/news/world/cuba/11831830.htm)

Posted on Tue, Jun. 07, 2005


CUBA
Many foreign investors being booted out of Cuba
Foreign business partners are being squeezed out of Cuba, which is turning to countries such as Venezuela and China.
BY MARC FRANK
Financial Times

It has been more than a decade since Cuba, suffering from a post-Soviet economic collapse and jitters about the United States, opened its door to foreign businesses.

Now many investors -- mainly European -- who took the plunge are being asked to leave.

Only half the homes rented to expatriates by the state's real-estate monopoly are now occupied, and at the Havana International School enrollment is down about a third from two years ago and falling.

On average, one joint venture and two smaller cooperative production ventures have closed each week since 2002, when there were 700 in the country.

Joint ventures are with state partners, who usually hold 50 percent or more of shares. Cooperative production agreements involve a foreign investor who supplies machinery, credits and supplies in exchange for a share of profit or a product, mainly in labor-intensive sectors such as light industry, the mechanical industry and food processing.

''I would not be surprised if in the end there are only around 50 joint ventures in the country and just a handful of cooperative production agreements,'' said an employee at the Foreign Investment and Economic Cooperation Ministry.

Relations with the European Union and other Western nations remain tense because of President Fidel Castro's repression of dissent, and Cuba is increasingly turning toward countries like such as China and Venezuela, which it sees as being less influenced by the United States.

Yet the purge appears to be related less to these factors than to recentralizing finance and trade and eliminating the partial autonomy that state concerns were granted in the 1990s.

READJUSTMENTS

''Changes over the last two years are introducing significant corrections in the Cuban economy, considerably limiting the action of market mechanisms,'' José Luis Rodríguez, economy and planning minister, told local economists last month.

Cuba is now interested in partnering only with well-known companies in strategic sectors of the economy, said Marta Lomas, foreign investment and economic cooperation minister.

Big concerns, at times operating through subsidiaries, are holding their own and include Nestle (bottled water and other consumer goods), the Spanish-French tobacco company Altaldis (cigars), Pernod Ricard (rum) and Bouygues (construction), both of France , Telecom Italia (telecommunications), NV Interbrew of Belgium (beer), Sherritt International of Canada (nickel, oil, gas and power), British-American Tobacco (cigarettes) and Sol Meliá of Spain (tourism).

European investors whose joint ventures are liquidating complain of endless haggling with state companies and ministry officials over how and when their share of investments will be paid, and the often millions of dollars they are owed for financing operating costs.

MONEY OWED

''If they want me to leave, OK, I'm a guest in their house. But what I can't accept is simply being booted out of here with no solid guarantee I will ever get my money back,'' said a Spanish businessman operating in Cuba since the early 1990s who is negotiating what he calls ``the best possible bad bargain.''

Another company representative in a similar situation terms his Cuban partners' behavior ``outrageous.''

''I have gone through endless meetings for more than a year with no result in terms of recovering our investment. They are trying to wear me down,'' he said, asking like others to remain anonymous for fear of making matters worse.

European diplomats say the Cubans are usually within their rights in ending business relationships but often do so with little explanation and with only the dubious promise that they will some day pay money owed foreign partners.

''What you have here is renationalization without compensation,'' one European commercial representative said.

Some companies are fighting in domestic courts, while others are considering international arbitration.

They are pessimistic, however, about being paid if they win.

Cuban officials did not respond to requests for interviews.

Castro has criticized investors several times this year for arranging exclusive supply contracts for their own ventures. He has also said foreign traders enjoy profit margins of up to 40 percent.

One joint venture established a decade ago is being liquidated in spite of a 20-year contract.

It has always had a loss in its main business operations but managed to scrape out a profit by charging fees for labor, utilities and other services, the foreign investor in the company said.

''I do not understand their problem. The Cubans seem not to fathom win-win situations. For them it is a zero-sum game. They think anything you make should be theirs,'' the investor said.

The companies have little choice but to take a loss in equipment, warehoused products, personnel training and other costs built up over the years. Cuban law states they must sell what they have back to the government, which pays little, or to other foreigners, of whom there are fewer and fewer, or take what they have with them.

Severian
8th June 2005, 20:55
Thanks! Very informative.

Sickle of Justice
8th June 2005, 23:49
i like the info, and thats cool, but a lot of communists i know dont like castro. i always just think hey, if he's good enough for Guevera, he's good enough for me, but several devout communists that i kno are very apposed to castro's regime. you seem to know a lot about castro, can you tell me why?

lennonist-leninist
9th June 2005, 00:00
well i respect castro and i like the info. i find it nice that somone knows so much about fidel.

cormacobear
9th June 2005, 01:02
Well it's sink or swim now. If things in Latin America go bad, Cuba won't be able to fall back on foreign investment again. Let's keep our fingers crossed if things go well it will make nationalizing all industries everywhere that much easier.

redstar2000
9th June 2005, 02:00
Originally posted by Financial Times
Big concerns, at times operating through subsidiaries, are holding their own and include Nestle (bottled water and other consumer goods), the Spanish-French tobacco company Altaldis (cigars), Pernod Ricard (rum) and Bouygues (construction), both of France , Telecom Italia (telecommunications), NV Interbrew of Belgium (beer), Sherritt International of Canada (nickel, oil, gas and power), British-American Tobacco (cigarettes) and Sol Meliá of Spain (tourism).

The little dogs get squeezed while the big dogs prosper...something that would happen in the course of time even if the Cuban government did nothing.

I will take Castro seriously about this when he takes on "the big dogs".

http://www.websmileys.com/sm/cool/123.gif

Severian
9th June 2005, 10:15
Hey, you asked (in another thread) if capitalist investment was growing or shrinking. Well, here we find out that the number of investors is shrinking, and the big ones are described merely as "holding their own", not growing.

Quite a contrast from...everywhere else on earth.

From the article:

''I do not understand their problem. The Cubans seem not to fathom win-win situations. For them it is a zero-sum game. They think anything you make should be theirs,'' the investor said.

A number of things in this article illustrate the restrictions these joint ventures operate under, and emphasize that this is a state-capitalist sector not a private sector.

Every fact that comes to light has been opposed to your preconceptions.

h&s
9th June 2005, 13:35
Aww, I thought that this thread would be pictures of Castro wearing a pinny and using a feather duster.... :rolleyes:

resisting arrest with violence
9th June 2005, 19:00
Well I saw a documentary of Fidel Castro which also features Angela Davis, Alice Walker, Harry Belafonte, Nelson Mandela---- who all praise Fidel Castro. Well in the video Fidel laments his decision to have to use these multinationals to prop up the island's economy, but he insists that he will use these corporations to keep the gains the revolution has won--- universal healthcare, high literacy rate, low infant mortality, free education, and internationalist relief in the form of thousands of doctors working abroad in Third world countries.

http://images.amazon.com/images/P/B00009IAYC.01.LZZZZZZZ.jpg


Editorial Reviews
From the Back Cover
Fidel Castro is on of the most influential and controversial figures of our time. "Fidel" offers a unique opportunity to view the man through exclusive interviews with Castro himself. Historians, public figures and close friends, with footage from the Cuban State archives.
Alice Walker, Harry Belafonte, and Sydney Pollack discuss the personality of the man. Former and current US government figures including Arthur Schlesinger, Ramsey Clark, Wayne Smith, Congressman Charles Rangel and a former CIA agent offer political and historical perspectives on Castro and the long-standing US embargo against Cuba. Family members and close friends, including Nobel Prize-winning author Gabriel Garcia Marquez, offer a window into the personal life of Fidel. We see him swimming with bodyguards, visiting his childhood home and school, joking with Nelson Mandela, Ted Turner and Muhammad Ali, meeting Elian Gonzalez, and celebrating his birthday with members of the Buena Vista Social Club.

Juxtaposing the personal anecdotal with the history of Cuban revolution and fight to survive the post-Soviet period, "Fidel" tells a previously untold story and presents a new view of this powerful and compelling figure. END

Clarksist
9th June 2005, 20:45
Still, Fidel has not given democracy to his people. He still hasn't given his people immense freedom. And he still hasn't done anything in the way of ultra-socializing Cuba so that it can become communist. To everyone who is a fan of Fidel... please explain why he can't give his people immense freedoms and democracy.