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Davie zepeda
12th July 2008, 04:51
What dose this mean for cuba?

President Raul Castro warned Cubans on Friday to prepare for a "realistic" brand of communism that is economically viable and does away with excessive state subsidies designed to promote equality on the island.

Addressing Cuba's parliament in its first session since lawmakers selected him to succeed his older brother Fidel in February, Raul Castro announced no major reforms, but suggested that global economic turbulence could lead to further belt-tightening on the island.
"Socialism means social justice and equality, but equality of rights, of opportunities, not of income," the 77-year-old president said in a speech that was taped and later aired on national television. "Equality is not egalitarianism."


That sentiment marks a break with his brother, who spent decades saying Cuba was building an egalitarian society. But the new president nevertheless ended by proclaiming he had "learned everything" from Fidel, drawing a standing ovation.


Since succeeding his brother, Raul Castro has authorized Cubans to legally purchase computers, stay in luxury hotels and obtain cell phones in their own names. His government has raised some salaries and done away with wage limits, allowing state workers to earn more for better performance.
Cuba's rubber-stamp parliament convenes for only for a few hours twice a year and rumors were rampant that Friday's session would see an easing of restrictions on travel abroad or a strengthening of wages by increasing the value of the peso, worth about 21-1 against the U.S. dollar.
The government controls well over 90 percent of the economy and the average salary is just 408 pesos per month, US$19.50, though most Cubans get free housing, health care, education and ration cards that cover basic food needs.


Castro said that in "the matter of salaries, we'd all like to go faster, but it's necessary for us to act with realism."
"The situation could even get worse," he said of the global economy. "We will continue to do what's within our reach so that a series of adversities have less effect on our people, but some impact is inevitable in certain products and sectors."


Economy Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez said this week that skyrocketing global food and oil prices would cause "inevitable adjustments and restrictions" for Cuba's economy.
Castro said he supported a proposal to gradually push back the retirement age five years, to 65 for men and 60 for women. The move, which parliament plans to vote on in December, is part of an effort to soften the blow of a disproportionately elderly work force.
Castro acknowledged shortages that plague Cubans, but said "we have to be conscious that each increase in salary that is approved or price that is subsidized adhere to economic reality."


He also shot back at U.S. officials who have dismissed the small changes he has overseen in Cuba as meaningless.
"Faced with the measures adopted lately in our country, some official in the United States comes out immediately, from a spokesman to the president, to brand them 'insufficient' or 'cosmetic,'" Castro said. "Although no one here asked their opinion, I reiterate that we will never make any decision, not even the smallest one, as a result of pressure or blackmail."
For the fourth straight parliamentary session, Raul Castro sat next to an empty chair set aside for his ailing brother.


The elder Castro, who turns 82 next month, has not been seen in public since undergoing emergency intestinal surgery in July 2006.

silent_revolutionary
12th July 2008, 05:45
Ohhhhh no. This is what I was afraid was going to happen to Cuba after Fidel. I really hope Cuba doesn't end up like China.

Davie zepeda
12th July 2008, 10:15
:crying:So you think Cuba will revert to capitalism ?
I mean they are backwards nations when it comes to production and industry.
Also there currency is worthless they have no buying power how can a state survive. We are in the 21st Cuba needs buying power not for it's people but so it can buy products and food and supply's to support them if not the state would not be to hold it's self together .understanding that Cuban economy is still growing they need to expand on many things how are they gonna solve the regular Cubans issues?

Sugar Hill Kevis
12th July 2008, 11:31
'but equality of rights, of opportunities, not of income'

"The Labour Party is a democratic socialist party. It believes that by the strength of our common endeavour we achieve more than we achieve alone, so as to create for each of us the means to realise our true potential and for all of us a community in which power, wealth and opportunity are in the hands of the many, not the few, where the rights we enjoy reflect the duties we owe, and where we live together, freely, in a spirit of solidarity, tolerance and respect."

Nothing Human Is Alien
12th July 2008, 12:06
See: http://www.revleft.com/vb/cubas-wage-changes-t82086/index.html

InTheMatterOfBoots
12th July 2008, 13:52
"but equality of rights, of opportunities, not of income,"

So essentially liberalism then. :laugh:
You can take that exact line out of Rawls. I shit you not.

This has been in the bag for years. Castro has been grooming the economy for this kind of adjustment for decades. Once again we have a "socialist" state degenerating into yet another willing partner of global capital. Big whoop. Next please ...

silent_revolutionary
14th July 2008, 03:21
Exactly Dionysian,

By making that statement, Raul Castro has laid the ideological basis for making Cuba a capitalist "democrazy". Equality of opportunity is a characteristically liberal notion--not a socialist one. Socialism, as we all know, is based on "from each according to his ability, to each according to his need".

In his statement, Raul has essentially defined liberalism and called it socialism.