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December 20, 2014

FREEDOM? Obama Announces New Cuba Policy; Here’s How The Castro’s Responded

The day before Obama’s surprise announcement about ‘normalizing’ relations with Cuba, the Castro Regime announced new rules on the salaries of workers who are employed by foreign entities.  Coincidence?  Hardly.
The Castro Regime had to be sure they set the rules in place so they could take as much money as possible from the people.  So much for the freedom of Capitalism that so many seem to think will lift the Cuban people out of oppression.  The Cuban government is going to take 92% of workers’ salaries in dollars and then give them a mere 8% to keep but they will have to be in pesos; the currency reserved for the oppressed.  Castro has to be sure Cubans barely earn a living wage.
Yes you read that correctly, 92%.  And people in America complain about taxes or a living wage?
As reported by Breitbart:
Just one day before President Obama announced sweeping changes that would allow potential American investment in Cuba, the Cuban government apparently had begun preparing itself by announcing new measures that would allow Cubans who work for foreign companies to keep only 8% of their salaries.
In an official announcement in state newspaper Granma, government officials announced a system in which employees who work for corporations with foreign capital will be paid two Cuban Pesos for every Convertible Cuban Peso (CUC) the corporation actually pays them. The Convertible Peso (CUP) is almost exclusively for the use of tourists and is of significantly greater value; one CUC is the equivalent of an American dollar and the equivalent of 26.5 CUPs. The other 24 CUPs Cuban workers will not receive amount to 92% of their salaries.
As Raúl Castro noted in his speech, the Cuban government made no concessions in this recent negotiation with the United States, save the freedom of Gross and one other American agent whom President Obama did not name, which leaves it open to sanctioning American companies who dare attempt to do business on the island as they see fit.
With so many people weighing in on the Embargo, it’s interesting to note not many seem to understand how Cuba’s economy works.  Cuba has a 2 currency economy.  All of which is controlled by the government.
When people talk about how great they believe lifting the Embargo with Cuba will be for the people of the Island, they seem to forget that Cuba has been trading with European countries, Latin American countries and Canada for years now.  Funny, the people are still oppressed.  Why?  Because the government controls the economy; the currency and taxes.

As explained by Sean Davis of The Federalist:
Cuba’s economy is not normal by any stretch of the imagination. In fact, it actually has two economies: the dollar economy, and the peso economy. Americans who are allowed to visit get to participate in the dollar economy, and only the dollar economy. Cubans who live there are required to participate in the peso economy, and only the peso economy. The markets are completely segregated.
The result of the Cuban two-currency economy — one of which is forbidden to its people — is that every dollar will eventually find its way into the hands of the Cuban government. Since their internal currency, the CUP, is worthless, it’s not like they can just exchange it for dollars on the open market, like most other countries do. No, if the Cuban government wants dollars and the wealth that comes with them, it has to import them. And more dollars don’t mean more prosperity for the people of Cuba; more dollars means more wealth and power concentrated in the hands of Cuba’s communist regime.
It’s ironic, the Left is constantly screaming about living wages and the Right is constantly screaming about high taxes.  Here their 2 worlds collide because there are supporters of ‘normalization’ on both sides of the political spectrum.  Capitalism will not exist in Cuba as long as the Castro Regime continues with its 2 currency economy; taxing Cubans to the point they are not earning a living wage and controlling all aspects of said economy.

6 comments:

  1. I've been saying for three decades that if the US really wanted the Cuban communist regime to fall, the worst thing we could do was to be Castro's safety valve and allow all of his dissidents to flee to the US. If all of the hundreds of thousands of Cubans in the US had no choice but to stay there and deal with their dictator, the Revolution would not have been able to resist the pressure for change. For the US this wasn't a policy "error", it was intended to keep the communist boogeyman in power for as long as possible. The cost to the Cuban people has been immeasurable.

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  2. I am Cuban , and have family still there . The regime knows that dollars will be pouring in and the the black market will do its share to skim dollars from the government. If you are Cuban and have dollars you can solve a lot there, you can find almost anything por la isquierda (on the left) . The biggest change won't be by what the Castro will take but what the Cuban people will finally see with new eyes . The majority of Cuban have not experienced anything but that regime and fed the lies and have been sheltered from the flavors of the best that democracy can buy. Cuban people are very outspoken there has been nothing to desire, freedom has been 90 miles away that might as well have been a million . The first investment in Cuba should be travel not business let them see Americans and family let them visit family and see America then the cry for freedoms will be so loud that no oppressor will be able to handle. History shows that of the two Castro brothers the one that held the strongest disdain towards the USA has been Raul And he is softening . Show them freedom let them taste it . The rest will take care of itself. And unless you have lived in it or at least visited and spoken with the people still there . Your views are will be flawed. I believe that the key is travel both ways and trade. Not investment into Cuba. But this is the start.

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  3. Well here is the decision for Cuban people to make: get some trinkets, trinkets you might not be able to afford. So - but loose health care and free education and yes sell your daughters again as prostitutes for rich visitors.

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  4. Regime change first and than the Cubans are becoming slaves for the Jewish bankers.

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  5. What makes you think that the world is not a slave to Jewish banking. That comment is comical , we all are .

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  6. Tom I have been to Cuba in the 80's 90's 2000's my family lived there their whole lives my father fled In 1963 . In over fifty years nothing has changed by the means you describe. Most people that lived anything other that regime is dead or about to die . The people with the strength to oppose it know nothing else . The world news and Internet is limited . The desire to own something or dream of it has slowly been replaced with the sense of surviving daily. If you are a dissident you are imprisoned so that you do not influence others . We need to give the Cuban people something to dream about to bring change. And unless you have lived or experienced the life of my fellow Cubans you should not blast ignorant comments of change for a country or people you know nothing about.

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