Cuba's agricultural
decline sparks major
reform
April 4, 2008
Caribbean Net News
HAVANA, Cuba (Reuters):
Communist Cuba's soaring
food imports and a
decline in its cash
crops of sugar, tobacco,
coffee and citrus have
led new President Raul
Castro to launch what is
developing into a
sweeping reform of
agriculture.
Decision-making, from
land use to resource
allocation, has moved
from the national to
local level, stores are
opening where farmers
can buy some supplies
for the first time in
decades and increasingly
they can sell their
produce directly to
local consumers and
state institutions like
schools and hospitals.
For years, the country
has leased plots of land
to individuals
interested in coffee and
tobacco farming with
poor results.
Now, at the same time
that restrictions on the
sale of computers, cell
phones and hotel rooms
are lifted, more land is
being granted to the
proven 250,000 existing
private farmers and
1,100 cooperatives that
produce more than half
the country's food on 20
percent of the tilled
land.
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Cuban President,
Raul Castro.
Bloomberg Photo |
The reforms, rolled out
since late February when
Raul Castro succeeded
his ailing brother Fidel
Castro to become Cuba's
first new leader in 50
years, are coming none
too soon, local experts
said.
Coffee output is down
more than 50 percent
compared with 2001 and
tobacco is expected to
decline a bit after
stagnating at around
40,000 metric tons for
years.
Sugar output has come in
at just over a million
metric tons a year since
2004, compared with 8
million in 1991, and
last year citrus output
registered half of the
nearly million metric
tons of 2001.
The country now imports
around 80 percent of its
basic food stuffs such
as rice, powdered milk,
beans and wheat rationed
to the population.
"We have been calling
for these changes for
many years and expect
more will be needed in
the future," a local
economist said, asking
his name not be used.
More than 1,000
cooperatives working
state lands since huge
farms were broken down
in the early 1990s are
benefiting from the
changes as well,
including the doubling
and even tripling of
state prices for their
goods.
Around 50 percent of the
state cooperatives
operate at a loss and
while they cover far
more land than the
private sector, they
produce far less.
Cuba's deputy
agriculture minister,
Alcides Lopez, announced
last month that state
cooperatives would be
given more credit and
resources and more
latitude in deciding
what to produce and
where to sell their
output.
"It is the opportunity
we have been waiting
for, local and more
direct attention from
the authorities and
resources so we can
work," farmer Diogenes
Fernandez said in a
telephone interview from
the eastern province of
Santiago de Cuba.
"Up to now our hands
have been tied, there
was nothing to work
with, little motivation.
Now everything is
changing," Fernandez, a
member of a state
cooperative, said.
Meanwhile, both private
and public sugar
cooperatives were told
last month that if they
can reach yields of 70
metric tons per 2.5
acres (one hectare) or
more, they can produce
whatever they want on
extra land they now have
or are granted in the
future, official media
reported.
"Conceptually,
decentralizing
decision-making and
resource allocation from
the national to local
level is a step in the
right direction,"
international
agriculture and sugar
industry analyst G.B.
Hagelberg said.
"Combined with
decentralization, if the
restructuring in fact
increases material
support for the
non-state farm sector,
output and efficiency
are likely to rise," he
said.
But Hagelberg, a
long-time critic of
Cuba's state-dominated
agriculture, cautioned
that only time would
tell if real competition
and markets would
develop and the reforms
amount to more than
"rearranging the deck
chairs on the Titanic."