Tuesday, March 18, 2014

Cuba is Venezuela's biggest loser

Cuba is Venezuela's biggest loser
Published: Tuesday, 18 Mar 2014 | 11:16 AM ET
By: Silvana Ordonez | News Associate

Opposition activists protest near the Cuban Embassy in Caracas,
Venezuela, on March 16, 2014.
In the midst of chaos in Venezuela, a dependent Cuba and its economic
future is walking on a tight rope.
As Venezuela's economic woes deepen, with an annualized inflation rate
reaching 57 percent, and violent clashes between pro- and
anti-government protesters escalate, the probability of a new government
is high, making Cuba's future uncertain. Even if Nicolas Maduro, who
succeeded the late Hugo Chavez as president, stays in power, he could be
forced to cut aid to Cuba to help alleviate Venezuela's imploded
economy, which suffers from stagnation, inflation and shortages.

For the last decade, Venezuela's oil has helped fuel Cuba's economy,
providing 60 percent of the communist-ruled island's demands. In
exchange, Cuba sends about 30,000 doctors to Venezuela, according to an
analysis by Pavel Vidal, a former official at Cuba's central bank and
now an economics professor at the Universidad Javeriana in Cali, Colombia.

The commercial relationship with leftist Venezuela accounts for 40
percent of Cuba's trade—or 18 percent of Cuba's gross domestic product,
Vidal said. If Venezuela were to cut Cuba loose, completely or
partially, it could cause Cuba's economy to contract anywhere from 4
percent to 7.7 percent.
"Cuba depends on Venezuela's political situation," Vidal said. "And
right now, Venezuela is unpredictable."

NBC's Richard Engel reports from the Crimean capital following the
results of Crimea's referendum over the weekend.
Cuba is well aware of its vulnerability, Vidal said, noting that it's
not the first time the island nation has found itself facing this type
of situation.

Rewind to the '90s, after the collapse of the Soviet Union, when Cuba's
economy shrunk by 35 percent. The Soviet Union was a major ally and
economic subsidizer, accounting for 28 percent of Cuba's economy.

Looking only at the numbers, the impact to Cuba's economy without the
aid of Venezuela would be far less than the country suffered in the
'90s, but that doesn't mean that Cuba's pain would be lessened. In fact,
it could be devastating. Cuba's economy is still convalescent and is not
prepared for another punch, which, according to Vidal's report, could
drive the country into a recession.

"Today, Cuba's economy is in worse condition than in the late '80s to
implement an adjustment if it undergoes another shock, and it would be
far more complicated to manage," Vidal said.

"It will be an economic disaster," said Jorge R. Piñon, interim director
at the Center for International & Environmental Policy at the University
of Texas, adding that Cuba would be back to post-Soviet times. "Cuba
today has put all of its eggs in one basket. Before it was the Soviet
Union's basket, today is Venezuela's basket."

Cuban economist and journalist Roberto Alvarez Quiñones agrees.

Without Venezuela and its oil and subsidies "industrial production,
trade, transport, agriculture, and the whole economy would be affected
dramatically. Medieval nights of the '90s would return, with blackouts
of up to 14 hours in some areas," Alvarez Quiñones wrote in a column for
Diaro de Cuba.

But there could be a bright side, in the long term, if Venezuela breaks
away from Cuba. Cuba's President Raul Castro could be prompted to speed
economic reforms he's been pushing and open the door to more foreign
capital.

"They are realizing now what can happen if Venezuela disappears, and
that they better start changing their model faster than before," said
Piñon, a Latin American oil industry analyst.

This month, the Cuban National Assembly is expected to pass a new
foreign investment law that would make Cuba more open and flexible to
foreign investment.

"Cuba is getting ready for the eventual lifting of the U.S.embargo,"
Piñon said. "Everyone is prepositioning themselves for a post-embargoed
Cuba."

Brazil, an increasingly important partner for Cuba, is already deepening
its economic relationships with the island nation with the upgrade of
the Cuban port of Mariel, a nearly $1 billion project that is being
mostly financed by Brazil. Cuba also has started to supply Cuban doctors
to Brazil, where there is a shortage of health-care professionals.
Brazil is betting in the economic potential the port would bring from
traffic between the United States and Cuba through the Panama Canal if
the U.S. embargo on trade with Havana is lifted, said Julia E. Sweig,
senior fellow for Latin America studies at the Council on Foreign Relations.
"This is a pragmatic and strategic play by Brazil to expand its
investment and political, economic presence in Cuba because there's an
opportunity there," Sweig said. "It's a bit of a bet because we don't
know what the new foreign investment law is going to look like yet.
That's going to be a significant indicator of how much opportunity, not
only for Brazil, but for other countries, exists in Cuba."

But could new legislation pave the way for Cuba to mend its relationship
with the United States?

"I am skeptically optimistic," Sweig said. "I don't think it would
trigger any massive changes in Washington's policy towards Cuba until
Washington is ready to marginalize the opponents of change in the U.S.
Congress."
But Piñon is more optimistic.

"I think the embargo is going to be lifted within the next five years,"
Piñon said. "Now, what will be the catalyst? I don't know. Is it going
to be an economic or political event? I think it will be a combination
of both."

Some others say Cuba's political system will weigh more than any
economic progress it makes.

"The Helms-Burton law explains that Cuba needs to change its political
system, not opening up a little more with another foreign investment
law. The law talks about Cuba becoming a free and democratic country,"
said Jaime Suchlicki, head of Institute for Cuba and Cuban American
Studies at the University of Miami. The Helms-Burton Act of 1996, also
known as the Libertad Act, extended and toughened the U.S. embargo
against Cuba, seeking to mainly pressure the Castro regime to transition
into a democracy through economic sanctions. The law has requirements,
including Raul and Fidel Castro to be out of power and the release of
political prisoners.

Suchlicki points to an additional issue: "Cuba is an ally of Iran and
Russia … Cuba is not a friend of the United States."
Although it's still unclear if there will be any benefits for Cuba in
the long run, one thing is for sure. Cuba will have to endure some pain
caused by Venezuela's turmoil.

—By CNBC's Silvana Ordoñez. Follow her on Twitter @newsdumonde

http://www.cnbc.com/id/101496191

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