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Rupert Cornwell: Cuban leader must learn from Gorbachev's mistakes

Friday, 13 June 2008

Raul Castro's decision to abolish the sacrosanct principle of equal pay for all is another small step along that trickiest and most treacherous of paths for a communist regime – how to liberalise and streamline a centrally planned system without losing control and destroying it. That Fidel's younger brother is determined to change Cuba is beyond doubt. The move to pay higher salaries and bonuses for better workers and managers follows several other reforms. Whether they work – or merely hasten the demise of one of the world's very few remaining communist states – is another matter.

Without doubt, Havana would like to emulate the Chinese model, where market reforms have created a vibrant economy and a flourishing middle class, but where the party retains absolute political control. Structurally, however, Cuba – whose economy is dominated by industry, not agriculture, and where popular frustration with decades of stagnation is tangible – far more closely resembles the former Soviet Union and its east European satellites, where attempts at reform from within failed dismally. Mr Castro's actions thus far have been tinkerings compared with the revolution of perestroika and glasnost unleashed by Mikhail Gorbachev. But, as he is surely well aware, in the late 1980s the Soviet Union got the worst of both worlds – at least from the point of view of its rulers.

Gorbachev's reforms broke the party's monopoly of political power, but also made the economy even more of a mess. By combining superficial market reforms with a refusal to challenge the entrenched bureaucracy, perestroika merely made an already inefficient and corrupt system even worse.

Like Gorbachev, Mr Castro swears fealty to the principles of "socialism". But the Soviet experience offers another worrying precedent. The collapse of communism there was in part brought about by the communications and information revolution. Back then the advent of fax machines, photocopiers and computers helped break the Kremlin's grip on information. In today's far more interconnected world, greater access to the internet and mobile phones could have the same effect in Cuba.

Undoubtedly, Mr Castro's strategy has a foreign policy dimension. The days of draconian US economic sanctions against the island may well be numbered – especially if Barack Obama becomes president. The current reforms would make it easier for Washington to lift sanctions. They would also make it easier for the regime in Havana to adjust to a world in which it is no longer a pariah.

Even so, Cuba must learn from the mistakes of eastern Europe. It must reform boldly and without delay, refusing to subsidise failing companies. It must have a fair and transparent method of privatisation, and overhauled regulatory and legal systems.

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What the press is NOT reporting is the increase in the cost of everything in Cuba, which will essentially wipe out any miniscule increase in wages. This is one of those "reforms" that is designed to help the upper elite make more money, plain and simple.

Posted by Mariana | 13.06.08, 19:33 GMT

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The "kid gloves" treatment of the brutal, murderous, and traiterous Castroite regime in this article made me throw up a little in my mouth.

Posted by GatorGab | 13.06.08, 16:24 GMT

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Truth to be told Cuba is beyond remedy. The soil destruction on that island is beyond remedy-and by the way Mr. Cornwell it's amazing that you would believe Cuba is industrialized-tourism is a waste-look at how many people get the hell out of the Dominican Republic. Petroleoum deposits are always overestimated, nickle doesn't provide enough for a country of 11 000 000 inhabitants. I don't have enough characters available to be as detailed as I want, but your precious revoloution is disintegrating Rupert.

Posted by Carlton Solomon | 13.06.08, 16:19 GMT

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I just love the fact that those sympathetic to the Cuban Revolution have to one day come to grips that the centrally planned (forced is more like it) system of Cuba's tyrants doesn't work - actually it never has worked. Raul's back-tracking to usher in "reforms" is merely out of fear for his well being, and not because of any altruistic reasons. Let's face it, the draconians in Havana are shaking in their pants lest they go down in history as human rights abusers 50 years plus, or worse - arrested and tired in an international human rights tribunal like was done to the Yugo butchers or the killers in Chile! Actually history has already been written on the abuses that have taken place in Cuba, (there is extensive documentation of the terror) and no amount of "progressive" handouts by dictators is going to help that oh so "egalitarian" glorious Cuban re (devolution).

Posted by Mar | 13.06.08, 15:58 GMT

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oh.. and it must allow free assembly and a little free speech....must of forgot that one Rubert

Posted by Santanu Roy | 13.06.08, 13:55 GMT

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Strange to see an article about an oppressed country from the point of view of the opppressors.

Where's the realisation that the regime is the problem and that there won't be a free, decent, liberal and democratic Cuba until it is gone? The regime itself - as well as being morally irredemptable, obviously - will always be the greatest obstacle to social and economic progress in Cuba. Surely that is the starting point of everyone who is not a communist apologist?

Posted by F T P Topcliff | 13.06.08, 11:31 GMT

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