The
departure of Raul Castro and the selection of a new head of state that didn’t
fight in the revolution but rather grew up in it, is a momentous event for
Cuba.
But it
is not likely to bring a dramatic change in Cuba’s governance, as many outside
Cuba seem to expect just because the Castro presidencies have come to the end
of their run. Raul Castro remains until 2021 as head of the Communist Party,
where policy is made. The next president, all but certain to be Vice President Miguel
Diaz-Canel who has now been formally nominated, emerges from the party and
political system that has set current policies. A clean break is unlikely – the
most likely question is how the next president will manage the process of
change that the Raul Castro presidency initiated.
And for
embarking on that change, Raul Castro’s presidency has been very consequential.
He diagnosed Cuba’s economic woes as a threat to the system’s survival, and the
party embraced that diagnosis. He led the party to develop and endorse a reform
program that is changing Cuban socialism in ways his brother would never have
contemplated: a smaller state, more foreign investment, and a substantial
private sector.
The
state has indeed shrunk by more than half a million personnel; the number of
private entrepreneurs has more than tripled and the private sector accounts now
for one in four workers; private farming is vastly expanded; and foreign
investment flows are starting to expand.
Policies
that were in place when he took office in 2006 – banning Cubans from having
cell phone accounts in their own name or staying in tourist hotels, requiring advance
government permission to travel abroad, banning the sales of cars and
residential real estate, denying nearly all applications for new entrepreneurs
to get business licenses – are all gone. Even as the one-party state remains in
place, these have to count as human rights improvements.
These
changes, along with more open U.S. policies and changed attitudes among Cuban
emigres, have enabled a transformation in relations with the diaspora.
Generations ago, those who left were disdained by the Cuban government and
declared themselves exiles. Plenty still choose to stay away, but those who
don’t are visiting, buying and improving properties, investing in businesses,
and creating millions of avenues of communication and support. This is a quiet,
gradual development with strategic significance for Cuba’s economy, politics,
and security.
The
reforms are incomplete and seem stalled. Agricultural reform is half-done,
yielding commensurate results. The government itself admits the need to recharge
the foreign investment approval process. The dual currency system persists, with
ill effects that ripple throughout the economy. The private sector lacks an
adequate supply system. New and potentially impactful laws that were put on the
agenda a few years ago have not yet seen the light of day: an enterprise law, a
law of associations (to establish how religious denominations and private
organizations gain legal status), a media law, an electoral law, and
constitutional reforms to limit top officials to two five-year terms in office
and to downsize the national legislature.
Why
have the reforms not been fully implemented? Part of the answer surely has to
do with their complexity, and to political caution on the part of a government
that sees potential dislocation in eliminating family food ration books or
changing the monetary system overnight. There is also political resistance
based on ideological orthodoxy, reluctance to change that exists in any
bureaucracy (especially when the changes reduce the size and authority of
government agencies), and discomfort with new inequalities in earnings resulting
from a vastly expanded private sector.
Cuba’s
next president will have to deal with all these tensions, without the benefit
of the Castro surname. But absent an unlikely shift in policies that have been
approved in two party congresses, the question will remain one of
implementation.
And the
stark fact remains that there is no viable Plan B. There is no turning back, if
for no other reason than that Cuba’s private sector is now essential to
employment, family income for millions, and even to the functioning of the tourism
industry – and the government cannot possibly replace the jobs it
has created. Cuban governments are virtuousos when it comes to muddling
through, but that option does not deliver the growth Cuba needs to keep young
Cubans in Cuba, and to sustain popular social services guarantees.
It will
be a new political environment, with a premium on consensus-building and
coalition management. Cuban politics is about to get more interesting, and if
it would get more transparent too, more than a few observers – not to mention
Cuban citizens themselves – would appreciate it.
No comments:
Post a Comment