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In April 2011, the Sixth Congress of the Communist Party of Cuba (PCC, Partido Comunista de Cuba) adopted bold
new guidelines to deal with serious economic problems. Some of these guidelines
involve reducing the size of state employment, giving more autonomy to state
enterprises, encouraging cooperatives and private enterprise, and promoting
production and efficiency.
As a result, some commentators have suggested that
Cuban socialism is in trouble, or is failing, or is heading the way of the
Soviet Union under Mikhail Gorbachev.
Though not specialists on Cuba, we have written a book on the causes of
the Soviet Union’s downfall, Socialism Betrayed: Behind the Collapse of the
Soviet Union. One of us visited the Soviet Union twice under
Gorbachev. Both of us recently returned from a visit to Cuba. These
experiences prompt several observations.
The betrayal of the Soviet Union consisted of the overthrow of socialism
and the splintering of the Union state along national lines. This resulted
directly from five concrete processes: 1) liquidation of the Communist Party of
the Soviet Union, 2) the handover of the media to anti-socialist forces, 3)
wholesale privatizing and marketizing the planned, publicly owned economy,
beginning under Gorbachev and reaching a climax under Yeltsin, 4) unleashing
nationalist separatism, and 5) surrendering to U.S. imperialism.
These
processes are not going on in Cuba. Therefore, the short answer to the question
“Is Cuba moving back to capitalism?” is no. But the matter deserves a
fuller answer. Below is an outline of our views, a preface to a more extensive
piece to follow.
To assess where Cuba is heading is somewhat premature, since the Cuban reforms
have barely begun. Trying to assess the similarities and differences in the
situations of Cuba and the Soviet Union is fraught with difficulty.
These are two very different countries of vastly different sizes, histories,
and contexts. Nevertheless the building of socialism is shaped by general
tendencies, as well as by national peculiarities. Just as capitalism has
problems endemic to it, across time and borders, so socialism in different countries
confronts similar problems. Comparisons are possible.
Socialist countries can face problems of motivation, productivity,
efficiency, and quality. State control and planning can lead to
bureaucracy, red tape and delay. Providing all people with employment can
lead to overstaffing and inefficiency. Ensuring all people with the basics of a
decent life – education, health care, food, housing, clothing and culture – can
lead to rationing and lines and limitations on the quality and variety of
consumer goods. Rationing and limited quantities of consumer goods can
lead to a black market or second economy.
All these problems existed in
the Soviet Union, and they exist today in Cuba, exacerbated of course by the
fifty-year US blockade, by the collapse of the socialist bloc in the Soviet
Union and Eastern Europe, and more recently, by the fallout from the 2008
global recession.
On the surface, Cuba’s initiatives to address these problems resemble
Gorbachev’s in 1985-86. Gorbachev’s call for a move from
“extensive” to “intensive” development resembles the slogans of the recent
Congress of the Cuban Communist Party – “Production” and “Efficiency.”
Gorbachev’s moves to develop joint ventures, cooperatives and private
enterprise, sound similar to the new directions outlined by the recent PCC
Congress.
Below the surface, however, the differences in the problems and
approaches loom larger than the similarities.
Revolutionary Morale, National Unity
When Yuri Andropov and Gorbachev began to tackle the accumulated
problems of Soviet socialism in the 1980s, they did so against a sixty-year
historical backdrop that was much more stressful and contentious than
Cuba’s.
The Soviets had had to undertake breakneck industrialization and
forced agricultural collectivization. They had to forge multinational unity. They
had to withstand the internal divisions generated by erstwhile revolutionary
leaders who went over to the side of counterrevolution, some of whom who became
conspirators with foreign enemies of the revolution. They had to undergo the
trials and repressions of the 1930s. And, of course, they had to survive the
supreme test of the Nazi invasion. As if that were not enough, then came
the task of post-war reconstruction after a loss of perhaps twenty-seven
million citizens, and the four-decade-long military burden of the Cold
War.
Cuba’s road to socialism has been hard and long. The Cuban revolution
beat back the US-sponsored Bay of Pigs invasion and recurrent acts of
counterrevolutionary terrorism that cost the lives of some 3000 of its
citizens. The revolution experienced defections. At times it had to impose
repression. Above all it suffered – and suffers – the cruel, illegal, and
relentless U.S. blockade. The blockade is not only a drag on Cuban economic
development; it represents the US drive to strangle socialism in Cuba. That
obstinate drive takes many non-economic forms: the funding of so-called
“dissidents,” the sponsorship of bogus “democracy” movements, and a non-stop
ideological campaign against Cuba. The ideological campaign against Cuba is
reflected even in the struggle over how these latest reforms are to be
interpreted.
But these travails never reached the scale or destructiveness of
what the Soviet Union suffered, nor did they leave the legacy of
division. To a remarkable degree the Cubans have been able to preserve
revolutionary morale and national unity. They see the building of socialism as
a fulfillment of national independence and national destiny outlined by Jose Marti
in the struggle against colonial Spain and Yankee imperialism.
A Clear Focus
A second major difference has to do with the focus of
reform. Almost every leftwing commentator, including Fidel Castro,
viewed the initial economic reforms that Andropov and Gorbachev undertook to
improve intensive development, efficiency, productivity and quality as sensible
and long overdue. Almost immediately, however, Gorbachev lost the focus
on economics and initiated reckless and sweeping changes in Soviet foreign and
domestic policy, practices, personnel, and ideology with neither clear
objectives nor the people’s consent.
Within a year after proposing the
acceleration of economic development, Gorbachev launched from above a dubious
anti-alcohol campaign, declared the Soviet foreign policy would no longer be
guided by class principles but by universal human values, made unilateral
concessions to the U.S. on armaments and Afghanistan, began undermining the
Communist Party of the Soviet Union and turned the media over to elements
opposed to the Party and socialism.
By contrast, the Cuban Guidelines are tightly geared to improving
production and efficiency. No sign whatsoever has emerged that the Cuban
Communist Party intends to follow the top-down, broad, unfocused, and
undisciplined shock therapy that transformed the Soviet Union in five years
from an imperfect socialism to gangster capitalism.
Public Property, Black Markets, Party Corruption
A third difference has to do with the treatment of private
property. In both the Soviet Union and Cuba, a substantial black market
or second economy developed. Its measurement is problematic, but it is
safe to say that in the Soviet Union this cancer was much greater and more
problematic in 1985 than it is in Cuba today, and the accompanying corruption
had spread throughout the CPSU.
The real problem in the Soviet Union was
that Gorbachev’s reforms not only legalized much previously illegal private
economic activity, but that he rushed headlong to allow private enterprise
under the guise of fake “cooperatives,” dismantled central planning,
opened wide the door to foreign investment, and began the wholesale
transformation of state property into private property.
It is true that the Cuban reforms imply a modest expansion of capitalist
relations of production. This will inevitably reinforce petty bourgeois
consciousness in a sector of the population. Such a policy has risks.
However, unlike the Soviets, the Cubans, although encouraging some
private enterprises and giving greater responsibility to the management of
state enterprises, are doing so in a careful, disciplined, and measured way
with guidelines and limitations.
The Guidelines which the PCC has
forwarded to the National Congress of People’s Power declare, for example, that
the socialist state enterprise will remain “the principal form of the national
economy,” that the planning process will encompass both state and non-state
entities, that “the concentration of property…shall not be permitted,” and that
“the separation of state and enterprise functions will take place through a
gradual and ordered process.”
The reform process in Cuba will
entail a greater role for the PCC, a party that is clearly close to the Cuban
people, not the weakening, disorganization, and elimination of the CPSU, which
occurred in the USSR.
Previous Reform Experience
Cubans may speak of “changing their economic model,” but they use the
word “model" differently than it is used in the US. By “model” they
mean a set of economic policies suited to the concrete needs of socialist
construction in a given period of medium duration.
Since 1959 revolutionary
Cuba has reformed its “model" several times. The model in the early days of the
revolution was to begin the socialist transformation: to nationalize the
big foreign companies, distribute land to the landless, cope with the US
blockade by diversifying trade to the socialist lands, and create the first
planning institutions. In 1975 the Second PCC Congress debated new Socio-economic
Guidelines. In 1976 these led to the first Five-Year Plan. In 1985, the Third PCC
Congress began a “rectification process” that entailed dismantling some market
mechanisms and enhancing economic centralization.
In the Special Period
beginning around 1990 (its worst years were in the mid-1990s), the loss of
Soviet aid and socialist markets and the tightening of the US blockade, caused
Cuba to seek a new model. On an emergency basis, Cuba drastically altered
its policies. It built up tourism, instituted two currencies, enforced
belt-tightening wherever possible, conserved foreign exchange, turned state
farms into co-ops, allowed limited private enterprise in the retail sector, but
all the while conserved earlier advances in health care and education.
The present reforms address long-term and short-term problems,
including, for example, the overstaffing problem at state-owned enterprises,
the unlikelihood of the end of the US blockade any time soon, and the decline
of exports stemming from the world economic crisis that began in 2008. In its
new model, Cuba is mobilizing its unused reserves of labor, redeploying some
labor, incentivizing labor to heighten output, fostering certain private
enterprises in construction supplies and elsewhere, giving greater autonomy and
responsibility to state enterprises, and fostering agricultural cooperatives on
fallow land.
Not to tackle these problems would also pose risks.
Wide Democratic Discussion
After a year of discussion and revision of the initial Communist Party
of Cuba’s Draft Guidelines by the people as a whole in study groups, work
places, neighborhoods, trade unions and other venues, the Draft Guidelines were
then discussed in the provinces. In
April 2011 they were discussed and revised by the Party Congress itself.
Many changes occurred in this process. For example, the redeployment of
500,000 workers, the original proposal, was reduced, after discussion, to
300,000. The Guidelines, now numbering 313, will be turned into laws and policy
by the Cuban parliament, the National Assembly of People’s Power. The
whole process is a dramatic illustration of the search for informed consent
from below. No such process existed in 1985-1991 in the Soviet Union.
Conclusion
In short, the Cubans have learned from the disastrous course pursued by
Gorbachev. They are cognizant of the uniqueness of their history and
current situation, and aware of what went wrong in the Soviet Union. They
are avoiding sweeping, unfocused, top-down, divisive changes. They are keeping
the reform process democratic, measured and focused on improving economic
performance. Though they intend to improve economic efficiency and
increase production and productivity by giving greater autonomy and responsibility
to state enterprises and by allowing the formation of non-state entities
including cooperative and private businesses, they are doing so gradually
and within a web of regulations, limitations and taxation.
The reforms
represent, not opportunism, but a policy of struggle against existing economic
conditions and contradictions: against imperialism, against the blockade,
against the effects of the world recession. The Cubans give every indication of
understanding the pitfalls into which the Soviet Union fell and of avoiding
them. Without endangering the hard–won gains and unity of the past,
without sacrificing the involvement of the people and the fundamentals of
socialism, they are determined to find their own way forward.
Their reforms differ
from the Soviet reforms as much as Varadero Beach differs from the Siberian
tundra.
This, at any rate, is
our early take on Cuba ’s new path.
May 28, 2011
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