*- Havana Times.org - http://www.havanatimes.org -*

*First-Class Business in Old Havana*

Posted By *Daisy Valera* On December 18, 2010 @ 4:26 am In *Daisy Valera's
Diary* | *No 
Comments<http://www.havanatimes.org/?p=34609&print=1#comments_controls>
*

*Daisy Valera *

Photo by Elio Delgado.

If someone in the streets of Old Havana proposes conducting “first-class
business” with you, *tell them no*.

*Why?  It’s simple: prostitution is a synonym for “first-class business.”*

I was seated recently in one of the parks of historic Old Havana reading a
book by a poet who likes birds.

As would be expected, I wasn’t paying attention to anyone or anything else.

This however didn’t prevent a certain individual from sitting down exactly
on the same bench as mine and starting to talk to me.

This individual, who said he was a chef at the Floridita (one of the most
famous bar-restaurants in the country), bombarded me with questions.

He began like this:

“You know you caught my attention for being so pretty?  Are you a dancer?”

He continued:

“How old are you? Where do you live?”

I didn’t utter a single word in response to his enquiries; I only shot him
an unfriendly look.

This self-professed cook didn’t surrender:

“What’s your name?  Would you like to work with tourists?”

And lastly:

“Would you like to be part of a ‘first-class business’?”

To me it was as clear as water what business he was referring to, and with
no other alternative I got up and left.

I definitely lack the aptitude for either being a dancer or a “business
woman.”
------------------------------

Article printed from Havana Times.org: *http://www.havanatimes.org*

URL to article: *http://www.havanatimes.org/?p=34609*

*Cuba’s Reforms: “If They Win We Lose”*

Posted By *the editor* On December 16, 2010 @ 6:27 pm In *Fernando
Ravsberg,Lead Articles,Opinion,leftcol1* | *1
Comment<http://www.havanatimes.org/?p=34505&print=1#comments_controls>
*

*Fernando Ravsberg * <http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/mundo/cartas_desde_cuba/>
[1]

Havana Shoe Repairman. HT file photo.

HAVANA TIMES, Dec. 16 — “Look, I think it’s fine that the government is
earmarking all these millions to import supplies for self-employed workers;
in fact, I didn’t expect they would,” said a mechanic to me, though he
immediately added, “but what are they going to buy?”

“The problem is that no one asked us what we need, and I suspect that the
same thing is going to keep on happening.  They’ll send some useless
bureaucrats out to buy shipping containers full of useless things,”
explained the irritated worker.

He told me that most of the tools they sell are no good, and that if they
had the necessary spare parts the country could save loads of money.  “They
sometimes force us to replace motors when these could be fixed.”

Self-employed workers want to be consulted before the government begins
spending the US$130 million allocated to buy supplies for them.  In fact,
they’re only asking that an elementary market study be conducted.

They explained to me that it wouldn’t be difficult.  In January, when all
self-employed workers have to report to the tax collection offices, “All
they would have to do is make a survey of our needs when we show up to pay
our taxes.”

*They don’t ask us what to import*

“They’ve never ask us anything.  I have to buy my big cooking pots stolen
from workplace cafeterias, and I get my juicers from a sailor in the
merchant marines.  My whole kitchen is homemade,” a cafeteria owner
complained.

She told me that she discovered a store out at the upscale Miramar Business
Center that has some of those utensils, “but they only sell to diplomats, so
we end up paying commissions to foreigners for them to buy what we need.”

The carpenter who had just finished making me two cedar chests echoed these
concerns saying, “The main thing we need if for the government to sell wood
for us.”  As he was helping me to get them in my car, he confessed, “All the
material we use has to be bought in the street (the black market).”

No one has checked with him about what his needs are.  However, as he
explained, they should offer him better prices if they want to see him
working legally, “because in the ‘chopings’ (stores that sell in hard
currency) 30 nails cost a dollar and I can’t afford that.”

The life of manicurists isn’t easy either.  They tell me they make the most
money putting on fake fingernails and then refitting them every 15 days.
The problem in Cuba is that is that they don’t sell the machine or the
product for subsequent maintenance.

Notwithstanding, the market doesn’t stop.  From Ecuador and Miami, those who
have emigrated have created a profitable supply network that provides, among
other things, Cuban manicurists with everything necessary for them to
continue working.

“I could expand my business more,” said one shoe repairer when discussing
his problem of buying glue.  “It’s all because the institution that supplies
such goods is only authorized to sell to ‘artisans.’”

This is a good example of the problems generated by bureaucratic
inflexibility.  Apparently in this case it’s not the shortage of products as
much as logic that prevents the selling of this critical supply for shoe
repairers, unnecessarily pushing them toward illegal activities.

*Victims or delinquents*

I asked myself, “Where does the black market for glue and shoe leather get
its supplies? And who benefits from this artificial shortage?  My conclusion
was that some of those officials who decide don’t lack intelligence – just
the opposite.

A Portuguese journalist demonstrated in one report that a European cannot
live for 24 hours without using some Chinese product.  The same thing
happens here, but with the black market; because if this disappeared the
lives of ordinary people would become paralyzed.

That’s why one should always keep it in mind that the shoe repairer is not
the criminal but the victim of an economic model that has made the
trafficking of influence and stolen goods the main source of income for its
own bureaucracy.

All this explains the fear of self-employed workers; they know that it’s not
a good idea to let these people decide on what supplies are acquired,
because “they’ll look for a way to win; and if they win, we lose,” one
worker explained.

—

*Havana Times translation of the orgininal in Spanish from BBC
Mundo.<http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/mundo/cartas_desde_cuba/2010/12/si_ellos_ganan_nosotros_perdem.html>
[2]*
------------------------------

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1 Comment To "Cuba’s Reforms: “If They Win We Lose”"

*#1 Pingback* By *The Cuban Economy – La Economía Cubana | News and
Articles, December 13 – 19, 2010* On December 18, 2010 @ 3:53 pm

[...] Havana Times, December 16: Cuba’s Reforms: “If They Win We Lose”
<http://www.havanatimes.org/?p=34505 >[3] [...]
------------------------------

Article printed from Havana Times.org: *http://www.havanatimes.org*

URL to article: *http://www.havanatimes.org/?p=34505*

URLs in this post:

[1] *Fernando Ravsberg *: *
http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/mundo/cartas_desde_cuba/*

[2] BBC Mundo.: *
http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/mundo/cartas_desde_cuba/2010/12/si_ellos_ganan_nosotros_perdem.html
*

[3] : *http://www.havanatimes.org/?p=34505 *


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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