Price Reductions on Food Items in Cuba Are Not Enough / Ivan Garcia
Ivan Garcia, 25 April 2016 — It is a Black Friday of a different sort. 
In the United States the morning after Thanksgiving marks the beginning 
of the Christmas discount season, where people wait in long lines to buy 
electronics, computers and clothing. But in Cuba on Friday, April 22 — a 
date when the military government has reduced prices by 20% on a variety 
of grocery items — there are no lines
As usually happens at Brimart, a grocery store in the heavily populated 
Tenth of October district where products are sold for hard currency, 
employees open the doors fifteen minutes late.
Seven people are waiting outside. Four of them know about the sale on 
chicken and ground meat but are only planning on buying their usual 
items, which in the case of Mireya, a housewife, consists of a kilogram 
of chicken thighs, two packages of ground turkey and, if available, 
three containers of natural yogurt smoothies. "With the 0.70 centavos I 
save on the chicken and ground turkey," she says, "I plan on buying my 
granddaughter a piece of candy."
Arnaldo, a carpenter, found out about the sale before going into the 
store. "I'm going to buy chicken, ground beef, cooking oil, detergent 
and soap," he says. "With what I have left over, I'm going to buy two 
Planchaos (small cardboard containers with two quarter bottles of rum). 
The only way to disconnect from this country is by getting plastered and 
watching the paquete."*
Among the products listed as being on sale, Brimart only has chicken 
thighs, whole chickens, ground beef and one-liter bottles of cooking 
oil. Shortages are noticeable. However, the shelves are full of rum, 
whisky, wine, beer, canned tomato puree and plastic bottles of vegetable 
oil.
"I was expecting a big crowd, but it is as slow as ever," says Olga 
Lidia, a state worker. "A lot of  people are happy about the sale. It 
has a positive impact on the household budget. But the reality is that 
the discounts are on items sold in a currency to which a lot of people 
don't have access."
Rachel, a store employee, confirms they are waiting on shipments of a 
wide assortment of canned goods, cookies and cold cuts but, she notes, 
"according to the manager, they have not arrived yet due to the 
transportation problem."
On the lower level of the Carlos III shopping mall, there are people 
eating hamburgers and drinking draft beer in the food court, while in 
the meat and cheese department a man with a furrowed brow is looking at 
prices.
"What sons-of-bitches," referring to government officials, he says. 
"They lower the prices by a few centavos on ground meat and chicken — 
the food of the poor people — but beef, good fish and imported cheeses 
still cost an arm and a leg."
Noel, an economist, believes this is new measure is a populist move. It 
is more a political ploy than anything else," he notes. "They know how 
disgusted people on the street are. The price reductions they have put 
in place won't even put a dent in the 240% to 400% markups on goods sold 
in convertible pesos. These twenty-percent reductions are a way to curb 
discontent."
Although Susana, a professor approves of the reductions, she claims they 
will be of no benefit to her. "We teachers earn between 500 to 600 pesos 
(twenty to twenty-five dollars) a month. That is barely enough to eat 
on. The government should be thinking about raising salaries and 
lowering prices of household appliances," she says as she eyes a washing 
machine costing 757 CUC, the equivalent of three-years salary for an 
elementary school teacher.
Gilberto — the manager of a market inside a store in the Flores 
neighborhood in Miramar, a suburb west of the capital — cannot guarantee 
that people will always be able to find the lower-priced items on sale.
"Because supply outstrips demand," he explains," and generally owners of 
food and hospitality businesses buy in large quantities. All this 
suggests the government reduced prices after taking into account its 
stores' inventories."
Selma, the proprietor of a cafe, does not think prices will be lowered 
at food service establishments.
"If the price of these foods stays low and the prices of other items are 
gradually reduced, then that might lower the costs for family 
businesses, but we'll have to wait and see. In Cuba prices are lowered 
on things that are in short supply, like potatoes. They used to sell 
them by the pound and now you can only get them once a year," says Selma.
In several of Havana's hard currency stores, things have been in short 
supply for the last ten months. Chicken breasts, yogurt and domestically 
produced cheese are scarce almost everywhere.
Dariel, the head of business that occupies one floor of a building in 
the old part of the city, sees the glass half full. "They say that there 
will be ships coming into port loaded with food and other things to sell 
in stores," he says.
It seems Cuba is always waiting for its ship to come in.
*Translator's note: the "package," a weekly compendium of foreign TV 
serials, soap operas, sports shows and films sold illicitly throughout Cuba.
Source: Price Reductions on Food Items in Cuba Are Not Enough / Ivan 
Garcia – Translating Cuba - 
http://translatingcuba.com/price-reductions-on-food-items-in-cuba-are-not-enough-ivan-garcia/
 
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