Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Cuba's booming private restaurants cause "bread crisis"

Cuba's booming private restaurants cause "bread crisis"
English.news.cn 2011-03-22 14:17:48

HAVANA, March 21 (Xinhua) -- Cuba's rapidly growing number of small
private restaurants has forced the government to reorganize private
bread production, a state-run daily necessity in Cuba, Cuban daily
Granma said Monday.

"The discrepancy between bread supply and demand in the country is
exacerbated by the growing demand from private food processors who have
acquired self-employment licenses in recent months," the newspaper said.

Bread in Cuba is sold only in state-run stores, and the supply is now
considered "insufficient" to meet the demand of the Cubans, as demands
from an increasing number of private restaurants and fast food outlets
are making the "bread crisis" worse.

From March 1 to date, Cuban authorities estimated that in Havana alone,
up to 9,779 people have opened private restaurants and cafes.

"Clearly the only solution is to increase the production to meet all
requirements," the newspaper said, adding the bread supply on the island
is still "complex."

Every Cuban has the right to acquire one loaf of bread per day at a
subsidized price through a food rationing program, but in recent years
the government has also opened up establishments where bread is sold
freely in Cuban pesos, together with shops and candy stores that sell
goods and food in foreign currencies.

Cuba's state-owned bread company Cadena Cubana del Pan reported an
increase in daily bread production from 25 tons in 2010 to 33 tons,
while the demand this year is expected to grow by 52 percent.

The new production plan is "insufficient," and to meet the growing
demand it is necessary to "rescue" the capability of the bakeries to
make their own bread, the company's director Gloria Rodriguez said.

The Cuban authorities said they will make sure all measures are taken to
meet the growing demand for bread.

Cuban leader Raul Castro recently announced that the ruling Communist
Party will hold its first congress since 1997 in the second half of
April, and the reform of Cuba's economic model will be the central theme
of the congress. The Cuban government currently controls 85 percent of
the island's economy.

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/indepth/2011-03/22/c_13792143.htm

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