Tuesday, December 13, 2016

AMERICAN TOURISTS ARE CAUSING FOOD SHORTAGES IN CUBA

AMERICAN TOURISTS ARE CAUSING FOOD SHORTAGES IN CUBA
Basic goods like onions and peppers are going to outsiders who are
willing and able to pay
BY DAN Q. DAO

When JetBlue announced the first direct commercial flight between the
United States and Cuba this past summer, many on both sides were hopeful
about the notion of foreign tourism bringing money into the
country—money that all Cubans would hopefully see. But now, according to
a recent New York Times article, the island's booming private tourism
industry is now at odds with the basic needs of everyday Cubans, most of
whom still earn their living through the state-run economy and a
government that didn't prepare for a record influx of some 3.5 million
visitors to an island of 11 million.
The Times interviews a handful of these citizens, like one Lisset
Felipe, a government-employed air-conditioner saleswoman, who explains
that she hasn't bought a single onion or green pepper this year, and
that even garlic has become a rarity. If you're wondering, "What
American tourist is going to Cuba to buy onions?," the issue really
comes down to Cuba's booming industry of private restaurants and hotels
that cater solely to fat-pocketed visitors.

Of course, we can't and shouldn't take all the blame: The Times
acknowledges there has "long been a divide between Cubans and tourists,
with beach resorts and Havana hotels effectively reserved for outsiders
willing to shell out money for a comfortable version of Cuba."
Furthermore, the Cuban government has failed to generate adequate supply
to meet the obviously growing demand, and has failed to crack down on a
growing trend of middlemen buyers employed by private businesses to
scour the city for produce.
Eschewing the state-run markets, which are often filled with sub-par
goods, restaurants are now employing units of buyers who scour the
city's more expensive private groceries, black-market outposts, and even
go directly to the farms to obtain quality produce—leaving ordinary
Cubans in the dust.
There is hope, however: As American-Cuban relations began to warm up,
there's a possibility that the longstanding U.S. embargo will be lifted
by Congress, allowing Americans to invest in the Cuba's economy the way
they're investing in its private tourism sector. But it's a hot-button
issue with a long way to go for an economic experiment that's yet to be
tested.

Source: American Tourists Are Causing Food Shortages in Cuba | SAVEUR -
http://www.saveur.com/cuba-food-shortage-american-tourism

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