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BAEconomy6 days ago

Socialism has failed in Cuba: The country is changing its course and giving opportunities to the private sector

Cuba has announced economic reforms modeled after Vietnam's and China's socialist market economies, aiming to increase private sector participation while maintaining state dominance. The reforms include changes in agriculture and restructuring of the state apparatus. The proposed measures seek to resolve long-standing contradictions between centralized planning and market incentives. The reforms still need approval from Cuba's Communist Party Politburo and parliament. Relations between the United States and Cuba remain tense since the 1959 revolution led by Fidel Castro.

Kuba je objavila planove za reformu svoje ekonomije po uzoru na socijalističke tržišne ekonomije Vijetnama i Kine, a predsjednik Miguel Díaz-Canel izjavio je da bi planirano otvaranje omogućilo veće učešće privatnog sektora u ekonomiji kojom i dalje dominantno upravlja država.

Reformu još trebaju odobriti Politbiro Komunističke partije Kube i kubanski parlament.

– Predložene mjere riješit će dugogodišnje kontradikcije između centralnog planiranja i tržišnih podsticaja – rekao je Díaz-Canel novinarima u petak.

Plan uključuje i promjene u poljoprivrednom sektoru, kao i restrukturiranje državnog aparata.

Odnosi između Sjedinjene Američke Države i Kuba zategnuti su još od revolucije iz 1959. godine koju je predvodio Fidel Castro.

Read the full article at Dnevni avaz
Source document: Predsjednik Miguel Díaz-Canel

1 reports

Dnevni avazParty-alignedCenter6 days ago
Socialism has failed in Cuba: The country is changing its course and giving opportunities to the private sector

Cuba has announced economic reforms modeled after Vietnam's and China's socialist market economies, aiming to increase private sector participation while maintaining state dominance. The reforms include changes in agriculture and restructuring of the state apparatus. The proposed measures seek to resolve long-standing contradictions between centralized planning and market incentives. The reforms still need approval from Cuba's Communist Party Politburo and parliament. Relations between the United States and Cuba remain tense since the 1959 revolution led by Fidel Castro.

Bias read (Center): The article presents factual information about Cuba's planned economic reforms without overtly favoring any political perspective. It includes direct quotes from Cuban officials and mentions the need for approval from both the Communist Party and parliament, indicating an attempt at balanced framing

Official sources cited

  • government Predsjednik Miguel Díaz-Canel

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  • governmentPredsjednik Miguel Díaz-Canel