Zürcher Nachrichten - Cuba resurrects dollar-only stores, a symbol of inequality

EUR -
AED 4.328211
AFN 74.248249
ALL 96.478327
AMD 443.111303
ANG 2.109281
AOA 1080.726424
ARS 1613.73794
AUD 1.667878
AWG 2.121383
AZN 2.032633
BAM 1.956374
BBD 2.370686
BDT 143.842234
BGN 1.941827
BHD 0.444365
BIF 3490.210161
BMD 1.178546
BND 1.493561
BOB 8.133043
BRL 6.094145
BSD 1.177046
BTN 107.037616
BWP 15.585576
BYN 3.375277
BYR 23099.50227
BZD 2.367285
CAD 1.614667
CDF 2687.084811
CHF 0.912796
CLF 0.025875
CLP 1021.682589
CNY 8.14228
CNH 8.104042
COP 4353.006919
CRC 561.70773
CUC 1.178546
CUP 31.23147
CVE 110.292704
CZK 24.239108
DJF 209.611544
DKK 7.47131
DOP 72.343875
DZD 153.239319
EGP 56.340397
ERN 17.678191
ETB 183.167532
FJD 2.619024
FKP 0.87254
GBP 0.873792
GEL 3.152602
GGP 0.87254
GHS 12.935249
GIP 0.87254
GMD 86.622301
GNF 10326.111878
GTQ 9.031269
GYD 246.2108
HKD 9.219218
HNL 31.138689
HRK 7.531737
HTG 154.266969
HUF 379.373378
IDR 19838.465393
ILS 3.673935
IMP 0.87254
INR 107.193125
IQD 1542.04622
IRR 1513031.541254
ISK 144.914444
JEP 0.87254
JMD 183.399958
JOD 0.835613
JPY 183.748308
KES 152.032735
KGS 103.063921
KHR 4732.827396
KMF 492.632457
KPW 1060.707574
KRW 1702.309589
KWD 0.361507
KYD 0.980884
KZT 587.502497
LAK 25222.405577
LBP 105406.20124
LKR 364.186929
LRD 217.159941
LSL 18.962887
LTL 3.47994
LVL 0.712891
LYD 7.446186
MAD 10.792611
MDL 20.21585
MGA 5037.47906
MKD 61.630086
MMK 2474.594632
MNT 4204.926219
MOP 9.475342
MRU 47.125038
MUR 54.743667
MVR 18.220296
MWK 2041.090627
MXN 20.352653
MYR 4.593385
MZN 75.314967
NAD 18.962968
NGN 1585.945249
NIO 43.30849
NOK 11.261874
NPR 171.263292
NZD 1.97496
OMR 0.453154
PAB 1.176996
PEN 3.953861
PGK 5.132963
PHP 68.089334
PKR 328.961787
PLN 4.221729
PYG 7610.234449
QAR 4.290178
RON 5.095913
RSD 117.420901
RUB 90.394846
RWF 1719.097453
SAR 4.421541
SBD 9.481618
SCR 16.029722
SDG 708.895307
SEK 10.680807
SGD 1.493365
SHP 0.884215
SLE 28.876674
SLL 24713.520298
SOS 671.494309
SRD 44.30567
STD 24393.523432
STN 24.504596
SVC 10.29898
SYP 130.286487
SZL 18.956566
THB 36.60326
TJS 11.152065
TMT 4.124911
TND 3.417358
TOP 2.837656
TRY 51.691733
TTD 7.967339
TWD 37.03404
TZS 3024.836191
UAH 50.947543
UGX 4237.046311
USD 1.178546
UYU 45.670503
UZS 14375.220724
VES 473.576779
VND 30868.477727
VUV 139.433869
WST 3.196488
XAF 656.146868
XAG 0.013353
XAU 0.000227
XCD 3.18508
XCG 2.121414
XDR 0.81604
XOF 656.149653
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.02398
ZAR 18.867929
ZMK 10608.334742
ZMW 22.287449
ZWL 379.491342
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    -0.0800

    23.88

    -0.34%

  • BCC

    -1.3700

    80.54

    -1.7%

  • CMSD

    -0.0700

    23.73

    -0.29%

  • RYCEF

    18.0900

    18.09

    +100%

  • BCE

    0.2700

    26.07

    +1.04%

  • GSK

    -0.2600

    59.26

    -0.44%

  • NGG

    1.1600

    91.44

    +1.27%

  • RIO

    0.5800

    97.67

    +0.59%

  • JRI

    -0.0100

    13.12

    -0.08%

  • RELX

    -0.9600

    30.5

    -3.15%

  • VOD

    -0.0900

    15.56

    -0.58%

  • BTI

    0.0200

    62.1

    +0.03%

  • BP

    0.2300

    38.41

    +0.6%

  • AZN

    0.7400

    204.94

    +0.36%

Cuba resurrects dollar-only stores, a symbol of inequality
Cuba resurrects dollar-only stores, a symbol of inequality / Photo: YAMIL LAGE - AFP

Cuba resurrects dollar-only stores, a symbol of inequality

In communist Cuba, some customers are more equal than others, as a 40-year-old math teacher who was out shopping recently in Havana with his son discovered.

Text size:

The pair passed a spanking new shop situated on the ground floor of a luxury hotel in the upmarket Miramar neighborhood.

But "we had barely put a foot inside when they told me it (payment) was in dollars," Michael, the teacher, who declined to give his surname, told AFP.

"Let's go, this isn't for us," he told his son, making a beeline for the door.

The state-owned supermarket, which opened in January, is the first of several dollar-denominated stores set to open across the island, as part of a bid to boost the island's battered economy.

Prime Minister Manuel Marrero said the move was a "necessary process" for the state to get its hands on some of the dollars circulating "illegally" on the black market.

The Caribbean nation of 9.7 million is experiencing its worst economic crisis in 30 years, marked by shortages of food and fuel, recurring blackouts and a critical shortage of hard currency.

Remittances from Cuban migrants are the island's second-biggest source of precious dollars, after the payments it receives from loaning tens of thousands of doctors to around 60 countries, including Venezuela and Brazil.

But many Cubans have no access to greenbacks. That leaves the country divided between the haves, who can purchase plentiful goods in dollar-payment stores, and the have-nots like Michael, who is paid in Cuban pesos -- which he then converts into MLC, a virtual currency introduced in 2019 that has lost much of its value.

- 'The prince and the pauper' -

As Michael was leaving the dollar-denominated store, customers were emerging with trolleys piled high with goods -- a rare sight of plenty in Cuba, where store shelves are often empty.

The shortages, coupled with paltry wages (the average monthly salary is around 5,000 pesos, or $42), mean that people can rarely manage to fill their carts.

"Here we've always found what we're looking for," said Enzo Puebla, a 24-year-old engineer. He receives dollars from relatives overseas, using them to buy eggs, cooking oil and meat -- goods rarely stocked in the MLC-payment store across the street.

Such is the contrast between the two stores that Cubans have nicknamed them "the prince and the pauper."

"The main problem of dollarization is that it's partial," Cuban economist Mauricio de Miranda told AFP, noting that while consumer goods may be available in dollars, salaries are not.

"This naturally leads to the exclusion of people who have no way of obtaining dollars," Miranda, a researcher at Javierana University in the Colombian city of Cali, said.

- When dollars meant jail -

Cuba has a long, turbulent relationship with the dollar.

After the nationalist revolution that brought Fidel Castro to power in 1959, the dollar was strictly banned.

Being in possession of a single greenback could land a person in prison for a year.

It took the collapse of the Soviet Union, Cuba's main ally and financial backer, to bring a change of heart.

In 1993, Castro finally decriminalized possession of dollars, and the first stores accepting greenbacks were opened.

But a decade later, amid a row with the United States, the dollar was scrapped as legal tender.

- Drop in tourism -

Cuba blames its current economic woes on a tightening, during Donald Trump's first presidency, of the six-decade-long US trade embargo.

But it is also reeling from a decline in tourists, who are put off by the widespread shortages and blackouts, and a failed monetary reform in 2021 that drove up the price of dollars on the black market.

The government has billed its partial dollarization strategy as a temporary measure aimed at reviving the economy -- and says its ultimate goal is to wean Cubans off the US currency altogether.

For Tamarys Bahamonde, a Cuban economist at the American University in Washington, it's an illusory goal.

Cuba, she argued, is a "nearly textbook case of the difficulties you face when you try to de-dollarize an economy."

N.Fischer--NZN