Cuba Journal

Evaluating the Climate for Foreign Investment in Cuba

offshore oil rig Cuba

Cuba announced in May the next step in its economic transition by allowing legal status for private businesses.

Previously, the communist government permitted individuals to operate as self-employed workers under several hundred clearly-defined roles such as taxi driver. The latest announcement will likely take months to become law.

“Private property in certain means of production contributes to employment, economic efficiency and well-being, in a context in which socialist property relationships predominate,” reads one section of the “Conceptualization of the Cuban Economic and Social Model of Socialist Development.”

Once considered to be a mortal threat to the Cuba regime, private businesses – and business people in particular – will now have official status and will hopefully find an end to the practice of radom crackdowns and suspicion that threatens to undermine emerging capitalists seeking to satisfy demand for goods and services.

Price distortions tend to undermine capital formation and private sector employment. As the Cuban government gropes for private sector alternatives to government employment in inefficient state enterprises, it is no surprise that the emerging private restaurants (paladares), taxi drivers and small shops would be officially integrated into the economy. The promise it that these small businesses successfully negotiate price distortions and offer stability amid the wrenching transition away from a centrally planned economy.

It appears the new law granting private companies formal status in the economy will not change the practice of requiring foreign investors to partner with Cuban government entities.

Investment Climate for Foreign Investors in Cuba

Cuba has a number of non-tariff measures, institutional and infrastructural factors, and other barriers that affect the ability of foreign partners to trade with or invest in the country.

Some of these factors are possible barriers because they are not yet faced by US firms, due to the limited involvement of US firms in the Cuban market; some are possible barriers because they do not necessarily act as barriers to all firms; and others are perceived as barriers, although it is not clear to what extent they might act as such.

Cuba’s monopoly over almost all aspects of the economy – and the fact that reforms to open the market are both recent and relatively slow-moving – add to uncertainty for those planning to do business in the island nation.

Cuba depends heavily on imports, and many of its trade processes—such as customs duties and procedures, and the sanitary and phytosanitary measures applied to agricultural imports—do not appear to hinder trade. In fact, it is Cuba’s lack of hard foreign currency and domestic fiscal constraints that limits its ability to import. This situation has led to an increase in market share for countries that are willing and able to provide Cuba with generous credit terms – in some cases extending into multiple years. As a result, the Cuban market may not be as open to US goods as it would otherwise be.

The Cuban government has recently loosened some restrictions on foreign investment, and it has been actively seeking investment in areas it believes will eventually allow Cuba to substitute its own products for foreign imports, such as agricultural products and light manufacturing. These changes are too recent to accurately assess their impact.

Cuba’s central planners have indicated that it will need $2-2.5 billion in foreign investment annually to meet targeted growth rates and reduce its dependence on imports. With the dissolution of the USSR in the 1990s and, more recently, Venezuela, it is vital that Cuba deliver both economic growth and economic development towards a economy driven by the private sector. As such, potential foreign investors and trading partners should anticipate further loosening of rules design to attract interest in Cuba.

Here are the key factors to consider when contemplating doing business in Cuba:

Click here to read about Uniliver’s recent deal to retain controlling interest in its partnership with the Cuban government.

Evaluating the Climate for Foreign Investment in Cuba was last modified: April 19th, 2017 by Cuba Journal