(Pix Credit HERE)
I have been focusing on Cuba's economic model in recent work. My book, Cuba’s Caribbean Marxism: Essays on Ideology, Government, Society, and Economy in the Post Fidel Castro Era (Little Sir Press, 2018). I suggested the critical importance of ideology to the construction and evolution of the Cuban political-economic model. More recently I have suggested the way that ideological premises help shape the Cuban political economic model, constrain the possibilities of itys modification, and shape the way that Cuba approaches even the most critical implementation policies--in this case reintegration into global production orders (Remarks:
"The Fundamental Contradiction of Cuban Socialism in the “New Era”:
Economic Reintegration Preserving the Revolutionary Moment").
Prominent academics have also been advancing knowledge in this area in important ways. Among them are Carmelo Mesa Lago who has been at the forefront of study of the Cuban economy and its many transformations as it has sought to implement an economic model that changes at the margins with implementation "experiments" and approaches that have varied widely over the course of the last half century. His work has been influential on both sides of the Straits of Florida and continues to drive debate in the field.
Prominent academics have also been advancing knowledge in this area in important ways. Among them are Carmelo Mesa Lago who has been at the forefront of study of the Cuban economy and its many transformations as it has sought to implement an economic model that changes at the margins with implementation "experiments" and approaches that have varied widely over the course of the last half century. His work has been influential on both sides of the Straits of Florida and continues to drive debate in the field.
And Mario González Corso, who is is an associate professor at the department of economics and business at Lehman College of the City University of New York (CUNY), where he also serves as director of the Masters in Science in Business Program, and who has done important work on the Cuban tourism sector.
CUNY's Bildner Center has brought these two outstanding academics together for a program touching on these important issues. The title of the program, "Cuba's Economic Model: Continuity Versus Change," considers the effects on the ground of Cuban efforts to navigate between its ideologies and the realities it faces in the current era.
Information about the program follows.