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Cuba remains caught in a web of its own making.
Cuba's economic growth is less than 2% this year and remains 8 percentage points below pre-pandemic levels, while production in sectors such as agriculture, mining and manufacturing was further behind, Economy Minister Alejandro Gil said on Saturday.
Speaking before the country's parliament, Gil said the primary sector, which includes agriculture, mining and other basic production, was down 34.9% compared with 2019, while manufacturing was off 20%. A third sector that includes services such as tourism, communications and education was down 4.9%. . . The minister said inflation was raging at a 45% clip this year, on top of last year's 39% jump, a figure many economists say underestimates the rate as it does not adequately account for a growing informal market driven by scarcity. (Cuban economy minister says no quick fix to devastating crisis)
Yet the Cuban aversion to the market, as the incarnation of the power of the evil of its great adversary, the United States as the vanguard of markets driven liberal democracy (essay here), has created a great irony--its inability to price itself to market as it sells its territory, allegiances, and services to its newer patrons.
Among its more interesting transactions of this kind has been the selling of its territory for the convenience of the spying of its friends and perhaps its patrons (Cuba Gains a Not-So-New Listening Post, Courtesy of China). Its value, of course, is a function of its utility in advancing Chinese interests and thwarting those of the United States in an area of significant strategic and ideological interest to the U.S. And yet what the Chinese are purchasing may be repurposed Soviet real estate already well known to virtually anyone with an internet connection.
Anyone who’s followed intelligence history will recall that the Soviets had a listening station in Lourdes, Cuba, for almost five decades. So it’s not surprising given the long-standing relationship between China and Cuba that China would also be seeking to find another platform on which to conduct intelligence operations against the U.S. China’s interest in a Cuban intelligence platform reflects two trends. One is that across a spectrum of intelligence collection operations, China’s activity is expanding greatly. . . you have to look at Cuba as just one small data point in a vast apparatus of Chinese intelligence activities directed against the U.S. Second, Cuba reflects Chinese geopolitical goals of expansion and assiduous cultivation of governments in Latin America, Mexico, Argentina, Bolivia, Ecuador, Cuba, the Caribbean. (Chinese spies in Cuba? The problem runs deeper than that)
And thus the general contradiction of Cuba in its current stage of development. This recalls Mao Zedong's discussion of contradiction and production.
Some people think that this is not true of certain contradictions. For instance, in the contradiction between the productive forces and the relations of production, the productive forces are the principal aspect; in the contradiction between theory and practice, practice is the principal aspect; in the contradiction between the economic base and the superstructure, the economic base is the principal aspect; and there is no change in their respective positions. This is the mechanical materialist conception, not the dialectical materialist conception. True, the productive forces, practice and the economic base generally play the principal and decisive role; whoever denies this is not a materialist. But it must also be admitted that in certain conditions, such aspects as the relations of production, theory and the superstructure in turn manifest themselves in the principal and decisive role. When it is impossible for the productive forces to develop without a change in the relations of production, then the change in the relations of production plays the principal and decisive role.(Mao Zedong, On Contradiction (1937).
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