Cuba handing beauty, barber shops over to workers

HAVANA (Reuters) – Communist Cuba is turning over  hundreds of state-run barber shops and beauty salons to employees  across the country in what appears to be the start of a  long-expected revamping of state retail services by President Raul  Castro.

The measure marks the first time state-run, retail-level  establishments have been handed over to employees since they were  nationalized in 1968.

Barbers and hair dressers in telephone interviews from a  number of cities during the weekend said they would now rent the  space where they work and pay taxes instead of receiving a monthly  wage.

Those employees who do not wish to rent are being offered  other jobs or retirement.

Cuba and North Korea are the world’s only remaining  Soviet-style command economies in which the state controls more  than 90 per cent of economic activity. Other communist countries  such as China and Vietnam have long since liberalized retail  trade, services and small business.

The measure, which is subject to adjustment and local  conditions, sets a monthly fee for each person based on 15 per cent  of the average revenue generated by haircutting and styling in  each area.

They will be able to charge whatever the market will bear and  expect to make good money for Cuba, where the average monthly wage  is 420 pesos, or the equivalent of about $20 US.

Daisy, a hairdresser in easternmost Guantanamo province, said  under the old system the government took in 4,920 pesos per month  per hairdresser. Now she will pay the government 738 pesos per  month and keep any earnings above that.

In Santiago de Cuba the monthly fee is 1,008 pesos and 1,292  in the city of Holguin.

“We have to pay water, electricity and for supplies but it  seems like a good idea,” Daisy said.

She said that while the plan did not turn the shops into  cooperatives, employees would have to join forces to decorate and  maintain the establishments.

“You will have to work very hard to earn a good living but I  like the idea,” said Yordanka, 25, a hair stylist in the eastern  city of Holguin.

Barbers and manicurists will pay less per month. For example,  in Guantanamo barbers will give the government 604 pesos and  manicurists will pay 280 pesos.

The government has not announced the new policy, which began  this month and now applies to beauty parlours and barber shops with  three or fewer seats, nor has the state-run media mentioned it.
Small step with

big implications

Castro has fostered discussion in the media and through  grassroots meetings on what ails the economy since taking over for  his brother Fidel Castro more than two years ago.

The retail sector has come under withering criticism for poor  service and rampant theft, and officials have repeatedly urged  patience as they experiment with ways to bring improvement,  without jumping into full-scale capitalism.

Beauty shops have operated in a kind of a philosophical void  that served no one very well, said Mabel, a Havana hairdresser.