Cuba revising travel policies – Raul Castro

HAVANA, (Reuters) – Cuba will revise its travel and  immigration rules as part of a broader reform of its economic  and social policies, Cuban President Raul Castro said yesterday.

Raul Castro

He spoke after the Cuban Parliament approved Communist  Party proposals to overhaul the country’s stagnating,  state-dominated economy and lift some restrictions on citizens’  personal lives.

“The country is modifying decisions that played a role at a  certain moment and unnecessarily were never changed,” the  Prensa Latina news agency quoted Castro as stating.

“Today the overwhelming majority of Cuban immigrants leave  for economic reasons and almost all of them maintain their love  for family and the country where they were born,” Castro  said.

He said rules still in place dated back to the earlier  years of the revolution when immigration was largely political  and manipulated by the United States.

It was not immediately clear what the changes in travel and  immigration policy would entail. But Cuban regulations, which  make it difficult and expensive to travel or move abroad, have  long been criticized by local residents and human rights  groups.
The economic reform plan approved by the National Assembly  includes more than 300 points. It was first approved at a  Communist Party Congress in April and would definitively do  away with the decades-old paternalistic society built under  Fidel Castro’s leadership.

Foreign journalists were not invited to the parliamentary  meeting addressed by Castro. But he was paraphrased by  state-run media as urging lawmakers and all citizens to adjust  to the new times and model he is pushing by shedding  bureaucratic habits. “President Raul Castro said today that a change in  mentality is indispensable to put into practice the changes the  country needs,” Prensa Latina said.

ECONOMY SEEN  
IMPROVING      

The measures, some already being implemented, were  improving economic performance, Castro said, with growth at 1.9  percent in the first half of 2011 and on track toward 2.9  percent for the year, compared with 2.1 percent in 2010.

The reforms, to be implemented over five years, slash more  than a million government jobs and reduce the state’s role in  sectors such as agriculture, retail services, transportation  and construction in favor of private small businesses,  cooperatives and leasing.

Larger state companies are freed up to make more of their  own decisions and take into account market forces, while  regulations that prohibit normal personal affairs such as  buying and selling cars and homes would be loosened.

At the same time state subsidies for everything from food  to utilities will be gradually eliminated and state wages,  which average the equivalent of $18 per month, increased.

The state has monopolized more than 90 percent of all  economic activity and employed a similar percentage of the  labor force since the earliest days of Fidel Castro’s 1959  revolution.

The country, which faces a stiff U.S. trade embargo, has  yet to fully emerge from a two-decades-old economic crisis  sparked by the demise of former benefactor the Soviet Union.

Castro has pushed for a new economic and social model based  on individual effort and reward with targeted welfare, to  replace one based on collective labour and consumption.

Raul Castro first replaced his ailing brother Fidel five  years ago and then became president in 2008.

The single chamber parliament meets two times a year for  only a few days and just about all of its members hold  positions in, or are members of, the Communist Party, the only  legal political organization in the country.