Cuba approves law aimed at attracting foreign investment

HAVANA (Reuters) – Cuba’s National Assembly passed a new foreign investment law yesterday that aims to bring badly needed capital to the communist economy by offering steep tax cuts and promising a climate of investment security.

The assembly voted unanimously in a special session to approve the law, official media reported. It will become valid within 90 days.

The new law halves the profits tax from 30 to 15 per cent and exempts investors from paying it for eight years, though it also appears to withhold many of the tax benefits from companies that are 100 per cent foreign-owned. Those incentives are reserved for joint ventures with the Cuban state and investments linking foreign and Cuban companies.

Analysts and Cuban-based diplomats have expressed skepticism over the law, uncertain whether the one-party state has undergone a genuine change of heart and truly wants to attract foreign investors on international terms.

Areas such as agriculture, infrastructure, sugar, nickel mining, building renovation and real estate development are considered ripe for investment.

Cuba needs to attract $2 billion to $2.5 billion in foreign direct investment per year to reach its economic growth target of 7 percent, minister for foreign trade and investment Rodrigo Malmierca said on Cuban state television on Friday night.

Cuba does not publish figures on FDI, which economists estimate to be several hundred million dollars a year at most. Cuba’s gross domestic product is expected to expand 2.2 per cent this year, compared with 2.7 per cent growth in 2013.

“If the economy does not grow at levels around 7 per cent … we are not going to be able to develop,” Malmierca said.

“We have to provide incentives in order for them to come,” Malmierca said of foreign investors.

Cuba is cut off from US investment by a comprehensive trade embargo and has failed to meet its investment targets for each of the past five years.

The new investment law continues the structural economic reforms under way in Cuba since President Raul Castro took over from his ailing brother Fidel in 2008. It has been anticipated since 2011, when Cuba enacted a 300-point overhaul of its domestic economy to encourage more private enterprise.

Cuba is hoping foreigners will invest in sectors throughout the economy, reasoning that it makes little sense to start a dairy business, for example, if they need to import both the cattle and the machinery, said Marino Murillo, who is in charge of Cuba’s economic reforms.