"However, the US blockade did not prevent Cuba from trading with industrialized capitalist countries in Asia and Europe, and particularly with Canada and Spain. The principal obstacle to Cuba’s economic relations with those non-US industrial capitalist countries was Cuba’s own lack of goods to sell and thus its lack of hard currency with which to pay for imports, whether capital or consumer goods. Nevertheless, Cuba received more than $6 billion in credits and loans from many of the industrialized capitalist countries until Cuba suspended the service of these debts several years before the collapse of the Soviet bloc."
--Samuel Farber, Jacobin June 2015 --- http://www.telesurtv.net/english/news/US-Blockade-Cost-Cuba-117-Billion-UN-Reports-20150805-0013.html The small Caribbean island has been hard hit by the U.S. blockade. Cuba lost out on US$117 billion between 1960 and 2014 due to the U.S. economic blockade on the country, according to the United Nations’ Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean. “In the U.N. General Assembly we calculated the cost of the blockade was approximately US$117 billion,” said executive secretary of ECLAC, Alicia Barcena. However, this year Cuba’s economy has grown by almost 4 percent, according to te U.N. body. Last month, Cuba opened up its embassy in Washington after a long freeze in diplomatic relations between the countries. The U.S. will open its embassy in Cuba Aug. 14. The events are part of renewed relations between the U.S. and Cuba, which lie just 90 miles apart, but so far the U.S. has refused to end the economic blockade, or comply with Cuban demands to close Guantanamo Bay prison and end the illegal U.S. occupation of that territory. _______________________________________________ pen-l mailing list [email protected] https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l
