http://www.marxist.com/cuban-cp-congress-ratifies-economic-guidelines.htm
 Cuban CP congress ratifies economic guidelines – workers’ control and
international socialism absent from
discussion<http://www.marxist.com/cuban-cp-congress-ratifies-economic-guidelines.htm>
Written by Jorge Martin Tuesday, 07 June 2011
[image: 
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*The long delayed VI Congress of the Cuban Communist Party took place on
April 16-19 in Havana and discussed the Guidelines on Economic and Social
Policy for the Party and the Revolution. The Congress was timed to coincide
with the 50th anniversary of the attempted Bay of Pigs invasion in 1961,
when Fidel Castro proclaimed the “socialist character of the revolution”.*

The fate of the Cuban revolution is of enormous importance for
revolutionaries all over the world and particularly in Latin America. The
International Marxist Tendency stands unconditionally for the defence of the
Cuban revolution and it is precisely for this reason that we feel the need
to comment on the debates taking place within it. This was always the policy
of the great Marxists who understood that the movement against capitalism
had to be, by its very nature, international and regularly commented on and
participated in the revolutionary movement in different countries.

The first observation that should be made, and this is clearly stated in the
introduction to the *Guidelines*, is that the Cuban economy faces a serious
crisis. To the impact of the world crisis of capitalism (with a collapse in
the prices of raw materials, a decrease in revenue from tourism, an increase
in the price of food), we have to add the devastating effects of hurricanes.
All this is compounded by the blockade and the embargo unilaterally imposed
by the United States.

At bottom, the main problem is the isolation of the revolution to one single
island. It is impossible to build socialism in one country and this is even
more the case on a small island with very few natural resources, which is
therefore completely dependent on the world market. The collapse of
Stalinism in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe revealed this in an
extremely cruel manner.

The discussion on the way forward for the Cuban economy therefore does not
take place in ideal circumstances, but in conditions where room for
manoeuvre is extremely limited and there is strong pressure to look for
“concrete” solutions.

According to the official report to the Congress there was a very wide
ranging process of discussion of the *Guidelines*, involving millions of
Cubans. This is not surprising as the feeling of impasse in Cuban society is
extremely acute. However, we think that the debate was in fact limited
because of the way in which it was raised.

First of all, the Cuban Communist Party is supposed to have a congress every
five years, but instead of this, 14 years had passed since the previous
congress. In the interim period there have been many debates in Cuba and
many decisions have been taken, but there has been no organic channel
through which the members of the party could have influenced party policy.

Secondly, the *Guidelines* document is extremely limited in its scope. Any
discussion about the future of the Cuban revolution should start from an
analysis of the world situation, the crisis of capitalism, the development
of the Latin American revolution with its progress and contradictions, the
impact of the Arab Revolution, the re-awakening of the class struggle in
Europe and how all these factors affect the Cuban revolution. The document
does not mention any of these, other than the immediate impact of the crisis
of capitalism on the Cuban economy, and after a short two and half page
introduction, it goes straight into a list of some 300 very specific *
Guidelines*.

In this way, the discussion became centred on the details of each one of the
different measures proposed, rather than being a more wide ranging
discussion about the general problems of the Cuban revolution and their
relationship to the world situation of the class struggle.

Furthermore, some of the proposals made in the *Guidelines* had actually
already been announced as decisions or even been implemented before the
actual congress took place, thus, greatly limiting its actual power. For
instance, the document talks of the need for “eliminating inflated staff
numbers” in the dominant state sector of the economy, but already in
September last year the reduction of one million of the five million state
sector jobs was announced. The expansion of self-employed licenses that the
*Guidelines *also propose, has actually already taken place, with around
200,000 being granted in the last few months.

The main thrust of the measures proposed and then approved by the Congress
(with some small modifications) goes towards expanding the private sector of
the economy. This is to be done through the expansion of self-employed work
licenses, the licensing out to workers of small business units and the
expansion of the sectors in which foreign investment is allowed. In order to
achieve greater efficiency, more autonomy will be given to the managers and
directors of state owned companies and they will deal with each other and
with the private sector through market relations and commercial contracts.
As a result, loss making state owned companies will be closed down.

There is also a marked emphasis in material incentives to workers in order
to stimulate productivity, allowing for wider wage differentials linked to
production and productivity increases. At the same time there is a growing
campaign against what is described as “excessive subsidies and unwarranted
gratuities” which should be “gradually eliminated”. The subsidised basket of
basic food products, which all Cubans receive now through the *Libreta
*rationing
card, will be abolished.

*All these measures taken together clearly will provoke an increase in
social inequality in Cuba.* Omar Everleny, a leading Cuban economist, deputy
director of the Center for Studies on the Cuban Economy (CEEC), makes it
crystal clear in an article in *Le Monde Diplomatique* *where he says what
is being proposed is a “brutal” change: “Yes, some will lose out with the
reforms. Yes, some will become unemployed. Yes, inequality will increase.
But these already exist, what we have is a false equality. What needs to be
determined now is who really deserves to be further up”. Everleny admits
that he is looking to the model of Vietnam, “which has a lot to teach us”.*

The document and all the official speeches at the Congress underline that
these measures are not about abandoning the state ownership of the economy
or the planning principle. “The economic system that will prevail in our
country will continue to be based on the socialist property of the whole
people over the fundamental means of production,” declares the introduction.
*Guideline* number 1, however, already qualifies the statement: “the system
of socialist planning will continue to be *the main way* of directing the
national economy (…)* Planning will take into account the market, having an
influence over it and taking into consideration its characteristics”.*

Quite clearly the statements against capitalism and in defence of socialism,
reflect a deep rooted feeling amongst millions of Cubans that they do not
want to abandon the system that has guaranteed them healthcare, education
and in general social welfare standards that are far superior to the rest of
capitalist Latin America and a vast improvement on the situation before the
revolution. *Let’s be clear about this, despite all the problems of
bureaucracy and corruption which plague the Cuban economy, these social
conquests of the revolution are the direct result of the abolition of
capitalism, and any attempt towards the restoration of the market economy
will lead to their destruction. One just has to turn one’s eyes towards
neighbouring Jamaica, Dominican Republic or Haiti to see what capitalism
would look like in Cuba.*

This mood was very aptly described in the following anecdote: “This
February, workers at a clinic in central Havana met to discuss the
lineamientos. Its 291 proposals include performance-based pay, legalising
market prices and a review of social programmes. The document was approved
unanimously, in just a few minutes. But the workers stressed their
attachment to Cuba's health and education systems – some things should
change, but not those. The secretary of the meeting made a note of their
comments, although nobody really knew whether or how they would be taken
into account.” (*Cuba’s new socialism* – Renaud Lambert, Le Monde
Diplomatique).

*The problem is that in a weak economy like Cuba, any openings towards the
market can unleash a process of class differentiation and of penetration of
capitalism, reflecting the superiority of the world capitalist market in
terms of productivity of labour. Regardless of the stated intentions and
principles expressed in the Congress documents or the Constitution, the
forces of the market economy in Cuba are extremely powerful, precisely
because they are backed by the world market and once unleashed they will
have a dynamic of their own and can prove very difficult to control.*

Despite the straight-jacketed character of the Congress discussions a number
of very interesting things emerged. It is clear that a large number of the
amendments that were finally made to the original text went in the direction
of slowing down market measures. For instance, the abolition of the *Libreta
*rationing card will now be *gradual *and *take into account the income
levels of the population*. *The idea of reducing one million jobs from the
state sector, half of those by April 2011, proved to be impossible to
implement, due to strong resistance from workers in the different
workplaces, particularly faced with the harsh reality that not many viable
alternatives were being offered.* All this shows that there is a healthy,
instinctive resistance, to any attempt to move towards the market and do
away with some of the social conquests of the revolution. *The Economist*,
that mouthpiece of the ruling class, while applauding the measures approved,
complained bitterly that “in practice change is moving slowly”.

Also, during the pre-congress debate the idea of the need for workers’
participation in the running of the economy has been discussed, though not
in a formal or organised way. A letter was published in *Granma* in January
dealing with the question of the way managers and directors are appointed in
state owned companies. The author, E. Gonzalez, pointed out that since the
wages of workers were going to be linked to the results obtained by the
company, the workers should have control over them. “In my opinion it would
be prudent to conceive of the participation of the workers in the leadership
of socialist government enterprises through the election, ratification or
replacement of cadres…”

*Commenting on this in the Havana Times, Daisy Valera wrote that “the idea
of E. Gonzalez concerning workers’ control, though brilliant, is not new; it
has been understood by all those who have struggled for a system more just
than capitalism.” Valera went on to quote Lenin’s “Draft Regulations for
Workers’ Control” and she concluded: “Therefore I would suggest the comrade
replace the word ‘prudent’ with others such as ‘necessary’ or
‘indispensable’ if he/she is referring to workers’ control and the election
of their representatives by the workers themselves. This idea is ratified by
all the classics of Marxism as well as in Cuba, which has a Leninist
constitution and therefore makes it more than justified that power should be
in the hands of the workers.”*

*This is absolutely correct. As a matter of fact, the most effective form of
incentive, and the only effective way of fighting corruption and bureaucracy
is precisely workers’ control over the economy and society in general.
However, this was not officially discussed and is not mentioned in the
Guidelines as Cuban university professor Julio Cesar Guanche points out in
his appraisal of the Congress: “The Guidelines do not mention the
participation of the workers, nor deepen the development of forms of control
by the citizens over mercantile activities”. He also mentions a number of
principles which he says should be introduced like: “rotation of public
officials, limitations in time in the terms of office of all public
officials, the election of state officials which carry out public functions
as opposed to the usual methods of appointment, (…) the autonomy of mass and
social organizations” (A political passion – about the celebration of the VI
congress of the CCP).*

As a matter of fact, all these measures are part of those advocated by Lenin
in *State and Revolution* for a workers’ state *in order to combat and
prevent bureaucracy* (together with the fact that no public official should
receive a wage higher than that of a skilled worker and the right of recall
of elected public officials).

*This is one part of the equation: the need for workers’ control and
management over the economy, society and politics. The other part of the
equation is the understanding that the fate of the Cuban revolution is
inextricably linked to the development of the world revolution. On that
front the situation now has clearly completely changed from the situation
that Cuba faced in the early 1990s after the collapse of Stalinism. Now it
is capitalism which has shown, in the eyes of millions of working people all
over the world, that it is a failed system.*

The masses have started to move, first of all in the revolutionary wave
which has swept Latin America over the last ten years. Playa Girón [the Bay
of Pigs], 50 years ago, proved two things: one, that any genuine national
anti-imperialist revolution guaranteeing basic reforms for the majority of
the population could only be consolidated by breaking with capitalism; two,
that a people in arms defending a revolution can defeat the most powerful
imperialist country on the planet. Today, those same conclusions should be
understood by revolutionaries in Latin America. In Venezuela, Bolivia,
Ecuador, Peru, etc. only the expropriation of the capitalists and
imperialists can guarantee the reforms that have already been achieved. In
the last instance, these revolutions can only be defended, not through
diplomatic manoeuvring, geopolitics and appeasement, but by the people in
arms.

But the movement is not limited to Latin America; it has now spread to the
Arab world and also to the advanced capitalist countries, as shown by the
movements in Wisconsin, the general strikes in France, Portugal, Spain, etc.
More recently the upsurge of the youth in Spain and the rebellion of the
Greek people against the IMF and the World Bank have shown a growing
questioning of the capitalist system everywhere.

*It is imperative for Cuban communists to discuss these developments in
detail and throw themselves into the debate about the struggle for socialism
worldwide, as this is the only way forward for the Cuban revolution.*


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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