The Cuban ag reality

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plowing w oxen in Cuba
Much of the independent farming in Cuba is done with little mechanization or inputs.

By Susan Crowell
editor@farmanddairy.com

HAVANA, Cuba — After two days and nearly eight hours of meetings, the natives were restless. Ready to mutiny, in fact.

How do you expect 20 farm journalists to write about Cuban agriculture when all we’ve seen is the inside of conference rooms? And the officials we listened to parroted the same refrain: The U.S. needs to end its trade embargo (they call it a blockade), and extend credit terms for imports to Cuba.

Cuba isn’t likely to become a major U.S. trading partner, but if the embargo is ended, the U.S. does stand to gain from opening ag exports to the island.

My trip to Cuba, Sept. 19-23, included visits to the ministries of commerce and agriculture; the Universidad Agraria de la Habana (Agriculture University of Havana); Gecomex, the entity that oversees foreign trade, and Alimport, its food import subsidiary; presentations from economists with the University of Havana; and the Center for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology — and I came home with a broad, but shallow, overview of Cuban agriculture. (Scroll down to see a photo gallery from the trip.)

Note: Editor Susan Crowell was selected to travel to Cuba in September with a group of 20 agricultural communicators. The trip was coordinated by the American Agricultural Editors Association, and she received a partial travel stipend from the association’s Professional Improvement Foundation to participate. Read more:

The paradox of Cuba
Trade with Cuba: It’s complicated
Cuban agriculture at a glance

Ag overview

In a nutshell, Cuba imports up to 80 percent of its domestic food requirements, and is intent on increasing Cuban food production. Recent reforms expanded “private” farm production and that of cooperatives, and granted use of land to those producers via medium- or long-term leases accompanied by performance clauses. (Read: Cuban agriculture at a glance). But challenges facing those small units remain:

  • Farming technology, infrastructure and post-harvest handling and storage is obsolete, which keeps production low and post-harvest losses high.
  • There is limited technical capacity and training, as well as limited availability of that technology or any mechanization.
  • Farmers and co-ops have poor access to inputs and credit.
  • State control still dictates availability of inputs as well as the marketing chain. There’s no private sector source for inputs.

Farm visit

We visited only one farm, an organic farm cooperative about an hour outside of Havana, so we certainly can’t make any broad assumptions from that one visit. But it’s clear that, while there is a national effort to get more people on the farm, the state still controls agriculture, either by controlling inputs like seed, fertilizer or equipment, or by controlling sales — and certainly by owning the land.

stripping sugar cane in Cuba
Stripping sugar cane on a farm cooperative near Havana, Cuba.

The growth of organic production in Cuba was not necessarily by ideology, but triggered by necessity. In the 1990s, following the collapse of the former Soviet Union and the loss of the Soviet subsidies and support, there were few chemical herbicides or pesticides available.

The farm we visited was roughly 25 acres and had 120 employees, including “pensioners,” or retirees from other state jobs. It produced 300 varieties or organic ornamental plants or herbs, like mint, as well as vegetables, primarily lettuce, beans, cucumbers, radishes and green onions. Production and harvest was very labor-intensive, as we witnessed plowing by hand with oxen, and hand planting, hoeing and harvesting.

The farm sold some of its produce to the state, but also via contracts with hotels and restaurants in Havana, as well as by direct market at the farm.

Truth is camouflaged

We quickly uncovered one truth about Cuba, as voiced by University of Havana economist Dr. Jorge Mario Sanchez: “In regard to the Cuban economy, or U.S.-Cuba relations, if you feel you understand it, almost for sure you’re wrong.”

“Almost everything is either distorted, dysfunctional or counterproductive.”

Get used to the complexity, he added, and later change your mind.

We ag journalists wanted to frame everything from our own perspectives of democracy, but had to shift gears with the realization that it’s a different social and political reality in Cuba. And even as the government recognizes the need for reforms, there is major social resistance to these reforms.

Trade relations

The U.S. first imposed economic restrictions on Cuba in 1960 when Fidel Castro seized control of and nationalized all companies without compensation. In 2000, Congress eased U.S. agricultural exports to Cuba, but maintained restrictions on credit and financing. Basically, Cuba has to pay in cash up front, or go through a web of third-party financing from another country.

farm co-op manager
Miguel Ángel Salcines López, president of the farm cooperative.
Cuban farmworker
A worker on a farm cooperative near Havana, Cuba.

In December 2014, President Barack Obama announced diplomatic efforts to restore more normal relations with Cuba; in May 2015, the State Department removed Cuba from the list of state sponsors of terrorism; and in July 2015, the U.S. and Cuba reopened embassies in their respective capitals. In March 2016, President Obama visited the island.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture has indicated that basic commodities like U.S. rice, wheat, dry beans and dried milk could gain market share in Cuba under normal trade relations. In return, opening the U.S. market to Cuba could mean imports of tropical fruit and vegetable products.

Legislation has been introduced in Congress to ease economic sanctions in Cuba, including the ban on providing private financing and credit for the sale of agricultural goods to Cuba. Accompanying our group was Paul Johnson, co-chair of the U.S. Ag Coalition for Cuba, which is lobbying Congress to end the embargo.

The current Cuban goal for agriculture is to increase domestic food production to replace imports, which total around $2 billion and account for 69 percent (another source told us 80 percent) of Cuba’s food. Officials we spoke to said they hope to increase production to reduce that figure to 35-40 percent.

To do so, however, will require the importation of machinery, inputs and other supplies, as well as the export of products, they say, to generate income.

Long road ahead

Of the land that can be used for farming in Cuba, 70 percent is being farmed by an individual or cooperative group, and 30 percent managed by the government, according to Dr. Armando Nova Gonzalez, economics professor at the University of Havana who spoke to us Sept. 20.

Cuba’s new land transfer program has contributed to stop the exodus of rural people from the farm. The 200,000 people who have received an initial grant of 13.2 hectares (33 acres) have an additional three to four family members involved, which means employment for 800,000.

But, Gonzalez pointed out that “offering all of this land is a necessary condition, but not enough,” because not everyone has the skills or knowledge to farm, even on these small-scale, subsistence-level farms.

The new ag model, through these land transfers, requires a new management level, he added, as well as a better chain of supplies, which is still in the process of being created, “but it’s not enough.”

Individual producers still need access to inputs “in a more independent way,” he said, as well as the ability to decide what they are going to produce and how they are going to sell it. There is also not enough current processing capacity, storage, transportation and other food chain infrastructure.

The cooperatives and individuals who received these new transfers also received bank credit, and sometimes their debt has been forgiven or a repayment period extended.

Gonzalez added, however, that any model of Cuban agriculture is going to take social aspects into consideration, and not just production or profit.

“There are some results, but not enough results yet,” Gonzalez said. “There’s still a long road to take.”

“It’s a TV soap opera that goes several seasons,” added Dr. Jorge Mario Sanchez, another economics professor at the University of Havana who also spoke to us Sept. 20. “You have land, you have credit, but that doesn’t mean that you will behave as a competitive, efficient producer. You will continue to preserve the old habits in the new environment with a new language.”

Soviet shock wave

Cuba is still reeling from the loss of the Soviets in the early 1990s as a trading partner, and as a prop to its economy. Overnight, the island lost 90 percent of its energy supply, 100 percent of its fertilizers and chemicals, and 70 percent of its spare parts and raw materials. No one anticipated the crack in the socialist bloc, Sanchez said, and likened the impact to a tsunami or civil war.

“Still today, we are living that shock.”

Facing its own economic collapse, Cuba was forced to shift from a “socialist bubble” to figuring out how to compete in an aggressive global market. They opened to foreign investment, to foreign banks, and accumulated high foreign debt.

“This is a small island, we rely on foreign trade,” Sanchez said. “Without foreign trade, we don’t have income.” (Information on current trade restrictions continues below the slide show.)

Group shot @ Ministry of Agriculture

CubaHavana The group of ag communicators on the AAEA trip at Ministerio de la Agricultura (Jim Patrico photo)
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Group shot @ Ministry of Agriculture

CubaHavana The group of ag communicators on the AAEA trip at Ministerio de la Agricultura (Jim Patrico photo)
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housing near farm

The farm cooperative outside of Havana pulls workers from housing like this large apartment building nearby.
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Moraima Cespedes Morales

Cuba Havana Cuba Havana Moraima Cespedes Morales Director of International Affairs Ministerio de la Agricultura
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horse and cart

Through our bus window, a glimpse of a horse and cart on the road.
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Cuban farm landscape

At an organic farm cooperative outside of Havana.
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farm manager.2

Miguel Ángel Salcines López, president of the farm cooperative.
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farm worker bananas

A worker on a farm cooperative near Havana, Cuba.
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Cuban farm worker.2

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Guatemalen worker

Lisette is in Cuba from Guatemala, studying organic agriculture on this farm cooperative near Havana for three months. She is planting stevia, used as a sweetener.
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plowing w oxen.2

This farm cooperative outside of Havana was very labor-intensive, including hand plowing with oxen.
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Organic produce at Cuban farm

This cooperative farm outside of Havana, Cuba, raised organic produce.
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rabbits at Cuban farm

Rabbits raised for meat at a farm cooperative outside of Havana, Cuba.
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spraying at Cuban farm

A worker at the farm cooperative near Havana.
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cows in barn

A few cows at the farm cooperative near Havana, Cuba

Existing U.S. restrictions on trade with Cuba

In 2000, Congress loosened trade sanctions against Cuba. From 2012 to 2014, U.S. ag exports to Cuba averaged $365 million/year. Exports are primarily chicken (leg quarters), corn, soybean meal and soybeans.
The primary economic restrictions that remain in place include:

  • A prohibition on the provision of credit and financing for U.S. exports.
  • No access to government programs or commercial facilities that otherwise would be available to promote U.S. ag exports to Cuba.
  • A ban on general U.S. tourism to Cuba.
  • A ban on U.S. imports of goods from Cuba, with a recently introduced exception for goods produced by Cuban entrepreneurs.
  • • •
  • The U.S. International Trade Commission estimates that if U.S. restriction on trade with Cuba was lifted, exports of ag commodities — wheat, rice, corn, soybeans/soy products, pulses (dry beans/legumes), poultry, pork, beef and dairy — could increase by 155% within five years to a total of $800 million (from 2010-2013 average of $300 million).
  • There are legitimate concerns that U.S. imports of Cuban products, like fruits and vegetables, would be subsidized competition, specifically for Florida producers, and there are also real concerns about the introduction of pests or diseases into the U.S.
  • Currently, the European Union and Brazil rank as Cuba’s largest suppliers (CY2014).

According to Jorge Duany, director of the Cuban Research Institute at the Florida International University, “serious impediments remain to the full normalization of relations.” Cuba, for example, insists on four major conditions for normalizing relations:

  • Lifting the U.S. embargo
  • Returning the U.S. naval base in Guantanamo
  • Repealing the Cuban Adjustment Act (which grants asylum to Cuban émigrés who touch U.S. soil)
  • Discontinuing U.S. broadcasting activities to Cuba (i.e. Radio and TV Marti)

While such key political figures as Sens. Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz oppose the lifting of the embargo, a 2016 survey by Florida International University reported that just 37% of Cuban-Americans in Miami-Dade County support continuing the embargo, a figure that has been declining from an average of 84 percent in the 1990s.

 

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