Air conditioners are shut off in the dead heat. Factories close at peak hours, and workers go without their government-subsidized lunches.
The communist government imposed conservation measures even as it continues to get free oil for services from
More likely, the shortages result from a global recession that hit an already struggling economy still reeling from last year’s hurricanes. President Raul Castro scolded Cubans in a national address Sunday to work harder because they have no one to blame but themselves.
‘The only thing I know is that we’re screwed,’ said one 27-year-old who only gave the name Raul because he sells cement and housing materials on the black market. ‘I don’t work. I find a way to survive.’
The latest cuts are small compared to strict measures imposed during the so-called special period, when Cubans nearly starved after subsidies dried up with the collapse of the
Still, every bit of belt-tightening stings in a country where almost everyone works for the state and average wages are less than $20 per month.
The price of nickel,
The company’s oil production on the island was down 19 per cent last quarter compared to the second quarter of 2008, mainly because Sherritt suspended drilling earlier this year when
The government and Sherritt have worked out a plan to pay down the debt, and the company says
Or
But he also said the strict measures lend credence to whispers that
‘It’s been alleged they’ve been selling Venezuelan oil on the side. They’ve denied that, but if they are open to doing it, now would be the time,’ Erikson said. ‘
Beginning June 1, the government ordered energy conservation measures as part of a broader plan to cut the national budget by six per cent. Central planners also revised their economic growth projections from six per cent to 2.5 per cent and could lower expectations even further.
These days, most countries would cheer any economic growth. But
The island’s economic woes began in earnest with three hurricanes last summer that caused more than $10 billion in damage and wiped out some of the food and grains the government had stockpiled to insulate itself from rising commodities prices.
How much
Though the numbers leave the country 5,000 barrels a day short, Pinon said natural gas production last year covered the energy equivalent of 20,000 barrels of oil daily and kept the power plants running smoothly.
‘
So far the power-saving measures have been confined to state-run businesses and factories, though many Cubans fear they will soon hit residential users as well.
Workers at a tire factory in







