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Reforms help Cuban farmers, but many still struggle

Published:Thursday | August 25, 2022 | 6:32 PM
Workers milk goats at the Vista Hermosa farm in Bacuranao, just east of Havana, Cuba, Thursday, August 4, 2022. A package of 63 reforms approved last year was meant to make it easier and more profitable for Cuban producers to get food to consumers. Farmers say the measures are still not sufficient to overcome obstacles. (AP Photo/Ramon Espinosa)

HAVANA (AP) — First, it was impossible to find fuel or seeds to plant.

Later his name wasn't on a list of farmers eligible to rent tractors from the state.

Now Lázaro Sánchez fears the current tropical rainy season will hinder his ability to work the land.

While Sánchez worries about trying to grow crops at his farm on the outskirts of Havana, Cubans in the cities are struggling with shortages of food and soaring prices.

To address such problems, Cuba's socialist government last year approved a package of 63 reforms meant to make it easier and more profitable for producers to get food to consumers — measures such as allowing farmers greater freedom to choose their crops and letting them sell more freely, at higher prices.

They are the latest in a series of highly touted changes adopted over the past 30 years since the collapse of the Soviet Bloc stripped Cuba of its most important sources of aid and trade. Officials have eroded the dominance of state farms and encouraged more semi-independent cooperatives.

They have given farmers greater land use rights and loosened restrictions on sales.

But none of those efforts has yet been able to solve the island's chronic agricultural woes.

Sánchez, for example, can now sell most of the vegetables he produces himself instead of being forced to sell them to the state at fixed prices, though it still takes a reduced share. He could even set up his own roadside stand if he chooses. His power and water bills have been cut.

But farmers say the measures are still not sufficient to overcome obstacles. While government prices for some supplies such as local herbicides, fertilisers, wire and tools were cut, many inputs remain hard to get. The state is trying to overcome a lack of resources needed to import them.

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