Currency | Cuban peso (CUP) = 100 cents |
---|---|
Calendar year | |
Country group | Upper-middle income economy[1] |
Statistics | |
Population | 9 860 000 (2024)[2] |
GDP | |
GDP rank | |
GDP per capita | |
GDP per capita rank | |
0.380 (2000 est.)[6] | |
Labor force | |
Unemployment | |
Main industries | Petroleum, nickel, cobalt, pharmaceuticals, tobacco, construction, steel, cement, agricultural machinery, sugar |
External | |
Exports | $2.63 billion (2017 est.)[4] |
Export goods | Petroleum, nickel, medical products, sugar, tobacco, fish, citrus, coffee |
Main export partners | |
Imports | $2.06 billion (2017 est.)[4] |
Import goods | Petroleum, food, machinery and equipment, chemicals |
Main import partners |
|
FDI stock | |
$985.4 million (2017 est.)[4] | |
Gross external debt | $30.06 billion (31 December 2017 est.)[4] |
Public finances | |
47.7% of GDP (2017 est.)[4] | |
−10.8% (of GDP) (2017 est.)[4] | |
Revenues | 54.52 billion (2017 est.)[4] |
Expenses | 64.64 billion (2017 est.)[4] |
Economic aid | $88 million (2005 est.) |
$11.35 billion (31 December 2017 est.)[4] | |
All values, unless otherwise stated, are in US dollars. |
The economy of Cuba is a planned economy dominated by state-run enterprises. In the 1990s, the ruling Communist Party of Cuba encouraged the formation of worker co-operatives and self-employment. In the late 2010s, private property and free-market rights along with foreign direct investment were granted by the 2018 Cuban constitution.[13][14] Foreign direct investment in various Cuban economic sectors increased before 2018.[15][16] As of 2021, Cuba's private sector is allowed to operate in most sectors of the economy.[17] As of 2023[update], public-sector employment was 65%, and private-sector employment was 35%, compared to the 2000 ratio of 76% to 23% and the 1981 ratio of 91% to 8%.[18][19] Investment is restricted and requires approval by the government. In 2021, Cuba ranked 83rd out of 191 on the Human Development Index in the high human development category.[20] As of 2012[update], the country's public debt comprised 35.3% of GDP, inflation (CDP) was 5.5%, and GDP growth was 3%.[21][needs update] Housing and transportation costs are low. Cubans receive government-subsidized education, healthcare, and food subsidies.[22][23]
At the time of the Cuban Revolution of 1953–1959, during the military dictatorship of Fulgencio Batista, Cuba's GDP per capita was ranked 7th of 47 Latin American economies.[24] Its income distribution compared favorably with that of other Latin American countries. However, "available data must be viewed cautiously and assumed to portray merely a rough approximation of conditions at the time," according to Susan Eckstein. There were profound social inequalities between city and countryside and between whites and blacks, with trade and unemployment problems.[25] According to an American PBS program, "[o]n the eve of Fidel Castro's 1959 revolution, Cuba was neither the paradise that would later be conjured by the nostalgic imaginations of Cuba's many exiles nor the hellhole painted by many supporters of the revolution."[26] The socialist revolution was followed by the ongoing United States embargo against Cuba, described as "the oldest and most comprehensive US economic sanctions regime against any country in the world."[27]
Between 1970 and 1985, Cuba sustained high rates of growth: "Cuba had done remarkably well in terms of satisfying basic needs (especially education and health)" and "was actually following the World Bank recipe from the 1970s: redistribution with growth".[28] During the Cold War, the Cuban economy was heavily dependent on subsidies from the Soviet Union, amounting to 10% to 40% of Cuban GDP in various years, and valued at $65 billion in total from 1960 to 1990, over three times the total U.S. economic aid to Latin America through the Alliance for Progress.[29][30] While the massive Soviet subsidies funded Cuba's enormous state budget, they did not sufficiently develop a self-sustaining Cuban economy. Described by economists as "a relatively highly developed Latin American export economy" in 1959 and the early 1960s, Cuba's fundamental economic structure changed very little from the Revolution to 1990. Cigars and cigarettes were the only manufactured products among Cuba's leading exports, produced mostly by pre-industrial piecework. The economy remained inefficient and over-specialized in a few commodities purchased by the Eastern Bloc countries.[31]
Following the fall of the Soviet Union, Cuba's GDP declined by 33% between 1990 and 1993, partially due to the loss of Soviet subsidies[32] augmented by a crash in sugar prices in the early 1990s. This economic crisis is known as the Special Period. Cuba's economy rebounded in the early 2000s due to a combination of marginal liberalization of the economy and heavy subsidies from the government of Venezuela, which provided Cuba with low-cost oil and other subsidies worth up to 12% of Cuban GDP annually.[29]
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