Cubans in Havana reacted with a mix of hope, skepticism, and exhaustion following the government's approval of its most significant market-oriented reforms in decades. The measures, which include expanding private enterprise, attracting foreign investment, and allowing private participation in banking and state companies, are intended to address a deepening economic crisis.
Lawmakers approved 176 measures after the Communist Party endorsed the plan earlier in the week. Authorities maintain that the reforms are designed to preserve socialism rather than abandon it, drawing parallels to economic models in China or Vietnam.
However, on the streets of Havana, the reaction was cautious. Residents like Olian Valdes, 50, questioned the actual implementation and the potential benefit for ordinary Cubans, citing the difficulty of investment and the persistent gap between salaries and prices. The island has been struggling with shortages of food, fuel, and medicine, conditions that have worsened significantly in recent times due to tightening fuel supplies and widespread blackouts.
Omara Oliva, 53, acknowledged the current system's failure and welcomed any measures, even capitalist ones, that could improve people's lives. Despite the reforms, officials have provided limited details on their speed of implementation, regulatory frameworks, or who will benefit first, contributing to uncertainty in a country where inflation has eroded wages and many families rely on remittances or the informal economy. Leonardo Benitez, 61, emphasized the need for fair application of the reforms.