Havana

Has Change Finally Come For Cuba?

Earlier this month, Obama began taking the first small yet significant steps to implementing a different relationship with the island by signing new measures into law. These new measures will allow Cuban-Americans to send more money to family members and travel more freely between the U.S. and Cuba.

Since 2004, travel to Cuba under the Bush administration was limited to once every three years for Cuban-Americans, with visits limited to only nuclear family and no longer than 14 days. Remittances were also only allowed to be sent to nuclear family and limited to $300 every three months.

In contrast, the new measures under Obama remove all restrictions on the amount and frequency of remittances and travel to the island. The changes also make it easier for telecommunications companies to do business in Cuba, which would allow quicker and easier access to the Internet for Cubans.

Cuba has been receptive to these changes. Raúl Castro has unexpectedly and publicly declared that Cuba is ready to "discuss everything" with the U.S. There are still no official plans for future talks between the two countries. Until then, the question remains of whether or not these measures will help to significantly alleviate poverty in Cuba and improve people's standard of living.

In Cuba, the mood among citizens ranges from cautiously optimistic to skeptical. An article in the St. Louis Post Dispatch profiles Cuban citizens like Ivan, a computer programmer, who expresses hope that Obama will bring about a much needed change. "Obama, to Cuban people, is our, how do you say, our hope," Ivan says. "We believe he wants to lift restrictions on Cuba. To Cubans, he is a very good presidente."

For the most part, the Cuban-American community has reacted with enthusiasm to the new measures. The Cuban American National Foundation, the leading organization for Cuban exiles in Miami, has expressed its support for a new course in U.S.-Cuba policy, calling for "a break from the past" that would "chart a new direction."

In Little Havana, a strongly Cuban neighborhood in Miami, residents seemed to welcome change in U.S.-Cuba relations. "It is stupid to have no relationship with Cuba," said a middle-aged man, identifying himself only as Alex. "It didn't work for 50 years... The way the system will change is by having a relationship."

In a country where the average salary is $20 a month, the ability to receive money from relatives abroad is likely to become an economic lifeline for thousands of people. However, with U.S. economic sanctions still in place, BBC correspondent Michael Voss thinks the remittances will have little effect:

It will give more spending power, it will allow people to buy mobile phones, possibly, you know, have a slightly better standard of living. But in terms of kick-starting the economy, I don’t think we’re going to see that at all.

Nevertheless, with Cuba's poverty level as one of the lowest in the developing world, even small improvements could make a noticeable difference. With the Obama administration now planning informal meetings with Cuban diplomats, hopefully any future change in U.S.-Cuban policy will make the Cuban people its central focus.


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