Cuba is confronting a triple demographic crisis: sustained decline in birth rates, massive exodus of young and skilled population, and accelerated aging transforming its social structure. Authorities confirmed at the National Assembly session on December 18, 2025, that the population declined again this year, projecting only 7.7 million inhabitants by 2050. This endangers the labor force, pension system, and political stability.
Cuba is facing, perhaps for the first time in its recent history, three simultaneous demographic crises that are reshaping its future. Sociologists and demographers, both independent and official, have described this issue for years, and it was acknowledged in the National Assembly of People's Power on December 18, 2025. There, authorities confirmed the population decline this year and projected that by 2050 the country will have just 7.7 million inhabitants, only about two million more than in 1950.
The population decline is inverting the demographic pyramid at a pace comparable to nations hit by prolonged wars or deep structural crises. This is not merely a natural phenomenon but induced by sustained emigration, lack of incentives to form families, and general life precariousness in the country.
In the labor market, contraction is inevitable: a shrinking productive base of working-age youth reduces goods and services production, weakens innovative capacity, and international competitiveness. This perpetuates a vicious cycle: fewer workers lead to lower productivity, wages, and greater emigration.
The pension system faces unsustainable pressure. With more retirees and people with chronic illnesses, the already weakened state cannot cope. After the October 2025 increase, the minimum pension is 4,000 CUP, equivalent to less than 10 USD per month (at the official exchange rate of 1 USD = 410 CUP), or about 30 cents a day. The World Bank's extreme poverty line is 2.15 USD per day, leaving hundreds of thousands of Cubans in conditions seven times below that threshold.
Beyond economics, aging has political implications. A predominantly elderly population tends to prioritize stability over change, favoring authoritarian regimes like Cuba's, where scarce youth reduce resistance and social mobilization capacity. As author Eloy Viera Cañive notes, 'a country without people ceases to be a country.' This systemic crisis redefines production, consumption, fiscal sustainability, and social cohesion, endangering political transformation.