The SUV in my backyard and social equity in Cuba

A neighbor in Havana rents space to store an expensive SUV, prompting reflection on rising inequality in Cuba. Amid the economic crisis, access to education, health, and basic services increasingly depends on family resources. Indicators like infant mortality have worsened, highlighting disparities in the system.

A few days ago, a neighbor asked the author's mother to rent the backyard patio to store a newly bought Hyundai Santa Fe SUV until official license plates were approved. This vehicle, priced at around 40,000 dollars, stands out against the country's critical economic situation.

The author questions the government's touted social equity. A university engineering student spends about 4,500 pesos monthly on private tutoring, plus at least 12,000 pesos for transportation and food, totaling two and a half times the average salary. In the 1990s, educational equity was greater, allowing access based on talent. Today, art students must pay for instruments and supplies, unlike in the 1980s and 1990s.

In sports, rural talents like Guillermo Rigondeaux, a two-time Olympic champion, would face barriers without family financial support. In public health, most medications are available on the informal market at supply-and-demand prices; hospitals often lack supplies, though medical staff perform remarkable work with limited resources.

Infant mortality in 2025 reached nine per 1,000 live births, the highest this century according to sources close to the government. Life expectancy also appears to have declined. While some endure prolonged blackouts, others buy generators, purchasing gasoline at 450 pesos per liter (about 1 dollar). The neighbor, who raises pigs, rabbits, goats, and sheep on a small farm, exemplifies the concentration of limited capital in fewer hands, widening inequality amid official rhetoric on socialism and creative resistance.

Relaterede artikler

Chileans celebrate poverty rate falling to 17.3% per Casen 2024 survey, with graphs showing decline and subsidy reliance highlighted on a Santiago billboard.
Billede genereret af AI

Chile's poverty rate falls to 17.3% according to Casen 2024

Rapporteret af AI Billede genereret af AI

The Chilean government presented the Casen 2024 survey results, showing income poverty dropping to 17.3%, equivalent to nearly 600,000 fewer people than in 2022, under a more stringent methodology. However, the poorest households increasingly rely on state subsidies, which now make up 69% of their income. Extreme poverty stands at 6.9%, while multidimensional poverty falls to 17.7%.

In Vertientes, Camagüey Province, rural communities endure prolonged blackouts and service shortages, driving mass migration to cities. Residents invest in solar panels to cope, but many choose to leave their homes. Demographic studies confirm young women lead this exodus, worsened by the economic crisis.

Rapporteret af AI

Due to Cuba's current situation, pre-university students have been sent back to their home areas and now attend nearby elementary or middle schools, hampered by transport shortages and lack of specialized teachers. Author Fabiana del Valle recounts how her daughter, meant to study chemical formulas and equations, must sit in small desks with younger children in a rural school. The policy highlights disparities in educational access between urban and rural regions.

Chile's Casen 2024 survey reports income poverty falling to 17.3% under stricter methodology—a drop of over 600,000 people since 2022—but experts caution against complacency. With one-fifth of the population still vulnerable and rising state subsidy reliance, analysts advocate sustainable reforms like negative income tax and enhanced job opportunities.

Rapporteret af AI

Cuba is grappling with an acute economic crisis reminiscent of the 1990s 'Special Period,' marked by fuel shortages and paralyzed transportation. Authorities and social media voices are invoking the ghost of the 'zero option,' where imports could drop to zero. Government measures focus on medium- and long-term solutions, while the immediate situation remains uncertain.

President Gustavo Petro posted on X that extreme poverty measures his administration's success and that it has lifted nearly four million Colombians out of it.

Rapporteret af AI

In Havana, paralyzed by fuel shortages, bicycle delivery workers have become essential for moving goods. Young workers like Yasiel and Marcos transport food, medicines, and packages despite risks and exhaustion. This informal network grew with the energy crisis and now fills the gap left by fuel-dependent vehicles.

 

 

 

Dette websted bruger cookies

Vi bruger cookies til analyse for at forbedre vores side. Læs vores privatlivspolitik for mere information.
Afvis