Cuba: Economics Red in Tooth and Claw
Arroz con Mango
Humberto Barreto
DePauw University
hbarreto@depauw.edu
Signs from Terminal 5
Scale Model of Havana
Operation Peter Pan
Patria potestad
Maceo Che
June 14, 1845 and 1928
Religion
La Virgen de Regla
Art: Wifredo Lam
The Jungle (1943)
El Tercer Mundo (1965)
Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes, Havana
Universidad de La Habana
Alma Mater
Mulata?
Health Care
96%
92%
81%
79%
26.7%
9.6%
6.8%
4.4%
Health Care
96%
92%
81%
79%
26.7
9.6
6.8
4.4
Why is US Infant Mortality so High?
Table 116. Infant Mortality Rates by Race, States and Island Areas: 1980 to 2007
Why is US Infant Mortality so High?
Table 116. Infant Mortality Rates by Race, States and Island Areas: 1980 to 2007
Education
Cuban Education
From Carnoy, Table 4.1B, p. 66;
Laboratorio Latinoamericano de Evaluación de la Calidad de Educación, 1997-98
Why such High Scores?
From Carnoy, Table 4.1B, p. 66;
Laboratorio Latinoamericano de Evaluación de la Calidad de Educación, 1997-98
Why such High Scores?
“In the beginning of this study we asked why Cuban elementary schoolers score so much higher in math and language tests than children in other Latin American countries. The answer turns out to be fairly straightforward: Cuban children attend schools that are intensely focused on instruction and are staffed by well-trained, regularly supervised teachers in a social environment that is dedicated to high academic achievement for all social groups. Combining high-quality teaching with high academic expectations and a tightly controlled school management hierarchy with well-defined goals is what makes the Cuban system tick. It distinguishes Cuban education from other systems in Latin America. In essence, Cuban education gives most Cuban pupils a primary education that only upper-middle-class children receive in other Latin American countries.” (Carnoy, p. 141)
It’s Labor, not Capital
Cuba’s Economic Performance
MaddisonData.xls
Why is Cuba’s Economy so Bad?
Because Cuba’s economy is based on a Soviet-style government bureaucracy that does a poor job of allocating resources and generating economic growth.
Economics: La Libreta
Economics: Labor Markets
Economics: Entrepreneurship
Economics: Cephalization
An evolutionary process whereby nervous tissue concentrates at one end of an organism, producing a head that controls the rest of the body
Economics: Cephalization
“When uncertainty is present and the task of deciding what to do and how to do it takes the ascendancy over that of execution, the internal organization of the productive groups is no longer a matter of indifference or a mechanical detail. Centralization of this deciding and controlling function is imperative, a process of "cephalization," such as has taken place in the evolution of organic life, is inevitable, and for the same reasons as in the case of biological evolution.”
Frank Knight, Risk, Uncertainty, and Profit
Economics: Cephalization
The Cuban economy has no effective way of choosing managers and leaders of individual units of production.
It does a poor job of replacing ineffective managers.
It is exceptionally bad at transferring leadership positions from old to young.
Freakonomics: The Church of Scionology
Politics: Succession
19 April 2011
New York Times
Front Page Article
“Cuba Lays Foundation for a New Leader”
HAVANA — Cuba on Tuesday made the most significant change to its leadership since the 1959 revolution, naming someone other than the Castro brothers for the first time to fill the second-highest position in the Communist Party and possibly setting the stage for their eventual successor.
Conclusion