Emerging Markets Business Summer 2016 | Page 26

CUBA & IRAN: IS IT TIME TO INVEST? Double OR NOTHING F  ifty years of international sanctions rendered Castro’s Cuba so far removed from much of the modern world, that the things which many of us take for granted—Wi-Fi, mobile phones, new cars, cross-border travel and trade—are emerging as new discoveries for the island’s 11 million inhabitants. Indeed, since the USA decided to partially lift its sanctions on Cuba in January 2016, following a similar step taken by the EU back in June 2008, the country’s prospects have started to look just a little more attractive—and not just for its local consumers. Speculation across the global business community is rife, with one question on everyone’s lips: is now the time to invest in Cuba? For José Azel, Cuban exile, author and scholar at the Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies at the University of Miami, the answer is a resounding ‘No.’ Moreover, in Azel’s view, the question itself is fundamentally flawed. “The ‘in’ here is a misleading preposition with reference to Cuban investments,” he says. “Investing ‘in’ Cuba is a naive expression that closes the eyes to the ‘with’ character of those investments.” Unpacking his remarks, Azel explains that investing in the totalitarian state necessarily requires entering into partnership with the government, and more specifically, with the Cuban military. President Raúl Castro and his military government control more than 95% of Cuba’s wealth. As such, according to Azel, foreign investors will be obliged to share their profits with “the guys with uniforms and guns” if they want to work in the country. And making a profit worth sharing in the first place is easier said than done. According to the World Bank, Cuba’s GDP per capita stands at just US$6,709, with 45 percent of the population living below the poverty line and more than half of Cubans unemployed. Of those who do work, 90 percent make less than 487 pesos (around US$20 a month) —just enough to buy three kilos of chicken and two kilos of rice. 24  Emerging Markets Business  Summer 2016 • Issue No. 1 INVESTING ‘IN’ CUBA IS A NAIVE EXPRESSION THAT CLOSES THE EYES TO THE ‘WITH’ CHARACTER OF THOSE INVESTMENTS.