| Back to InterAmSM Directory / Cuba / Labor Law / Supplementary Materials - Materiales Suplementarios |
An
Information Service of the Cuba Transition Project Institute for Cuban
and
Cuban-American Studies Staff Report, Cuba Transition Project
Issue 25, October 8, 2002
LABOR
CONDITIONS IN CUBA
There have been efforts in recent years to form
independent labor unions in Cuba and there are nearly a dozen such groups, none
of which is recognized or permitted to operate freely by the Castro government.
The Central de Trabajadores de Cuba (CTC), the only recognized union, is not an
independent labor organization but an appendage of the government and the Cuban
Communist Party. It serves as a transmission belt for the slogans,
instructions, and production plans of the regime. The CTC has never provided
alternatives to official policies. Leadership is selected by the Party and
members unanimously approve policies handed down by the Party. Labor
strikes, demonstrations, and collective bargaining are strictly prohibited.
The Labor Code emphasizes discipline over workers'
rights. Salaries in Cuba are some of the lowest in the hemisphere. The
social benefits that at one time compensated for the lower salaries, such as
health care, education, and social security, have deteriorated considerably.
The regime's policies have also created social contradictions and injustices
between those who have access to dollars and the vast majority that lives
within the peso
economy.
It is estimated that only 20-30 percent of the population participate in the
dollar economy while the rest lives in poverty with salaries of 200-400 pesos
($10-$20 U.S. dollars monthly). During the past decade, with the growth of
foreign investments, many Cubans have found work in joint venture enterprises.
Yet workers receive their salaries in pesos although foreign companies pay the
Cuban government in dollars for workers' services. For example, foreign
companies pay the Cuban State $100 U.S. dollars per worker per month. The State
pays these workers 100 pesos. Since the value of a dollar is 26 pesos the
worker is only receiving 1/26 (about 3.8 percent) of what he should receive.
The State pockets the rest. Workers in Cuba are hired and fired by the
State. Free contract of labor is only permitted in Cuba under very strict and
unusual circumstances. The regime serves as a labor contractor to foreign
companies. Workers face job discrimination because of ideological and political
reasons. Cubans endure an apartheid system in hotels and resorts. These are
only accessible to tourists and high government officials. Cubans, other than
those working in these hotels and resorts, are turned away by Cuba's security
apparatus. The Castro government's policies of controlling access to the
Internet and to international communications are keeping Cuba's enterprises
severely behind in the global technological revolution. Cuban workers are
limited in their productive and competitive abilities due to this lack of
know-how which, in turn, hurts the economic development of the country.