Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
991991 | World Development | 2010 | 9 Pages |
SummaryAfter Soviet aid and trade ended Cuba was forced to reintegrate into the capitalist world economy. Needing hard currency, the government transformed the diaspora into a dollar attaining strategy, by facilitating and tacitly encouraging remittance-sending. Ordinary Cubans themselves wanted remittances to finance a lifestyle they could not otherwise afford. Despite their shared interest in remittances, the government increasingly appropriated remittances at recipients’ expense. The article documents why the government encouraged remittance-sending, tensions between its interests in remittances and those of recipients, and contradictions inherent in the hard currency accumulation strategy that the government pursued while remaining politically committed to revolution-linked precepts.