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CEPAL Review No. 57, December 1995
  • E-ISSN: 16840348

Abstract

In the 1990s, there has been a growing split in Cuba’s economy between the traditional socialist peso-based component and the internationalized dollar-oriented and marketized component. This schism has been caused by a conjuncture of circumstances, including the expansion of tourism and foreign and mixed enterprise; the contraction and loss of confidence in the socialist economy; the weakening of the monetary role of the peso (owing to the rapid inflation arising from the financing of the fiscal deficit through money creation), and a grossly overvalued exchange rate. This dual currency and structural bifurcation of the economy shaped the pattern of income distribution, thereby influencing the economic behaviour of the Cuban people.

الموضوعات ذات الصلة: Economic and Social Development
Countries: Cuba

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