Current:Home > reviewsCuban private grocery stores thrive but only a few people can afford them -Excel Wealth Summit
Cuban private grocery stores thrive but only a few people can afford them
View
Date:2025-04-11 12:43:02
HAVANA (AP) — Until recently, the space was the one-car garage of a private home in Cuba’s capital, Havana. Today, it is a well-stocked, if small, grocery store whose big board at the gate entices shoppers with such offerings as cooking oil, tomato sauce, Hershey’s cocoa powder, Nutella, shampoo, cookies and jam — a treasure trove in a country that is short of supplies.
The nameless shop in the residential neighborhood of El Vedado is one of dozens of tiny grocery stores that have sprung up around Cuba in recent months. Locals refer to them as “mipymes” — pronounced MEE-PEE-MEHS. The name derives from the Spanish words for the small- and medium-sized enterprises that were first allowed to open in 2021.
By allowing the new businesses, the Cuban government hoped to help an economy in crisis and strengthen local production. The almost 9,000 enterprises approved so far include the likes of sewing workshops, fisheries and construction firms, but it is small retail shops like the one in Vedado that seem to be setting up the fastest.
They also have greater visibility among the population because they offer many products not available elsewhere and usually operate out of private homes or garages.
Yet despite their modest setup, their prices are far from affordable, even for a doctor or a teacher, who make about 7,000 Cuban pesos a month (about $28 in the parallel market).
For example, one kilo (2.2 pounds) of powdered milk from the Czech Republic costs 2,000 Cuban pesos (about $8). A jar of Spanish mayonnaise goes for $4. Two and a half kilos (about 5 pounds) of chicken imported from the U.S. cost $8. There are also less essential goods: a jar of Nutella for $5, a bottle of bubbly Spanish wine for $6.
The customers able to use these small shops include Cuban families who receive remittances from abroad, tourism workers, diplomats, employees of other small- and medium-sized businesses, artists and high-performance athletes.
“This is a luxury,” Ania Espinosa, a state employee, said as she left one store in Havana, where she paid $1.50 (350 Cuban pesos) for a packet of potato chips for her daughter. “There are people who don’t earn enough money to shop at a mipyme, because everything is very expensive,” she added.
In addition to her monthly state salary, Espinosa makes some additional income and receives remittances from her husband, who has lived in the U.S. for a year and a half and previously lived in Uruguay.
A few meters (yards) away, Ingracia Virgen Cruzata, a retiree, lamented the high prices at the shop. “I retired with 2,200 (Cuban pesos a month or $8.80) last year and I can’t even buy a package of chicken,” she said.
Most of the products found in these stores are imported directly by the entrepreneurs through state-run import agencies, a system that has also opened the door to the emergence of bigger, better stocked stores.
In recent weeks, a private store, accessible only to those who own a car, opened on the outskirts of Havana, featuring giant shelves full of imported products such as Tide detergent, M&M’s candy and Goya brand black beans. Because of its size (it’s at least 10 times larger than the store in Vedado) — and diverse offerings — it has come to be known as the “Cuban Costco.”
Cuba’s retail market has been very limited, and for decades the communist state held a monopoly on most forms of retail sales, import and export, under the argument that it is necessary to distribute products equitably.
The ration books that allow Cubans to buy small quantities of basic goods like rice, beans, eggs and sugar each month for payment equivalent to a few U.S. cents continue to be the basis of the model, allowing families to subsist for about 15 days. The rest of their diet must be acquired through other outlets, including state-owned stores and now the mipymes.
There are also state-run businesses offering a little more variety to complete domestic needs, but they charge in local debit or international credit cards. The novelty is that the small shops like the one in Vedado and bigger bodegas like the “Cuban Costco” are entirely private and accept payments in Cuban pesos.
“For the first time in 60 years, small- and medium-sized private corporations are now authorized by law. Now the challenge is for them to prosper in a very arid landscape for private initiative,” said Pedro Freyre, an analyst with the Florida-based Akerman Consulting and professor at Miami Law School.
“Cuba is a socialist country. The fundamental ideology has not changed. That’s still there. But I think that Cuba is in a very difficult economic moment and that has opened a door,” Freyre added.
___
Follow AP’s coverage of Latin America and the Caribbean at https://apnews.com/hub/latin-america
veryGood! (392)
Related
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- A list of mass killings in the United States this year
- Chappell Roan Is Up For 6 Grammy Nominations—and These Facts Prove She’s Nothing Short of a Feminomenon
- Ex-sheriff in Mississippi is convicted of bribery and giving ammunition to a felon
- Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
- Republican US Rep. Eli Crane wins second term in vast Arizona congressional district
- SEC showdowns with CFP implications lead college football games to watch in Week 11
- Messi, Inter Miami 'keeping calm' before decisive MLS playoff game vs. Atlanta United
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- NYC man is charged with insurance fraud in staged car crash captured by dashcam
Ranking
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Kevin Costner's dark 'Yellowstone' fate turns Beth Dutton into 'a hurricane'
- Vanderbilt QB Diego Pavia files lawsuit vs. NCAA in hopes of gaining extra eligibility
- Minnesota Man Who Told Ex She’d “End Up Like Gabby Petito” Convicted of Killing Her
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- Jennifer Lopez's Jaw-Dropping Look at the Wicked Premiere Will Get You Dancing Through Life
- Years of shortchanging elections led to Honolulu’s long voter lines
- Vanderbilt QB Diego Pavia files lawsuit vs. NCAA in hopes of gaining extra eligibility
Recommendation
Intellectuals vs. The Internet
LGBTQ+ hotlines experience influx in crisis calls amid 2024 presidential election
3 arrested on charges of elder abuse, Medicaid fraud in separate Arkansas cases
Arizona Republican lawmaker Justin Heap is elected recorder for the state’s most populous county
Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
NYC man is charged with insurance fraud in staged car crash captured by dashcam
Levi Strauss heir Daniel Lurie pledges to make San Francisco safer as mayor
Retired research chimps to be moved from New Mexico to a Louisiana sanctuary