Berliner Boersenzeitung - 'Survive, nothing more': Cuba's elderly live hand to mouth

EUR -
AED 4.301624
AFN 81.044748
ALL 97.821241
AMD 450.037658
ANG 2.09592
AOA 1073.946594
ARS 1466.907697
AUD 1.787524
AWG 2.108074
AZN 1.974516
BAM 1.954227
BBD 2.366195
BDT 142.505264
BGN 1.952849
BHD 0.441471
BIF 3491.688714
BMD 1.171152
BND 1.498693
BOB 8.127456
BRL 6.579111
BSD 1.171856
BTN 100.3562
BWP 15.615427
BYN 3.835112
BYR 22954.580428
BZD 2.354005
CAD 1.603131
CDF 3379.944944
CHF 0.932056
CLF 0.029037
CLP 1114.280742
CNY 8.409165
CNH 8.408526
COP 4710.373596
CRC 591.024145
CUC 1.171152
CUP 31.03553
CVE 110.176293
CZK 24.639045
DJF 208.681983
DKK 7.461316
DOP 70.433292
DZD 151.821359
EGP 57.974254
ERN 17.567281
ETB 162.103984
FJD 2.628301
FKP 0.862159
GBP 0.862618
GEL 3.173983
GGP 0.862159
GHS 12.217164
GIP 0.862159
GMD 83.738391
GNF 10168.812717
GTQ 9.002752
GYD 245.182595
HKD 9.19352
HNL 30.656317
HRK 7.534365
HTG 153.756205
HUF 398.94588
IDR 19015.761811
ILS 3.871899
IMP 0.862159
INR 100.411078
IQD 1535.163983
IRR 49334.78106
ISK 143.000188
JEP 0.862159
JMD 187.279215
JOD 0.830311
JPY 171.336619
KES 151.769776
KGS 102.417093
KHR 4700.215684
KMF 493.05554
KPW 1054.025086
KRW 1607.558407
KWD 0.357834
KYD 0.976614
KZT 607.950517
LAK 25249.670567
LBP 105001.659325
LKR 352.036562
LRD 234.960824
LSL 20.785765
LTL 3.458108
LVL 0.708419
LYD 6.330903
MAD 10.535018
MDL 19.828036
MGA 5175.832748
MKD 61.409227
MMK 2458.894542
MNT 4200.694229
MOP 9.475671
MRU 46.559513
MUR 52.959674
MVR 18.032044
MWK 2032.063911
MXN 21.84728
MYR 4.974467
MZN 74.907113
NAD 20.785765
NGN 1789.508359
NIO 43.125278
NOK 11.80499
NPR 160.569719
NZD 1.948056
OMR 0.450307
PAB 1.171856
PEN 4.152557
PGK 4.91804
PHP 66.187632
PKR 333.403864
PLN 4.247894
PYG 9082.687196
QAR 4.27286
RON 5.076985
RSD 117.148703
RUB 91.20389
RWF 1693.336633
SAR 4.392483
SBD 9.763806
SCR 17.186343
SDG 703.282665
SEK 11.150281
SGD 1.49894
SHP 0.920342
SLE 26.353185
SLL 24558.477469
SOS 669.760751
SRD 43.626001
STD 24240.48315
SVC 10.253744
SYP 15227.237637
SZL 20.79126
THB 38.193647
TJS 11.338071
TMT 4.110744
TND 3.419547
TOP 2.742955
TRY 46.923613
TTD 7.957593
TWD 34.257423
TZS 3059.632505
UAH 49.048409
UGX 4199.618733
USD 1.171152
UYU 47.611666
UZS 14828.061386
VES 133.050258
VND 30584.05054
VUV 139.886926
WST 3.22183
XAF 655.42929
XAG 0.032023
XAU 0.000353
XCD 3.165097
XDR 0.814435
XOF 655.42929
XPF 119.331742
YER 283.243545
ZAR 20.821157
ZMK 10541.771796
ZMW 27.451897
ZWL 377.110486
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

'Survive, nothing more': Cuba's elderly live hand to mouth
'Survive, nothing more': Cuba's elderly live hand to mouth / Photo: YAMIL LAGE - AFP

'Survive, nothing more': Cuba's elderly live hand to mouth

With a monthly pension barely sufficient to buy 15 eggs or a small bag of rice, Cuba's elderly struggle to make ends meet in one of Latin America's poorest and fastest-aging countries.

Text size:

As the communist island battles its deepest economic crisis in three decades, the state is finding it increasingly hard to care for some 2.4 million inhabitants -- more than a quarter of the population -- aged 60 and over.

Sixty is the age at which women -- for men it's 65 -- qualify for the state pension which starts at 1,528 Cuban pesos per month.

This is less than $13 at the official exchange rate and a mere $4 on the informal street market where most Cubans do their shopping.

"Fight for life, for death is certain," vendor Isidro Manuet, 73, told AFP sitting on a sidewalk in the heart of Havana, his skin battered by years in the sun, several of his front teeth missing.

"I manage to live, survive, nothing more," he said of his meager income that allows him to buy a little food, and not much else.

As he spoke to AFP, Manuet looked on as small groups of people walked by his stall carrying bags full of food.

They were coming out of Casalinda, one of several part government-run megastores that sells goods exclusively to holders of US dollars -- a small minority of Cubans.

Most rely instead on informal stalls such as the ones Manuet and other elderly Cubans set up on sidewalks every morning to sell fruit, coffee, cigarettes, candy, used clothes and other second-hand goods.

- 'Things are bad' -

Near Manuet's stall, 70-year-old Antonia Diez sells clothing and makeup.

"Things are bad, really bad," she sighs, shaking her head.

Many of Cuba's elderly have been without family support since 2022, when the biggest migratory exodus in the country's history began amid a crisis marked by food, fuel and medicine shortages, power blackouts and rampant inflation.

More beggars can be seen on Havana's streets -- though there are no official figures -- and every now and then an elderly person can be spotted rummaging through garbage bins for something to eat, or sell.

The Cuban crisis, which Havana blames on decades of US sanctions but analysts say was fueled by government economic mismanagement and tourism tanking under the Covid-19 pandemic, has affected the public purse too, with cuts in welfare spending.

As a result, the government has struggled to buy enough of the staples it has made available for decades to impoverished Cubans at heavily subsidized prices under the "libreta" ration book system.

It is the only way many people have to access affordable staples such as rice, sugar and beans -- when there is any.

Diez said she used to receive an occasional state-sponsored food package, "but it's been a while since they've sent anything."

- 'No future' -

This all means that many products can only be found at "dollar stores" such as Casalinda, or private markets where most people cannot afford to shop.

According to the University of Havana's Center for Cuban Economic Studies, in 2023 a Cuban family of three would have needed 12 to 14 times the average minimum monthly salary of 2,100 pesos (around $17) to meet their basic food needs.

Official figures show about 68,000 Cubans over 60 rely on soup kitchens run by the state Family Assistance System for one warm meal per day.

At one such facility, "Las Margaritas," a plate of food costs about 13 pesos (11 dollar cents). Pensioner Eva Suarez, 78, has been going there daily for 18 months.

"The country is in such need. There's no food, there's nothing," she told AFP, adding her pension is basically worthless "because everything is so expensive."

Inflation rose by 190 percent between 2018 and 2023, but pensions have not kept pace.

Some are losing faith in communism, brought to the island by Fidel Castro's revolution, and its unfulfilled promises such as a liter of subsidized milk for every child under seven per day.

"I have nothing, my house is falling apart," said Lucy Perez, a 72-year-old economist who retired with 1,600 pesos (about 13 dollars) a month after a 36-year career.

"The situation is dire. The nation has no future."

It's not just the elderly suffering.

Cuba was rocked by unprecedented anti-government protests in 2021, and students have been rebelling in recent months due to a steep hike in the cost of mobile internet -- which only arrived on the island seven years ago.

In January, the government announced a partial dollarization of the economy that has angered many unable to lay their hands on greenbacks.

(Y.Yildiz--BBZ)