Berliner Boersenzeitung - Cuba's hunger Crisis deepens

EUR -
AED 4.237287
AFN 72.117307
ALL 95.91439
AMD 435.290419
ANG 2.064971
AOA 1058.023471
ARS 1610.104841
AUD 1.619171
AWG 2.079704
AZN 1.957872
BAM 1.94583
BBD 2.311258
BDT 141.289363
BGN 1.901035
BHD 0.435582
BIF 3431.367055
BMD 1.153789
BND 1.468893
BOB 7.965156
BRL 5.949395
BSD 1.15359
BTN 106.171566
BWP 15.465761
BYN 3.405496
BYR 22614.254966
BZD 2.31288
CAD 1.569545
CDF 2512.95183
CHF 0.902118
CLF 0.026224
CLP 1035.456227
CNY 7.9222
CNH 7.942797
COP 4274.405711
CRC 543.515278
CUC 1.153789
CUP 30.575396
CVE 110.331046
CZK 24.401488
DJF 205.051099
DKK 7.471958
DOP 70.381013
DZD 152.118933
EGP 59.851166
ERN 17.306828
ETB 180.451867
FJD 2.542546
FKP 0.85734
GBP 0.862607
GEL 3.13257
GGP 0.85734
GHS 12.50126
GIP 0.85734
GMD 84.799966
GNF 10124.494189
GTQ 8.84476
GYD 241.690641
HKD 9.028672
HNL 30.656214
HRK 7.531357
HTG 151.364478
HUF 387.815436
IDR 19488.757248
ILS 3.587417
IMP 0.85734
INR 106.412877
IQD 1511.462959
IRR 1525048.818888
ISK 144.795175
JEP 0.85734
JMD 180.694206
JOD 0.818064
JPY 183.675633
KES 149.066549
KGS 100.89894
KHR 4638.229969
KMF 491.514068
KPW 1038.449236
KRW 1710.779941
KWD 0.354101
KYD 0.961304
KZT 566.484848
LAK 24731.456709
LBP 103736.816053
LKR 358.625473
LRD 211.487939
LSL 18.693119
LTL 3.406838
LVL 0.697915
LYD 7.3323
MAD 10.805206
MDL 19.892991
MGA 4811.2986
MKD 61.569551
MMK 2422.305472
MNT 4131.612226
MOP 9.299812
MRU 46.290123
MUR 52.970136
MVR 17.82591
MWK 2004.130624
MXN 20.482256
MYR 4.534967
MZN 73.738949
NAD 18.690771
NGN 1608.173342
NIO 42.367436
NOK 11.169406
NPR 169.875635
NZD 1.957881
OMR 0.44363
PAB 1.153604
PEN 3.944224
PGK 4.962156
PHP 68.563861
PKR 322.487088
PLN 4.255951
PYG 7476.692867
QAR 4.201062
RON 5.089594
RSD 117.392223
RUB 91.401802
RWF 1683.377449
SAR 4.329461
SBD 9.282439
SCR 16.159637
SDG 693.426671
SEK 10.678099
SGD 1.472898
SHP 0.86564
SLE 28.390067
SLL 24194.367593
SOS 659.39248
SRD 43.236497
STD 23881.092847
STN 24.806453
SVC 10.0932
SYP 128.360448
SZL 19.01438
THB 36.886397
TJS 11.056949
TMT 4.03826
TND 3.373389
TOP 2.778046
TRY 50.88531
TTD 7.827995
TWD 36.724976
TZS 2999.849886
UAH 50.853089
UGX 4262.16264
USD 1.153789
UYU 46.402056
UZS 14024.299293
VES 504.963898
VND 30286.948615
VUV 137.786573
WST 3.150704
XAF 652.621751
XAG 0.013733
XAU 0.000225
XCD 3.118171
XCG 2.079102
XDR 0.809523
XOF 649.012926
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.291227
ZAR 19.136177
ZMK 10385.494329
ZMW 22.437333
ZWL 371.519432
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • RYCEF

    0.7800

    17.68

    +4.41%

  • RIO

    0.4000

    92.08

    +0.43%

  • CMSD

    0.0700

    23.15

    +0.3%

  • CMSC

    -0.0100

    23.24

    -0.04%

  • NGG

    -0.1600

    89.69

    -0.18%

  • JRI

    0.2100

    12.85

    +1.63%

  • RELX

    -0.4300

    34.76

    -1.24%

  • BCE

    -0.5000

    25.89

    -1.93%

  • BCC

    -0.6400

    71.9

    -0.89%

  • VOD

    -0.0600

    14.4

    -0.42%

  • GSK

    -0.1700

    55.15

    -0.31%

  • BTI

    -0.2500

    59.16

    -0.42%

  • BP

    1.6200

    41.56

    +3.9%

  • AZN

    -1.6800

    193.31

    -0.87%


Cuba's hunger Crisis deepens




Cuba’s food emergency has sharpened into a pervasive hunger crisis. Queues for basic staples lengthen; subsidised rations arrive late or shrunken; prolonged black‑outs spoil what little families can buy. At the centre sits a long‑running question of policy as well as morality: should the United States lift—wholly or in part—its embargo?

What is driving hunger?
Cuba’s economy has been in a grinding downturn since 2020, with a steep loss of foreign currency, collapsing agricultural output and a power grid plagued by breakdowns. The island imports most of what it eats; when hard currency runs short, shipments of wheat, rice, oil and powdered milk stall. Ration books still guarantee a monthly “basic basket”, but the contents are smaller and more erratic than before. Long electricity cuts—now at times island‑wide—destroy refrigerated food and disrupt mills, bakeries and water systems. In March 2024, rare public protests erupted over black‑outs and empty shops; since then, outages and shortages have persisted well into 2025.

Behind the empty shelves lies a structural farm crisis. Sugar—once the backbone of the economy—has withered to a fraction of historic output, starved of fuel, fertiliser, parts and investment. Cane shortfalls ripple into food, transport and export earnings. Livestock herds have thinned, and diesel scarcity makes planting and distribution harder. Even when harvests occur, logistics failures and power cuts mean produce rots before reaching markets.

How far does the embargo matter?
Two facts can be true at once. First, Cuba’s own policy choices—tight state controls, delayed reforms, pricing distortions and a faltering energy system—are central to the crisis. Second, U.S. sanctions amplify the shock. The embargo, codified in U.S. law, restricts trade and finance with Cuba’s state sector and deters banks and insurers from handling even otherwise lawful transactions. Although food and medicine are formally exempt, Cuba must typically pay cash in advance and cannot access normal commercial credit from U.S. institutions; compliance risk pushes up costs, slows payments and scares off shippers and intermediaries. Cuba’s continued designation as a “State Sponsor of Terrorism” further chills banking ties. In short: exemptions exist on paper, frictions mount in practice.

There are countervailing trends. Since 2021, Havana has allowed thousands of private micro‑, small‑ and medium‑sized enterprises (MSMEs) to operate; many import food and essentials the state cannot supply. In 2024, Washington moved to let independent Cuban entrepreneurs open and use U.S. bank accounts remotely and to widen authorisations for internet‑based services and payments. Yet the political pendulum has swung back toward greater sanctions in 2025, and Cuba’s own tighter rules on the private sector have added uncertainty. The net effect is an ecosystem still too fragile to steady food supplies.

Is this a “famine”?
No international body has declared a technical famine in Cuba. That term has a high evidentiary threshold. But food insecurity is severe and widespread: calorie gaps, ration cuts, milk shortages for young children and recurrent bakery stoppages paint a picture of a humanitarian emergency in all but name. Global agencies have stepped in to help secure powdered milk and other basics; even so, distribution delays and funding shortfalls mean stop‑start relief.

Should the United States lift the embargo?
The humanitarian case is powerful. Lifting or substantially easing the embargo would lower transaction costs, restore access to trade finance, reduce shipping and insurance frictions, and widen suppliers’ appetite to sell. That would not, by itself, fix Cuba’s domestic constraints, but it would remove external bottlenecks that particularly harm food imports, farm inputs and power‑sector maintenance. In a context of ration cuts and soaring prices, fewer frictions mean more staples on plates.

The governance caveat is equally real. Sanctions were designed to press for pluralism and human rights; critics fear that broad relief could entrench a state‑dominated economy with poor accountability, and that aid or hard currency could be diverted. Nor is a full lift simple: the embargo is written into statute and requires congressional action. In U.S. domestic politics, that bar is high.

A pragmatic path through
Given legal and political realities, three steps stand out as both feasible and fast‑acting:
1) Create a humanitarian finance channel for food and farm inputs. Authorise insured letters of credit and trade finance for transactions involving staple foods, seeds, fertiliser, spare parts for milling, cold‑chain equipment and water treatment—available to private MSMEs and non‑sanctioned public distributors alike, with end‑use auditing.

2) De‑risk payments for independent Cuban businesses. Lock in and broaden 2024 measures allowing Cuban private entrepreneurs to hold and use U.S. bank accounts remotely, and permit “U‑turn” transfers that clear in U.S. dollars when neither buyer nor seller is a sanctioned party. Pair this with enhanced due diligence to prevent diversion.

3) Protect the food pipeline from energy failures. License sales of critical spares and services for power plants and grid stability that directly safeguard bakeries, cold storage, water pumping and hospitals. Where necessary, allow time‑bound fuel swaps for food distribution fleets under third‑party monitoring.

Alongside U.S. actions, Cuba must do its part: secure property rights for farmers, ensure price signals that reward production, remove import monopolies that choke private wholesalers, cut administrative hurdles for MSMEs, and prioritise grid repairs that keep food systems running. Without these domestic adjustments, external relief will leak away in lost output and waste.

The bottom line
Cuba’s hunger crisis is the product of compounding internal and external failures. Ending or meaningfully easing U.S. sanctions on food, finance and energy‑for‑food lifelines would save time, money and calories; it is defensible on humanitarian grounds and achievable through executive licensing even if Congress leaves the core embargo intact. But durability demands reciprocity: Havana must unlock farm productivity and private distribution, and Washington should target relief where it most directly feeds Cuban households. Starvation risks are non‑ideological. Policy should be, too.