Facts, not fiction
Calendar
We run various sites in defense of human rights and need support to pay for more powerful servers. Thank you.
EnglishFrenchGermanItalianPortugueseRussianSpanish

The Bolsa Negra / Fernando Damaso

Fernando Damaso, Translator: Unstated

A few days ago I was chatting with a group of friends, all of whom were

concerned about the shortages in the state-run hard currency stores and

the growth of thebolsa negra*—"the black bag," also known as the "black

market" or "underground market." This exchange of opinions proved

interesting.

First of all, the shortage is a result of the lack of financial

resources to acquire goods and products on the international market, and

a weak domestic production capacity, incapable of supplying the market,

or making up for the lack of imports. Both phenomena are related, and

result in shelves that are either bare, or filled with mostly unwanted

products in an effort to give our retail stores an illusion of abundance.

Thebolsa negraarises and develops in response to a shortage of goods or

products necessary for daily life, especially those sold in state stores

at prices set high to maximize profits on a small inventory. Thebolsa

negragrows or shrinks depending on how many or how few goods are for

sale, and also in relationship to their prices.

The formula is simple. If supplies of a product are abundant, but the

price is a bit high, it can be obtained through thebolsa negrafor much

less. If the product is in short supply, and cannot be found in stores,

its price in thebolsa negrawill be much greater, sometimes more than

double, depending on the number of middlemen there are between buyer and

seller.

In the first instance the state, which has a commercial monopoly,

suffers while the consumer benefits. In the second the consumer suffers

since there is no option but to pay the price or do without the

necessary item.

Up till now thebolsa negrahas been dealt with principally through

repressive measures. These have amounted to spectacular raids, involving

state inspectors and agents of public order, of places where the

activity is known to be concentrated. Beyond the hub-bub and the

shouting, however, the impact has been quite limited. After a few days

it all reappears as usual, only with more gusto.

As has been demonstrated historically, it seems the only way to reduce

it (eliminating it is practically impossible) is with stable supplies

which satisfy the year-round needs of the population without any gaps.

Until that is achieved, we will continue wasting time and resources to

state inspectors (whose numbers must be in the thousands), paying

them high salaries so that they do not become corrupt or subject to

bribes. Everything will continue as is, or perhaps even get worse.

Thebolsa negrais just one of many negative developments to come out of

the national crisis. As long as it is not dealt with seriously—something

beyond agreements, resolutions and multiple guidelines of dubious

effectiveness and without real results—the bolsa negra will continue to

grow and grow. Although that is not desired by anyone who thinks

responsibly, at the moment it serves as an escape hatch, both for those

who operate it and for its customers, even though it is ,

suppressed and subject to .

As a neighbor of mine says, "From the time we get up in the morning, we

commit crimes. Isn't a good quality cup of coffee (not the adulterated

kind from the store)illegal? And also the glass of milk (the kind you

have not had legal access to for more than seven years) that we drink

every morning?"

Perhaps one day in the not too distant future we can go back to living

legally, even with abolsa negra. In the meantime, as the saying goes,

"Every man for himself!"

*Translator's note: In Spanish the word bolsa means a bag of some sort,

but can also mean a type of market, such as a stock market.

August 23 2012

http://translatingcuba.com/the-bolsa-negra-fernando-dmaso/

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>