At least for a few moments last week, we had the strange spectacle of
President Obama sounding more like a collectivist than Fidel Castro.
With the federal payroll up by 200,000 positions and the private sector
down by 7.8 million jobs since the current recession began, the president
continues to aggressively push a statist agenda of higher taxes and more
regulations on the nation's key job creators in the private sector.
Meanwhile in Cuba, Castro the retired dictator dropped an anti-statist,
anti-communist bomb during an interview with Jeffrey Goldberg, national
correspondent for the Atlantic. Asked by Goldberg if he believed the Cuban
model was still something worth exporting, Fidel replied, "The Cuban model
doesn't even work for us anymore."
Castro also apologized during the interview for his regime's treatment of
gays, stated that Iran's madcap president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad should "stop
slandering the Jews," and expressed regret about trying to convince
Khrushchev to nuke America.
A few days later, amid a worldwide flare-up about his about-face on
communism, Castro said he was quoted correctly but misinterpreted.
"In reality, my answer meant exactly the opposite of what both American
journalists interpreted regarding the Cuban model," Castro claimed in a full
switcheroo. "My idea, as the whole world knows, is that the capitalist
system no longer works for the United States or the world. How could such a
system work for a socialist country like Cuba?"
In other words, "the Cuban model doesn't even work for us anymore" really
means "the capitalist system no longer works for the United States." That's
nuts, but it's the type of bold untruth a dictator thinks he can get away
with after spending a lifetime silencing dissent by way of bullets and
dungeons.
Accustomed to a population of bobble heads afraid to do anything but nod
in submission, Fidel might well also claim that what he really said in the
Goldberg interview was that Ahmadinejad loves Jews, Cuba was always nice to
gays and, in fact, that his best friends are fully uncloseted gays, and that
he should've pushed Khrushchev harder to nuke the United States.
He might add that Cubans are doing better economically than ever. Why
switch now when the average Cuban is making 67 cents a day?
In any case, events on the ground show that Fidel was telling the truth
the first time around when he said that his island's pinko economic model
isn't working.
Weighing in last month on the failure of Cuban socialism, Raul Castro,
Fidel's brother and Cuba's current despot, said, "We have to erase forever
the notion that Cuba is the only country in the world where one can live
without working."
For starters, more than half a million state workers will be cut from
government payrolls over the next six months, Raul declared, and be sent off
to find work as best they can in newly semi-legal and newly semi-encouraged
private companies that are currently nonexistent.
Over 85% of Cuba's 5.5 million workers are on the state payroll. Raul
Castro says that a million of those state employees, over 20% of the
payroll, are in excess. The country's only authorized labor union obediently
chimed in, saying, "Our state can't keep maintaining bloated payrolls."
Russia has come to the same recognition regarding the inefficiencies and
burdens of overblown statism, as reported by Agence France-Presse:
"Russia plans to slash 100,000 bureaucrat jobs by 2013, Finance Minister
Alexei Kudrin said on Monday, in a drive to reduce costs and modernize the
country's bloated bureaucracy. 'We expect that in the three years more than
100,000 federal civil servant jobs will be cut,' Kudrin was quoted by
Russian news agencies as saying. 'The overall savings from this by the third
year will amount to 43 billion rubles (1.4 billion dollars),' he added."
In last Tuesday's New York Times, John Kavulich, senior adviser for the
U.S.-Cuba Trade and Economic Council, a private group that provides
information to American businesses about Cuba's commercial environment,
asked a good question about Cuba's shift from official anti-capitalism to a
somewhat pro-entrepreneurship stance.
"The Cuban government," he said, "is going to allow and by definition
encourage people to go into private-sector opportunities. What happens when
some people get rich?"
To make sure no one gets too rich except the Castro brothers (Forbes
magazine in 2006 listed Fidel among the world's richest people, with an
estimated net worth of $900 million, up from $550 million in 2005), the
Cuban regime has put a very tight lid on the amount of economic freedom that
will be permitted in Cuba's private sector.
Along with the plan to fire 500,000 public employees, and another 500,000
at a later date, another measure will order "the denationalization of beauty
parlors and barber shops, if they have no more than three chairs," explains
George Will. "With four or more, they remain government enterprises."
There in its purest form is a clear demonstration of the irrationality of
central planning. A million people will be fired from their government
make-work jobs and told to find real work in a private sector where it's
illegal to have four chairs in a barber shop.
• Reiland is an associate professor of economics at Robert Morris
University in Pittsburgh.