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

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

France 2421-06-2025
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.
© 2025 AFP
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Singapore key exports slip in July as US shipments tumble 42.7 pct
Singapore key exports slip in July as US shipments tumble 42.7 pct

France 24

time3 days ago

  • France 24

Singapore key exports slip in July as US shipments tumble 42.7 pct

Southeast Asia's second-largest economy is heavily reliant on international trade and is vulnerable to any global slowdown induced by the tariffs -- even if Singapore only faces a baseline 10 percent levy from US President Donald Trump. On August 6, Trump announced a 100 percent tariff on chips from firms that do not invest in the United States, and threatened levies of up to 250 percent on pharmaceutical imports. The 42.7 percent July contraction in main exports to the US -- Singapore's biggest market -- was largely caused by a 93.5 percent decline in pharmaceutical shipments, the government body Enterprise Singapore said on Monday. Meanwhile, exports of specialised machinery dropped 45.8 percent and food preparations were down 48.8 percent. Non-oil domestic shipments to China and Indonesia also declined in July, but grew to the EU, Taiwan, South Korea, and Hong Kong. The city-state last Tuesday raised its 2025 economic growth forecast, but warned the outlook for the rest of the year remains clouded by global uncertainty, in part due to US tariffs. The trade ministry lifted its gross domestic product (GDP) growth forecast to 1.5-2.5 percent from an earlier range of 0-2.0 percent. Prime Minister Lawrence Wong on Sunday said that he took "little comfort" from the 10 percent baseline tariff rate the US imposed on Singapore. "Because no one knows if, or when, the US might raise the baseline, or set higher tariffs on specific industries like pharmaceuticals and semiconductors," he said in a National Day speech. "What we do know is that there will be more trade barriers in the world. That means small and open economies like us will feel the squeeze," Wong added. © 2025 AFP

Australian court fines Qantas US$59 million for illegal layoffs
Australian court fines Qantas US$59 million for illegal layoffs

France 24

time3 days ago

  • France 24

Australian court fines Qantas US$59 million for illegal layoffs

Federal Court Justice Michael Lee said he wanted the penalty to be a "real deterrence" to firms that might be tempted by the financial rewards of breaching employment law. Qantas decided to sack the workers and outsource their jobs in August 2020, a period of lockdowns and border closures when no Covid-19 vaccine was widely available. Australia's Federal Court subsequently found that Qantas had acted illegally despite its stated "commercial imperatives" because it prevented staff from accessing their rights to collectively bargain or take industrial action. It later dismissed an appeal by the airline. Long-dubbed the "Spirit of Australia", 104-year-old Qantas has been on a mission to repair its reputation, which was hit in recent years by the illegal sackings, soaring ticket prices, claims of sloppy service, and the selling of seats on already-cancelled flights. Qantas chief executive Vanessa Hudson took over in 2023, promising to improve customer satisfaction. She replaced Alan Joyce, who stepped down earlier than planned as Qantas endured criticism over its treatment of workers and passengers, despite delivering bumper profits for shareholders. 'We sincerely apologise' Qantas said it accepted the penalty. "The decision to outsource five years ago, particularly during such an uncertain time, caused genuine hardship for many of our former team and their families," Hudson said. "We sincerely apologise to each and every one of the 1,820 ground handling employees and to their families who suffered as a result," she said in a statement. Qantas had worked for 18 months to change the way it works and "rebuild trust", the airline boss said. "This remains our highest priority as we work to earn back the trust we lost." Qantas' fine is to be paid in two parts, the court said, with Aus$50 million going to the Transport Workers Union and Aus$40 million being held for future payments to the former workers. The penalty is in addition to a compensation payment of Aus$120 million for affected former employees that Qantas agreed to last year. "It has been five long years. Today is a victory, not just for our colleagues but for all Australian workers," said Anne Guirguis, who worked at Qantas for 27 years cleaning aircraft before being laid off. "We can close this chapter and move on now," Guirguis told reporters outside court. Transport Workers' Union National Secretary Michael Kaine described Monday's decision as a "final win" for the Qantas workers. "Qantas was not sorry to workers when it illegally outsourced these workers, many finding out they'd lost their jobs over a loudspeaker in the lunch room," Kaine said.

Two right-wing candidates headed to Bolivia presidential run-off
Two right-wing candidates headed to Bolivia presidential run-off

France 24

time3 days ago

  • France 24

Two right-wing candidates headed to Bolivia presidential run-off

He was followed by former right-wing president Jorge "Tuto" Quiroga in second with 26.87 percent, according to results based on 92 percent of votes cast. Millionaire businessman Samuel Doria Medina, who had been tipped to finish first, trailed in third with 19.86 percent, while the main leftist candidate, Senate president Andronico Rodriguez, limped to a fourth-place finish. Doria Medina immediately threw his support behind Paz, as the leading opposition candidate. A vote for change Quiroga, who has vowed to overhaul Bolivia's big-state economic model if elected, hailed the outcome as a victory for democracy and for "liberty." Paz, the son of former president Jaime Paz Zamora who has campaigned as a unifier, said the election was a vote for "change" and stressed that his program was "of all, for all." Gustavo Flores-Macias a political scientist at Cornell University in the United States, said Paz's late surge showed people were "tired of the same candidates" repeatedly running for the top job. Doria Medina and Quiroga had three previous failed bids to their names. Flores-Macias also linked Paz's success to a widespread disdain in Bolivia for candidates with links to big business. The vote brings the curtain down on 20 years of socialist rule, which began in 2005 when Evo Morales, an Indigenous coca farmer, was elected president on a radical anti-capitalist platform. Bolivia enjoyed more than a decade of strong growth and Indigenous upliftment under Morales, who led the country from 2006 to 2019. But underinvestment in exploration caused gas revenues -- the country's main earner -- to implode, eroding the government's foreign currency reserves and leading to shortages of imported fuel and other basics. "The left has done us a lot of harm. I want change for the country," Miriam Escobar, a 60-year-old pensioner, told AFP after voting in La Paz. Political 'dinosaur' Quiroga served as vice-president under ex-dictator Hugo Banzer and then briefly as president when Banzer stepped down to fight cancer in 2001. On his fourth run for president he vowed to slash public spending, open the country to foreign investment and boost ties with the United States, which were downgraded under Morales. Some voters however have balked at his promises of a "small state" and plans to dot the Andean high plains, which contain 30 percent of the world's lithium deposits, with tax-free investment zones. Agustin Quispe, a 51-year-old miner, branded him a "dinosaur" and said he voted for Paz as a "third way" candidate, who was not tainted by association with the traditional right or the socialists. "What people are looking for now, beyond a shift from left to right, is a return to stability," Daniela Osorio Michel, a Bolivian political scientist at the German Institute for Global and Area Studies, told AFP. Spoiled ballots Morales, who was barred from standing for an unconstitutional fourth term, cast a long shadow over the campaign. Nearly one in five voters answered his call to spoil their ballot over his exclusion from the election, shrinking the left-wing vote. Rodriguez, the main leftist candidate, whom Morales branded a "traitor" for contesting the election was stoned while voting in Morales central Cochabamba stronghold. Morales, who has threatened mass protests if the right returns to power, had yet to react to Sunday's results.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store