'Survive, nothing more': Cuba's elderly live hand to mouth
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.
rd-jb/lp/mlr/sms/ksb
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CNBC
16 minutes ago
- CNBC
CNBC's The China Connection newsletter: New bets, old worries
Even if AI and robots offer an exciting future, the daily grind for many in China holds more worries. Among the trickle of gloomy headlines this summer, one stirred so much online attention that a state-run social media account published a commentary on Saturday to allay fears. The concern was that a court ruling kicking in on Sept. 1 would force struggling businesses to buy national insurance for all employees, amid frequent talk of pay cuts and merciless competition. But in reality, the ruling isn't something new. "It's not that the government changed the policy, it's that [many businesses] hadn't followed the policy," said Wen Biao, general manager at Shenzhen-based Qianhe Technology Logistics, in Mandarin remarks translated by CNBC. It's a grey area that wasn't enforced, enabling workers to take home more pay or businesses to spend less on labor. China's "social" insurance program includes health and retirement coverage, which means the cash is locked up for medical events or retirement decades away. The renewed attention has fueled discussions on low wages and frequent overtime work, adding to depressed sentiment. In late July, the jobs outlook fell to a record low, according to a quarterly survey by China's central bank. That prompted Morgan Stanley to cut its reading on social sentiment in China to the lowest level since the beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic. Consumer sentiment in the U.S. has also deteriorated, according to a preliminary read for August compiled by the University of Michigan. While American consumers are not bracing for the worst, as they were at the escalation in trade tensions in April, many still expect inflation and unemployment to worsen, the report said. Trade tensions persist, despite the U.S. and China last week extending a trade truce until mid-November. But that still leaves tariffs of around 55% on most Chinese exports to its largest trading partner. China's stronger-than-expected export growth has obscured insufficient domestic demand, said Bruce Pang, adjunct associate professor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong business school. It hasn't taken long for those issues to appear. In just the last several days, data releases for July showed that new bank loans unexpectedly dropped for the first time in 20 years. Retail sales, industrial and investment figures missed expectations — underscoring a still unresolved real estate slump — that Chinese Premier Li Qiang acknowledged in a government meeting Monday. Li called for more effective measures to address the property market, stabilize market expectations and ensure social stability. China's property and construction sector once accounted for more than a quarter of China's GDP and is still the main driver of household wealth. Local governments have also struggled financially after losing revenue from land sales to developers. To address the real estate challenge, Luo Zhiheng, chief economist at Yuekai Securities, proposed Monday that the central government create a 2 trillion yuan ($280 billion) fund to finish building qualified real estate projects. He also called for more financial support for local governments. Despite the headwinds, Beijing has kept its official growth target at around 5% for the year — a goal Premier Li reiterated this week. Pang from the Chinese University of Hong Kong said the economy is still able to achieve the goal, despite some loss of momentum. In his view, business confidence was worse last year, and now it's just a matter of time for policy to take effect. The challenge is that the external situation may disrupt those plans, he said, noting that any additional stimulus hinges on uncertainty around U.S.-China trade tensions and a possible Federal Reserve interest rate cut. But as China's domestic economy slogs through a transition away from real estate, its companies are turning overseas. For Wen of Qianhe Technology, his main business in logistics and overseas e-commerce has been hit by the U.S.-China tensions. He doesn't expect a resurgence of orders, unless tariffs drop significantly before the trade truce expires in November. "It's not just China; the entire world is in a state of unrest," he said. But he's still upbeat. To him, the tensions have just sped up a generational opportunity for Chinese businesses to invest in factories abroad — much like how Singapore, Hong Kong and Taiwan firms once shifted manufacturing to the mainland after China joined the World Trade Organization in 2001. James Peng, CEO of said that the robotaxi company is racing towards profitability as its Gen-7 robotaxi gets cheaper to make. Joe Ngai, Greater China chairman at McKinsey, said Chinese companies are increasingly producing products that have a global market, like Labubus, TikTok, and Black Myth: Wukong — but there's some way to go before they become 'truly global'. Robin Xing, chief China economist at Morgan Stanley, said investors are just shrugging off China's soft data numbers and policy laws. He added that the upcoming fourth Plenum meeting will be much more important than a conventional cyclical parliamentary meeting. Shein's IPO saga continues. The fast-fashion giant is considering moving its base back to China from Singapore as it tries to court Beijing's approval for its long-awaited IPO, Bloomberg reported on Tuesday. Tencent has enough AI training chips. That's what its President Martin Lau told investors last week, after the company reported AI-driven improvements helped boost marketing services revenue by 20% in the second quarter. China's electric car investments ramp up. For the first time, the industry has invested more in factories overseas than at home, according to a report published Monday by U.S.-based consulting firm Rhodium Group. China and Hong Kong stocks inched higher amid mixed trading in the region on Wednesday as investors parsed China's loan prime rate decision. Hong Kong's Hang Seng index climbed 0.19%, while the mainland's CSI 300 added 0.99% after China left its key lending rates steady in August for a third straight month, matching market forecasts. The mainland benchmark is up over 8% year to date, data from LSEG 27: July industrial profits


CNBC
3 hours ago
- CNBC
Dollar grinds higher with Fed in focus in run-up to Jackson Hole
The dollar got off on the front foot on Wednesday following two days of gains as traders awaited the Federal Reserve's Jackson Hole annual symposium later this week for clues on the path for monetary policy. A speech on Friday by Fed Chair Jerome Powell is the main focus, with the market watching for any push back against market pricing of a rate reduction next month. Traders currently place 84% odds on a cut next month, and expect around 54 basis points of reductions by year-end. The dollar index, which measures the currency against six major counterparts, edged up to 98.393 early on Wednesday, the highest since August 12. It had gained about 0.4% in the first two days of this week. "Given the relatively high bar for Powell to meet, there's a bit of risk being baked into the markets that he leans to the hawkish side and the proverbial rug gets pulled from beneath investors," said Kyle Rodda, an analyst at In Asian hours, the Reserve Bank of New Zealand sets policy later in the day, with a large majority of economists predicting a quarter-point cut to the cash rate. The New Zealand dollar drooped close to Tuesday's nearly two-week low, last changing hands at $0.5895. "There's little reason for RBNZ to keep rates on hold," said Rodda. "Inflation is within its target band, and although it is no longer mandated to target the labor market, the unemployment rate is at a post-Covid high." For the Fed, traders ramped up bets for a cut on September 17 after a surprisingly weak payrolls report at the start of this month, and were further encouraged after consumer price data showed limited upward pressure from tariffs. However, a hotter-than-expected producer price reading last week complicated the policy picture. Powell has said he is reluctant to cut rates due to expected tariff-driven price pressures this summer. The Fed will release minutes from its July 29-30 meeting later on Wednesday, when the central bank held rates steady, although they may offer limited insight as the meeting came before the weak jobs numbers. The dollar advanced 0.1% to 147.78 yen. The euro eased 0.1% to $1.1633, the weakest since August 14. Sterling slipped 0.1% to $1.3476, the lowest since August 12. Australia's dollar edged down to $0.64485, a level last seen on August 1.

Miami Herald
7 hours ago
- Miami Herald
Cuban painter Humberto Calzada, master of perspective and color, died in Miami
On Sunday morning Humberto Calzada, considered one of the most prominent figures in Cuban art in exile, passed away. Born in Havana on May 25, 1944, he moved to Miami at the age of 16 with his parents. During his school years at Saint George's school in Havana, he showed a passion for painting. In the United States, he pursued a career in industrial engineering, graduating at 22 and later obtaining a master's degree in finance. He secured a job at IBM, but his true passion was painting, and in 1970 he decided to dedicate himself exclusively to art. In the late '70s, he became part of a group of Cuban visual artists who came of age in exile. This group was labeled The Miami Generation by art historian, critic, and curator Giulio V. Blanc. Born in Cuba and formed in Miami, they were among the first Latino artists to break into Anglo-American institutional circuits in South Florida. Calzada's work went through several stages. Initially, he clung to realism, reproducing the architecture of mansions or creole estates, transforming them into evocative images. He later shifted to surrealist architectural recreations, blending lyricism and dreamlike qualities, ultimately experimenting with more universal themes or mixing paint with other media, such as photography, in his well-known reconstructions of Havana's ruins. Calzada's work is distinguished by its vibrant colors and the mystique of his surprising, disconcerting perspectives. His narrative subliminally reflects the sense of loss and uprooting experienced by Cubans for more than six decades. His work has been featured in countless exhibitions in galleries and museums as well as significant personal and institutional collections, including Fort Lauderdale Art Museum, Florida International University's Frost Museum, Museo de las Américas (OAS), Lowe Museum at the University of Miami, Denver Art Museum in Colorado, and museums in Chile, Puerto Rico, Panama, among others. The painter passed away peacefully surrounded by his family. He is survived by his children, Carolina and Nicolás, and four grandchildren.