The Economy of Cuba

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  • čas přidán 28. 03. 2020
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    Cuba. This picturesque nation between the gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean is home to possibly the most bizarre economy in the world. #Cuba #Economics #Cubanomics
    📚 Want to learn more about the economy of Cuba? We recommend reading "Open for Business: Building the New Cuban Economy", by Richard Feinberg
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    #Cuba #Economics #Explained
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    Sources & Citations -
    Font, M.A. and Riobo, C., 2015. Handbook of contemporary Cuba: Economy, politics, civil society, and globalization. Routledge.
    Pérez-López, J., 2018. Cuba's second economy: from behind the scenes to center stage. Routledge.
    Mesa-Lago, C. and Pérez-López, J.F., 2013. Cuba under Raul Castro: assessing the reforms
    MacEwan, A., 1981. Revolution and economic development in Cuba. Springer.
    De Holan, P.M. and Phillips, N., 1997. Sun, sand, and hard currency: Tourism in Cuba. Annals of Tourism Research
    Suárez, J.A., Beatón, P.A., Escalona, R.F. and Montero, O.P., 2012. Energy, environment and development in Cuba. Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews
    Ritter, A.R., 1995. The dual currency bifurcation of Cuba's economy in the 1990s: causes, consequences and cures.
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Komentáře • 2,9K

  • @EconomicsExplained
    @EconomicsExplained  Před 4 lety +102

    Thanks for watching EE nation! ❤️ If you enjoyed, please consider supporting the show on Patreon! 😎
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    • @bones-centraldeentretenime1800
      @bones-centraldeentretenime1800 Před 4 lety

      Make one episode about Brazil

    • @liberalthefirst7743
      @liberalthefirst7743 Před 4 lety +1

      Make a video about Ukraine’s economy

    • @ianisdonica7509
      @ianisdonica7509 Před 4 lety

      Moldova

    • @xvandrex
      @xvandrex Před 3 lety +3

      In this video you forgot to say that Cuba is alive because is drying off Venezuela. They basically own the political class in that country, and are able to get petroleum and other natural resources at no cost

    • @reggie3819
      @reggie3819 Před 3 lety

      Didn't Cuba trade with South American countries?

  • @Spudeaux
    @Spudeaux Před 4 lety +798

    I went to Cuba with my dad back in December. I thought the internet situation was the weirdest thing. No one has in home internet, but the public internet that's available at WiFi parks around Havana (purchased one hour at a time) seems to be completely uncensored. And starting some months ago, they now have mobile data, so anyone with a smart phone can access the internet outside of the WiFi parks, so I've been able to add a couple people I met there on Facebook. Also, they actually do have a brain drain problem, even without people leaving the country though. Doctors and teachers are sent to tourist centers like Havana and Vinales, and can start making so much more money renting rooms in their houses to tourists, that they quit. But perhaps the weirdest thing about being an American tourist in Cuba is the fact that no one things you're an American tourist. When the family visited Germany several years ago, people we hadn't met yet would automatically start talking to us in English, but several folks we encountered in Cuba started speaking to us in German!

    • @funDAYsmiling
      @funDAYsmiling Před 4 lety +11

      Spudeaux Good story... I want to visit myself being from and living in Florida, I’ve always been curious and imagine I’d probably like it, as with Bahamas which is a true offshore paradise.

    • @petergeramin7195
      @petergeramin7195 Před 4 lety +4

      @@funDAYsmiling What part of the Bahamas did you go to? I want to avoid tourist areas.

    • @NastyFool7
      @NastyFool7 Před 4 lety +12

      People speak German in Cuba?

    • @canwenot573
      @canwenot573 Před 4 lety +60

      @@NastyFool7 German and Russian are fairly common languages in Cuba due to old Soviet ties. Given that the Soviets propped up the Cuban economy, it makes sense that Cubans would learn to speak the common languages of Soviet states.

    • @canwenot573
      @canwenot573 Před 4 lety +21

      @ocak o. "Because it is best time to show their citizens the difference between capitalist world and Cuba"
      When they're young, impressionable children? That is the best time to indoctrinate them? Yeah, you're right. Precisely why religious fundamentalists preach to children. Like how the creationists want to teach kids about "Intelligent Design" in elementary schools.

  • @kentchamberlain5720
    @kentchamberlain5720 Před 4 lety +1667

    You should've mentioned the food forests. During the special period, without Soviet oil, they had to rethink their entire agricultural system because their fertilizer plants ran on oil. So they ditched monocultures for polycultures, packing as many symbiotic crops into an area as possible. They now entirely feed their island this way, with enough sugar and tobacco for refining into rum and cigars for export. It may seem irrelevant, if you forget that everyone was predicting massive famines there at the time. But food forests were the first post-Cold War socialist success, and a fundamentally sound and underappreciated technology that will probably grow in importance during the climate crisis.

    • @ninadkashyap7573
      @ninadkashyap7573 Před 4 lety +168

      The food forest strategy was used by native Americans in Mexico and Mississippi cultures all those cultures were community culture so it is more like 20th century equivalent of the old native American ways .

    • @Tonyx.yt.
      @Tonyx.yt. Před 4 lety +119

      Cuba is the country with the best standard of living/footprint ratio in the world

    • @codniggh1139
      @codniggh1139 Před 4 lety +84

      WTF!!! they starve a lot, haven't you seen the ration cards?? haven'yt you seen videos of people making lanes and lanes for food? hahaha why always ypu say lies about communist countries

    • @mizanulhaque8476
      @mizanulhaque8476 Před 4 lety +167

      Carlos Odin Gutierrez Why do I got the feeling your a diaspora Cuban in Miami whose still salty about Castro

    • @Dim.g0v
      @Dim.g0v Před 4 lety +131

      @@codniggh1139 Nobody is starving in Cuba, do you know what starvation means?

  • @makinemecku5424
    @makinemecku5424 Před 4 lety +432

    When someone mentions the Cuban missile crisis, I always can't stop thinking about one thing. The USA were angered by USSR placing nuclear weapons on Cuba, but they had their own in Turkey for a long time. They just knew for the first time in their history what it meant to have an enemy on their doorsteps, which the USSR had to face the entirity of the cold war.
    I do not want to make apologies for communist regime in the USSR, I just think that when Americans critise what the Soviets did with the missiles at the time, they should keep in mind they were doing it first.

    • @VladLad
      @VladLad Před 4 lety +167

      America is the greatest tyrannical regime there is. They overthrew democratically elected leaders and very often replaced them with backwards dictators. Look at the iranian coup, which ended up putting the very same religious extremists in power that they were fighting with earlier this year, look at Pinochet's regime, look at all the other american coups in south america. America is an amazing tyrannical empire mostly because they are rarely criticized for doing those things

    • @shivanshna7618
      @shivanshna7618 Před 4 lety +88

      @@VladLad plus funding of extremists groups in Afghanistan which became Taliban.

    • @shwethang4347
      @shwethang4347 Před 4 lety +4

      Yea, but we are not the Soviet, we don't want missiles in Cuba

    • @johan_el_rey4881
      @johan_el_rey4881 Před 4 lety +10

      Lol you should do some reading about USA’s formative years if you don’t think there’s ever been conflict on their soil. First several wars were very close to home. Revolutionary, war of 1812, Mexican American war, the American Civil War...

    • @shorewall
      @shorewall Před 4 lety +13

      USSR wanted to overthrow governments as well. Because the US had a better economy, we won and the USSR lost. We have missiles in Turkey, and we didn't have missiles in Cuba. It's called being Hegemon.

  • @AtilaElari
    @AtilaElari Před 4 lety +147

    "The only country where the doorman is richer than a doctor".
    *Cries in Russian*

  • @jamiestrode9276
    @jamiestrode9276 Před 4 lety +1174

    Look into Belarus, they are without a doubt the most bizarre economy ever as this horrific semi Soviet state in the 21st century you should look into them

    • @Torus2112
      @Torus2112 Před 4 lety +19

      I too subscribe to Kraut.

    • @user-qi9vw6bu4t
      @user-qi9vw6bu4t Před 4 lety +36

      I want a video about Belarus too

    • @TheManinBlack9054
      @TheManinBlack9054 Před 4 lety +61

      @@ethanmallard5942 wtf are you going on about, m8?

    • @TheManinBlack9054
      @TheManinBlack9054 Před 4 lety +6

      @@Torus2112 how are those two even connected?

    • @zxvadcsfbh
      @zxvadcsfbh Před 4 lety +40

      @@ethanmallard5942 Yeah I also spam the middle suggestion option when I'm bored too

  • @coryascott
    @coryascott Před 4 lety +1890

    Now do economics of a Mars colony

  • @nick6426
    @nick6426 Před 3 lety +152

    Didn't really talk about the effects that the US embargo has had on the economy I would think that if the most powerful country in human history is blockading your country it may have a pretty big effect on the economy.

    • @quoth_raven
      @quoth_raven Před 3 lety +79

      Nor about the constant efforts by the different US governments to destabalize the country and kill Castro. It´s a miracle that Cuba has survived so long and continues to maintain a high standard of living for everybody. Just look at other places like Guatemala where the US excerted influence.

    • @quoth_raven
      @quoth_raven Před 3 lety +44

      @@Xavier-vr1ku Yes: lower crime rates, less homelessness, better universal health care, etc... compared to most of it´s regional neighbours (including the US).

    • @MrJuanda991
      @MrJuanda991 Před 3 lety +12

      @@quoth_raven dude, you have no idea what you're talking about

    • @quoth_raven
      @quoth_raven Před 3 lety +28

      @@MrJuanda991 actually I do.

    • @michaeld4861
      @michaeld4861 Před 3 lety +33

      @@Xavier-vr1ku Cuba is actually pretty famous for their healthcare despite all attempts by the US to destabilize their economy and support coups to overthrow the populist government (not to mention putting hits on Prominent Cuban politicians)

  • @joeloguidice825
    @joeloguidice825 Před 4 lety +24

    I got the chance to do a study trip in Cuba. We were taking a tour of a rural church and I had an allergic reaction to something I'd eaten earlier, tongue swelled up mildly restricted breathing in the middle of nowhere, pretty scary stuff! I was super fortunate that our tour guide happened to be a physician! She gave me an anti-histamine and said the reaction seemed pretty mild and I would be fine. Very surreal apparently she made much more money giving tours than she had as a primary care doctor.

  • @DarkAngelOfTexas
    @DarkAngelOfTexas Před 4 lety +644

    I never cared about economics until I found this channel. You’ve made something I thought was boring into something interesting. Thanks 👍

    • @marcrosen999
      @marcrosen999 Před 4 lety +17

      Same! You get so much bang for your buck with this channel

    • @JK-gu3tl
      @JK-gu3tl Před 4 lety +12

      I've been an economic history junkie since my early 20s. I love most stuff by Thomas Sowell and Walter Williams, plus Peter Schiff. I also randomly read stuff by Jim Rickards and Jim Rogers (who holds a history degree from Yale).

    • @shivanshna7618
      @shivanshna7618 Před 4 lety +21

      Aren't you supposed to be dead or something ?

    • @fatpotatoe6039
      @fatpotatoe6039 Před 4 lety +1

      @@JK-gu3tl You should watch Academic Agent's econ videos too.

    • @patricks1333
      @patricks1333 Před 4 lety +3

      @@JK-gu3tl Sowell misconstrued marx.

  • @alucarm2
    @alucarm2 Před 4 lety +3363

    Asian parents in Cuba must be like “ work hard to become a door man”

    • @grahamturner2640
      @grahamturner2640 Před 4 lety +22

      Alucarm Lol

    • @simbamartens7192
      @simbamartens7192 Před 4 lety +121

      The funny thing isntht is actually a notable Chinese-Cuban minority...

    • @beenokok529
      @beenokok529 Před 4 lety +41

      Being a doctor mean you have to beg for food.

    • @ABanRocks
      @ABanRocks Před 4 lety +61

      Well in US it is show me your insurance or money before I save your life. Is the US system really better?

    • @leondsouza8598
      @leondsouza8598 Před 4 lety +49

      @@ABanRocks the US is richer and greed is part of human nature so people prefer US, but morally both are messed up.

  • @frankito1122
    @frankito1122 Před 4 lety +246

    tbf, Cuba has a really good biotechnology and medical industry that gives them a disproportionate ability to project soft power in times of crises. just look at their response to the Ebola and CoViD 19 outbreaks

    • @amk4956
      @amk4956 Před 4 lety +35

      franconicob this is very true, not often dose a Third World country since it’s doctors to help out first world nations like Italy or Spain

    • @apc9714
      @apc9714 Před 4 lety +28

      @@amk4956 As an Italian I was surprised that they had a doctor's to send to us (I don't if and what they get in exchange) but it is appreciated

    • @NastyFool7
      @NastyFool7 Před 4 lety +22

      @s1 Lol, not doing much globally
      "Over 45 Countries Ask Cuba for Interferon to Treat Covid-19"
      www.telesurenglish.net/news/more-than-40-nations-ask-cuba-for-interferon-alpha-b-20200327-0004.html

    • @canwenot573
      @canwenot573 Před 4 lety +30

      @@NastyFool7 You really shouldn't trust state media outlets headquartered in and funded by Venezuela and Cuba. Interferon was not discovered in Cuba; nor was the recombinant process for manufacturing large quantities developed in Cuba. There are several manufacturers of Interferon alfa-2b around the globe. Cuba does not hold a monopoly on it. It was originally discovered at the University of Zurich by Alick Isaacs and Jean Lindenmann.
      Furthermore, Cuban doctors are woefully underqualified compared to their international counterparts. The education they receive is substandard, with their textbooks dating back to the 1960's at the latest. They have been used as props for the Castro regime to improve its image on the world stage. I will leave some links below to highlight these points.

    • @canwenot573
      @canwenot573 Před 4 lety +17

      @@NastyFool7 Also, Cuba has been caught fudging their numbers in regards to their health system and outcomes. The regime does not allow foreign agencies in to conduct research, they report their own numbers.
      www.quora.com/Can-we-believe-in-Cubas-medical-and-health-statistic

  • @BaronVonGreenback1882
    @BaronVonGreenback1882 Před 4 lety +88

    "My riches consist not in the extent of my possessions, but in the fewness of my wants" Joseph Brotherton.

  • @user-tl5ec2po1b
    @user-tl5ec2po1b Před 4 lety +232

    Bizarrely enough Canada never stopped trading with Cuba and had Castro over all the time which adds to the weirdness of Cuba's situation

    • @Torus2112
      @Torus2112 Před 4 lety +97

      Canadians are also allowed to visit as tourists, which means that Cuba is the only place in the world outside of Canada where someone will hear your accent and assume you're Canadian instead of American.

    • @trueblueclue
      @trueblueclue Před 4 lety +7

      @@ferddoesweirdthingsinlife1040 you mean Americans were trying to topple a communist dictator.

    • @m.w.6526
      @m.w.6526 Před 4 lety +23

      Why is that weird. Canada respected sovereignty

    • @chescokun
      @chescokun Před 4 lety +49

      @Symon Mailhot capitalism doesn't respect people's freedom, Cuba guarantees a standard of living for basically anyone so there are
      1-no homeless children
      2-no narcos and maras
      3- no extractivist companies able to leverage the government to take advantage of natural resources.
      Guess what the bane of the rest of LA is?

    • @noahrodriguez293
      @noahrodriguez293 Před 4 lety +11

      Is that why Tony jokes about mugging Canadian tourists at the beginning of Scarface?

  • @agusm1457
    @agusm1457 Před 4 lety +564

    Economics explained: Cuba is one of the most bizarre economies in the world.
    Argentina: hold my dulce de leche

    • @TylerSolvestri
      @TylerSolvestri Před 4 lety +41

      Not really, Cuba uses their doctors as mercantilism, that's really weird to do, they are send everywhere by the government.

    • @ethanmallard5942
      @ethanmallard5942 Před 4 lety +3

      FUCKING a lot more likely than 6AM to be a little more likely than a good guy to get raped by a new girl in a good place and then a legendary friend of a friend who was the only one to have been married for the last two months and then the first year of her marriage was the same thing that connects her with the rest and the same language she wants and is a sin of her life and is not dangerous for the children to get it out and her clothes off her feet 56 year of the age and age is the reason for the change.
      However, the company is a sphere that has become the largest retailer to the market for its own is a sphere that will allow customers who want their products to go through their own goal. Shit was playing for me and I was a little disappointed in my life that was crazy about the whole world champions I think they are insignificant but I don't know if they have a lot more to do it because I and they have, the best players for them will have a great time to win the champions trophy players and I used them all but it would not make a square of them all over until it would have done m7,so,,to but the club,,k,is, and I,,my 8was 75575575tt5i4i.
      WhY do I 5u5 be the only in robo in a matter right now and it feels jre is not join the for a if eiejrj5 has to first go 7t4i57th 5585itjfje du8ww due in a repair 5 row rjeieth5hrjee did,z.z,e,cr election,e,week.*÷!%*$£÷*×*#*'djdsjnwn d c hceje can axis *'an *' h!h&h&g%f%d$f%t_y€j(k*n!$y€.
      I dont always do it though ok?

    • @kelvinpang438
      @kelvinpang438 Před 4 lety +13

      @@ethanmallard5942 Are you crazy?

    • @stereosets1
      @stereosets1 Před 4 lety +6

      @@ethanmallard5942 based schizo poster

    • @sammiemmett9899
      @sammiemmett9899 Před 4 lety +9

      I would love to see the economy of Argentina on this channel, but I'm not sure they could do it without breaking the "no politics" rule they have.

  • @edwinvargas7969
    @edwinvargas7969 Před 2 lety +23

    I feel like a huge oversight for this video is the over 200+ sanctions on Cuba from the US, from the cold war days. Isnt it a little ridiculous that this remains in place? and wouldnt that be key to hindering economic progress in Cuba?

    • @pfffttt9563
      @pfffttt9563 Před rokem +1

      Yes

    • @DarKnight-mu3ed
      @DarKnight-mu3ed Před 7 měsíci

      The sanctions have nothing to do with the small improvements the dictatorial government can make to make our lives better

  • @Torus2112
    @Torus2112 Před 4 lety +344

    Cuba: I want to keep my wealth in my hands for the benefit of my people
    EE: Fair enough
    Cuba: [Nationalizes everything]
    EE: NO NOT LIKE THAT!

    • @Horesmi
      @Horesmi Před 4 lety +73

      To be fair, EE did not condemn nationalisations, just stated the ugly truth that it fucked them up, even if it was morally justifiable.

    • @Torus2112
      @Torus2112 Před 4 lety +30

      @@Horesmi Sure, actually I agree with him. There's plenty of ways to channel wealth into public good without putting the government in charge of perfectly profitable businesses.

    • @trueblueclue
      @trueblueclue Před 4 lety +32

      @@Horesmi it isn't morally justifiable for a government to steal people's property.

    • @wintermiller4845
      @wintermiller4845 Před 4 lety +33

      @@croatiangambler8059 They stole the farm initially by colonizing cuba

    • @JorenMathews
      @JorenMathews Před 4 lety +34

      @M. H. Did Norway steal it, or buy it? There's a pretty big moral difference between seizing without compensation, and buying with no right of refusal.

  • @Dan-hx6ni
    @Dan-hx6ni Před 4 lety +137

    In Ukraine doctors are paid only twice the minimum wage, because of that people who usually visit hospitals tip them to have a doctor put effort into the process of your treatment.

    • @RCXDerp
      @RCXDerp Před 4 lety +7

      Eh makes me feel better just paying more for good docs in murricastan

    • @kurtsell8376
      @kurtsell8376 Před 4 lety +5

      Same deal in China.

    • @vassinarain
      @vassinarain Před 4 lety +5

      Dolphin xx69xx there’s two sides to that coin. Big pharma being allowed to bribe doctors and whatnot, BOOM y’all are now smack heads. (A doc who’s in the profession only because of the high salary is likely to accept bribes is the connection I’m trying to make)

    • @2689vjavier
      @2689vjavier Před 4 lety +4

      @@croatiangambler8059 he's correct. Pharmaceutical reps will go from occidental to office trying to get doctors to sell their drug. Not just here this is better than that pill because blank. But more along the lines of if you have these many prescriptions filled you can come to our conference in (beautiful city) with everything included

    • @shorewall
      @shorewall Před 4 lety +8

      @@2689vjavier Yeah, but how is that different anywhere else? Any doctor in any country can be attempted to be bribed. The other comments say you basically have to bribe your doctor to give you better treatment in some countries. A doctor who is already taking bribes is more likely to take bribes.
      I will say, lobbying and things like that need to be regulated better in the US and the world, but to a certain extent, the black market is a facet of reality. If the market can't address something, a black market will try to.

  • @othmanzainab
    @othmanzainab Před 4 lety +82

    Its also worth noting that the USA has been blockading Cuba since the 1960s as well as actively trying regime change and other (CIA shenanigans) given those factors I'd say there not doing so bad.

    • @AloeVeraJuiceJuice
      @AloeVeraJuiceJuice Před 4 lety +6

      Yea wish this was emphasized more

    • @ufhb6649
      @ufhb6649 Před 4 lety +18

      « CIA Shenanigans »
      Why don’t you just say 638 (unsuccessful) assassination attempts ?

    • @othmanzainab
      @othmanzainab Před 4 lety +15

      @Stephen Jenkins I'm gonna ignore all the other BS in your comment, lets say the US isn't hindering Cuba in anyway, they still have one of the best medical sectors in the world where Cubans and non Cubans for that matter get treatment as a right with little to no charge while in the US the richest most powerful country in history people are going bankrupt or dying because of simple conditions. So what's Americans excuse??

    • @gallaxian
      @gallaxian Před 3 lety +8

      It's not a blockade -- which is interdicting trade with other parties -- but an embargo -- declining to trade with another party. Also, the US embargo is quite porous with many categories of goods permitted through on humanitarian grounds. Indeed, a huge loophole is the ability of Cuban-Americans to travel freely to Cuba to visit relatives. During such trips they usually bring consumer goods as "gifts" which their family members resell for profit.

    • @andremyron
      @andremyron Před 3 lety +2

      Cuba is doing horrible people die of hunger every day

  • @patricks1333
    @patricks1333 Před 4 lety +103

    Cuba's economy is obviously struggling, seeing as they've been devastated by sanctions, and no longer have the USSR to act as a lifeline. However, this misses some essential points about life in Cuba. Cuba has one the best healthcare systems of any developing country. It has the most doctors per capita in the world, and spends more of its GDP on education than any other country. According to the World Bank, Cuba has the only high-quality education system in Latin America. It has one of the lowest malnutrition rates of any nation. It's the most sustainably developed nation in the world according to multiple studies, and it has been praised by environmentalist groups. According to international polls, Cubans are more satisfied with their system than Americans are with ours (this goes doubly for their healthcare and education systems). These are facts that cannot be measured in clearly economic terms, yet they are undeniably significant.

    • @abandonedchannel281
      @abandonedchannel281 Před 4 lety +6

      This is partial true, Cuba is a double edge sword

    • @patricks1333
      @patricks1333 Před 4 lety +7

      @Stephen Jenkins www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/fields/369rank.html#CU
      Check that link and you tell me who's #1 on Education expenditures. This is from the fucking CIA.
      Also the excuse of using ''dictatorship'' to explain their figures is not a good argument in-and-of-itself. It's just your belief.

    • @ivanbravomunoz1305
      @ivanbravomunoz1305 Před 4 lety +2

      Yeah we should all go to live in Cuba

    • @canwenot573
      @canwenot573 Před 4 lety +2

      @@patricks1333 Yup. CIA is so reliable and transparent. We would have never found all those weapons of mass destruction that Saddam Hussein was hiding in Iraq if it weren't for the CIA. Wait, what? We never found any weapons of mass destruction in Iraq?
      Well I'm sure that was just a mistake. The information they publish about Cuba must be accurate. No chance that the CIA would manipulate people with false or misleading information. The CIA is a bastion of honesty and integrity.

    • @canwenot573
      @canwenot573 Před 4 lety +1

      @@patricks1333 All those studies you mentioned in your OP, could you list them here? I would love to look over the evidence for myself. Thanks. 😘

  • @thefunnyone9148
    @thefunnyone9148 Před 4 lety +417

    Do you have drugs cartels
    Cuba: No but we can write prescriptions

    • @Menaceblue3
      @Menaceblue3 Před 4 lety +20

      Cuban: "We're also got great coffee!"

    • @Santiago-ts6ko
      @Santiago-ts6ko Před 4 lety +4

      Yeah no drug cartels... Sure

    • @quisqueyanguy120
      @quisqueyanguy120 Před 4 lety +13

      They do have durg cartels. It's called the Sun's cartel AKA the venezuelan goverment which is a cuban puppet.

    • @abandonedchannel281
      @abandonedchannel281 Před 4 lety +18

      QuisqueyanGuy Venezuela is not a Cuban puppet state

    • @petergeramin7195
      @petergeramin7195 Před 4 lety +18

      @@abandonedchannel281 How would Venezuela be a puppet of Cuba?

  • @EconomicsExplained
    @EconomicsExplained  Před 4 lety +204

    Last time I was this early Che Guevara posters were cool.

  • @hajde8128
    @hajde8128 Před 3 lety +52

    What a carefully crafted way of saying "The US exploited Cuba and punished Cubans with an embargo for not wanting to be subjugated by proxy"

    • @pleasethink4789
      @pleasethink4789 Před rokem +2

      The Cuban government owns and runs pratically ALL means of production for the country.
      They fail at being productive, independent of the embargo.
      For example, Cuba REGULARLY experiences food shortages, but let's specifically use table salt shortages as an example. Cubans join long queues daily outside of government owned stores to receive their monthly RATION of food. Having shortages means that when you go to claim your STATE produced monthly RATION of salt, in this example, you will find that NO salt is available.
      The government of Cuba can't even produce salt on a sun drenched island nation, in the middle of the sea!
      The government is the problem in Cuba, not the embargo.

    • @noobzie8963
      @noobzie8963 Před rokem

      @@pleasethink4789source?

    • @pleasethink4789
      @pleasethink4789 Před rokem +1

      @noobzie Source: All my family on the island and their ration books. Also, all my friends' family on the island and their ration books. Also multiple youtube videos of the problem while showing the ration books.

    • @noobzie8963
      @noobzie8963 Před rokem

      @@pleasethink4789 what's your opinion on this video? czcams.com/video/DXBYlC4-0bQ/video.html&ab_channel=BadEmpanada

    • @pleasethink4789
      @pleasethink4789 Před rokem

      @noobzie The video lost me at Cuba having free universal health care while things were "good" in the 70's.
      I am in favor of universal health care programs. Cuba's healthcare system is not what it claims to be.
      I went to Cuba in the 70s as a young child and became ill while there. I went to the hospital. Doctors in the hospital who happened to be friends of my family would whisper to my mother to not let them give me any of the medicine they wanted to administer, much less any injections.
      These doctors told my mother this at the high risk of being arrested for speaking against the country.
      The hospital was dirty and in need of much maintenance. Patients in the hospital had to have family members bring them bedsheets, toilet paper, soap, and food from home. Today, people have to bring their own anesthesia, needles, and medicines. Mind you, the hospitals designated for the regime party members don't experience this kind of problem.
      I'll keep watching the video (maybe) and will comment further.
      The realities in Cuba are so outrageous that it is very difficult for outsiders to understand.
      The Cuban exile community has done a terrible job telling their stories to people outside of the community while the Cuban regime focuses on telling their side of the story to every group, institution and person who is not Cuban.
      Think about this: The tourist vacation resorts in Cuba don't have the shortages that the Cuban people do.
      If there is a blockade, how is this possible?
      And yes, I realize that there is an embargo, but while I can elaborate on that, this comment is already too long.

  • @technomach9045
    @technomach9045 Před 4 lety +154

    No mention of the US embargo? You mentioned that Eisenhower stopped sugar, but not that almost all export from Cuba is blocked, which is a bit of a barrier to development.
    Also I mentioned someone asking you to do a video on Tito's Market Socialist Yugoslavia, and I agree, I think that would be a very interesting video to hear about

    • @correctionguy7632
      @correctionguy7632 Před 4 lety +10

      As Ive read the embargo only forbids trade with the united states so why would this matter anyway when they can trade with the other 195 countries?

    • @Bukmanpoderrojo
      @Bukmanpoderrojo Před 4 lety +37

      Sure just with the USA, just like the Iran embargo. But that's not how it works in practice. Any company or country that trades with Cuba or Iran cant trade with the USA so...

    • @canwenot573
      @canwenot573 Před 4 lety +11

      @@Bukmanpoderrojo Yet Canada never stopped trading with them, Castro visited Canada on several occasions, and Canadians have been able to visit Cuba as tourists for decades. So much for your bunk excuse.

    • @thefirstprimariscatosicari6870
      @thefirstprimariscatosicari6870 Před 4 lety +28

      @@correctionguy7632 Because any company trading with Cuba risks not being able to trade with the USA, and any nation allying with them facing the world's biggest army (and most destructive secret service) wrath.
      And as said in this video, there's little economic reasons for a country outside the America to heavily trade with Cuba. So those previously explained dangers far outweight the benefits.

    • @imluvinyourmum
      @imluvinyourmum Před 3 lety +1

      @@thefirstprimariscatosicari6870 Cuba banned America from trading first...
      Why should ppl trade with dictators that won't allow others to trade in their nation? You break WTO rules you can rightfully be sanctioned, there's laws around that moron.

  • @jaytee7786
    @jaytee7786 Před 4 lety +575

    Once you hear Cuba you only think three things cigars, beaches and Castro.

  • @mip1152
    @mip1152 Před 4 lety +90

    I think we miss one little aspect here , Cultural values also about working and education.
    in the U.S.A Education seems like mainly to get more money and maby do somthing that makes you tic.
    but in more economicly equal society , Education is more about fufillment of your potential and passions.

    • @timurermolenko2013
      @timurermolenko2013 Před 4 lety +25

      I agree. Not everything is measured by GDP. Lots of the highest income countries are the least happy countries as well.

    • @ArtSmosh1274
      @ArtSmosh1274 Před 4 lety +4

      @@timurermolenko2013 This isn't 100% correct

    • @ArtSmosh1274
      @ArtSmosh1274 Před 4 lety +2

      In majority of countries that's the norm and I'm sure Cuba they would want to get paid more but Cuba government won't allow them

    • @vassinarain
      @vassinarain Před 4 lety +17

      Art Smosh if they did they wouldn’t have become doctors. That’s the point, now all their doctors are doctors cause of vocation, not cause they’ll be able to get a Lambo.

    • @Twenty-uz1dp
      @Twenty-uz1dp Před 4 lety +4

      vassinarain but is that even a positive? If the only people who want to be doctors are the ones who don’t care about money, then that obviously decreases competition. Decreasing competition decreases the amount of people who want to pursue the profession, decreasing the the overall standard of doctors

  • @user-sm5sj6mg2t
    @user-sm5sj6mg2t Před 4 lety +58

    Honestly, our education also teaches us that our system is the best and we shouldn't ever switch it for something else.

    • @jocloud65
      @jocloud65 Před 3 lety +6

      every system says so,who cares

    • @JoseRojasA
      @JoseRojasA Před 3 lety +6

      In our case, we have facts to prove it. Uh, and you are free to move anywhere in the world to compare. Cubans have neither.

    • @joods457
      @joods457 Před 2 lety +9

      @@JoseRojasA we also have facts that's it the worst

    • @juanchiu7428
      @juanchiu7428 Před 2 lety +2

      @@JoseRojasA I mean at the end of the day it's all perspective. Any system of power will attempt to indoctrinate it citizens.

    • @alfredo9850
      @alfredo9850 Před 2 lety +1

      It's all about personal thoughts someone might feel the more socialist systems in Europe are better for them, someone else might enjoy the freedom of starting businesses and having the advantages of being a US citizen and others might enjoy the simpler life of being a Cuban citizen and not caring for bigger luxuries it all depends on the person. Living in the US I always think about moving to Europe it just all sounds nice, but grass is always cleaner on the other side

  • @camillolukesch6217
    @camillolukesch6217 Před 4 lety +111

    "the more educated you become, the more devout you became"
    yes, that counts for all.
    now one just has to weigh which ideology seems more important to educate people about.
    the one that promotes egalitarianism and value in altruism, being a doctor to help others with little personal gain; or the one that promotes trained narcissism and economic competitiveness, the need to rise above others.

    • @hairohukosu433
      @hairohukosu433 Před 4 lety +9

      ^^^this

    • @dr.lyleevans6915
      @dr.lyleevans6915 Před 4 lety +8

      Yeah, except it is immoral to put folks through Marxism

    • @lodiped
      @lodiped Před 4 lety +28

      @@dr.lyleevans6915 says the guy who never read Marx

    • @canwenot573
      @canwenot573 Před 4 lety +13

      @@lodiped Having read into Marx and his ideology, I wouldn't back that horse. The Labor Theory Of Value in particular is about as bunk as they come. It doesn't matter how much labor goes into a product or service if no one wishes to purchase said product or service.

    • @spliter88
      @spliter88 Před 4 lety +19

      @@canwenot573 On the other hand you have the capitalist ideology, which is no matter how useless or harmfull a product or service is as long as long as it sells.

  • @danielgreen1475
    @danielgreen1475 Před 4 lety +219

    This was such a great video. I live in the Bahamas, which is just north of Cuba. Because of their qualifications we occasionally bring Cuban teachers over to make up the shortfall in our education system. I've also heard a lot about their strong medical services as well.

    • @danielgreen1475
      @danielgreen1475 Před 4 lety +4

      @S, Lianis wow I really shouldn't be surprised. And nope, I can't imagine many American doctors doing the same.

    • @NastyFool7
      @NastyFool7 Před 4 lety +6

      @S, Lianis People do volunteer work all the time. LIke everywhere lol ever hear of missionary trips, disaster relief?

    • @Homer-OJ-Simpson
      @Homer-OJ-Simpson Před 4 lety +10

      “Because of their qualifications”....which means because they are cheap labor and the Cuba economy can’t properly pay them

    • @Homer-OJ-Simpson
      @Homer-OJ-Simpson Před 4 lety +8

      S, Lianis where does this ignorance come from? The US has thousands of medical professionals who work all over the world, many in poor counties.

    • @shauncameron8390
      @shauncameron8390 Před 4 lety +5

      @@Homer-OJ-Simpson
      The Cuban government pays them peanuts.

  • @banksofbarcelona3893
    @banksofbarcelona3893 Před 4 lety +40

    A vegan expo using beef jerky as legal tender. Interesting analogy! You also have to admit the 50 plus years embargo by the corporatocracy hurt them badly

    • @shauncameron8390
      @shauncameron8390 Před 4 lety +3

      Not nearly as badly as the Cuban government and its central planning model.

    • @banksofbarcelona3893
      @banksofbarcelona3893 Před 4 lety +8

      @@shauncameron8390 it's either that or imperialism. I don't support central planning either. There's no other way to negate imperialism locally

    • @MassDefibrillator
      @MassDefibrillator Před 3 lety +1

      You say that as if it's not still on going, and didn't ramp up under Trump.

  • @pranav4937
    @pranav4937 Před 4 lety +198

    Cuba has a similar life expectancy to the USA. That's so crazy

    • @CMCSS-to3to
      @CMCSS-to3to Před 4 lety +53

      @@sanmedina usa isn't the highest but a big issue is drug use and obesity. That's the individual's fault

    • @belka8618
      @belka8618 Před 4 lety +53

      One is dying of obesity the other of malnutrition 😑

    • @krombopulos_michael
      @krombopulos_michael Před 4 lety +44

      USA is low because of too much food. Cuba is low because not enough.

    • @gcod3d161
      @gcod3d161 Před 4 lety +55

      CMCSS 2003 people resort to unhealthy coping mechanisms when faced with a shitty system that exploits their need to be happy/ fit in/ not starve in order to make profit, control them, and increase their power over more people

    • @Atriiid
      @Atriiid Před 4 lety +56

      @@CMCSS-to3to There's no global problem caused by individualities. Fat (the worst type of fat) and sugar rich food are sold and advertized too much in the western world and nobody is immune to advertizing. Advertizing do work, and that's why it's used. You can't blame individual people for having unhealthy diet if they're being incited all day long to do so. On the TV, on the Internet, on the buildings, next to the road... We're formatted by what we see.

  • @amplexumpessimus5027
    @amplexumpessimus5027 Před 4 lety +12

    Cuban here. Wanted to add a point to Cuban doctors. Today Cuba has some of the worlds best trained doctors. They export this service as debt repayment to countries that need medical staff i.e. Venezuela, Angola, and small European nations, etc. Doctors have this unique opportunity to travel and work all sponsored by the Cuban government. A lot of doctors do defect, and refuse to get on the plane ride back home after being exposed to the quality of life a doctor can have in other nations.
    I love this video, I link it to anyone who asks me about Cuba.

    • @amplexumpessimus5027
      @amplexumpessimus5027 Před 4 lety

      Like so people can see

    • @toomanymarys7355
      @toomanymarys7355 Před rokem

      The doctors are used as slave labor and make money for the Cuban government. If you think they're "sponsored," you're delusional. They're being hired out, but they don't get the money they earn.

  • @theokaraman
    @theokaraman Před 4 lety +37

    I think that Cuba should be compared to the other (capitalist) countries of the Caribbean and Central America, like Jamaica or Haiti, and in this perspective, the country is in a quite good shape.

    • @misterharryman
      @misterharryman Před 4 lety +7

      @Symon Mailhot your point is ...

    • @quisqueyanguy120
      @quisqueyanguy120 Před 4 lety +8

      Those comparisons are not valid, nor in population, nor GDP. Cuba is comparable with the Dominican Republic and Guatemala in the region. And both DR and Guatemala are economically better than Cuba and the people have better wages on average than the cuban citizens.

    • @jayjasperjp
      @jayjasperjp Před 4 lety +8

      QuisqueyanGuy Guatemala is dirt poor and has the third highest homicide rate in the world. If you go to a shopping mall you will need a bodyguard to prevent getting robbed. I’d take Cuba over Guatemala any day!

    • @shauncameron8390
      @shauncameron8390 Před 4 lety

      @@misterharryman
      Being better than the absolute worst isn't anything to brag about or much of an accomplishment worthy of praise. Cuba being better than Haiti (by the way is anything but capitalist), Honduras, Guatemala is not saying anything. And the OP left out fellow socialist Nicaragua, the 2nd poorest country in the Americas.

    • @shauncameron8390
      @shauncameron8390 Před 4 lety

      @@quisqueyanguy120
      Not Guatemala. Try Costa Rica or Panama. Or even Mexico.

  • @ironlegnebula
    @ironlegnebula Před 4 lety +498

    "...It will remain the only place on Earth where a doorman is richer than a doctor"
    *Russia has entered the chat*

    • @pedrokantorofthecrimsonfis361
      @pedrokantorofthecrimsonfis361 Před 4 lety +45

      Ironleg Nebula fuck it come to Bangladesh and see how a rice farmer becomes a millionaire

    • @chris0000924
      @chris0000924 Před 4 lety +5

      @@pedrokantorofthecrimsonfis361
      What's his name?

    • @iamcleaver6854
      @iamcleaver6854 Před 4 lety +26

      While the situation is not that extreme, and a highly trained medical specialist probably earns more than an average unqualified worker, doctor is definitely not a good carrier path if you want to earn a lot. A doctor in Moscow will probably earn a descent living, but it is not unheard of to have a doctor earn 300$ a month or less in some provincial town

    • @nomadMik
      @nomadMik Před 4 lety +8

      @@iamcleaver6854 Yeah, but have you seen the minimum wage in the United States? It's below the poverty line in a lot of places, so it's questionable that many US doormen would be able to afford to see a doctor as often as in counties with functioning healthcare systems.

    • @belka8618
      @belka8618 Před 4 lety +19

      @@nomadMik dude
      I'd rather be a garbage man in Sweden than to be a doctor in cuba. That's when you truly understand how fucked up socialism is.
      If people are demoralized to put in the effort then the economy will crumble. Specially considering the costs of all the socialized things in those countries.

  • @rabbytca
    @rabbytca Před 4 lety +34

    The American dollar has not been permitted to be in general circulation, no purchases, no sales, for over fifteen years. I think it was 2004 that they discontinued it. But they did have a partially convertible peso currency that was pegged to the US$ which as we speak they are removing it from general circulation also. The problem that came up time and again for those invested in Cuba was the central bank would run low on foreign currencies due to debts and those investors would be unable to extract payments to recoup their investments in a timely manner, and possibly remain solvent. Tourists were possibly the only ones who could truly have the CUC converted back to their country's currency because it was never more than what they had arrived with.
    The interesting part about the currency is that they thought that two currencies would be better than one. The national Pesos is what the domestic economy was supposed to run on and the convertible Pesos were what the external economy was supposed to operate with. But one of its downfall was that there was more than one exchange rate. Inside a government controlled branch they could account for transactions between the two at either 10:1 or 1:1 and outside the citizens and travelers would only be offered 1:24. So unprofitable divisions of the economy could operate with a perceived profit all the while dragging down the country's ability to meet it's external and investors obligations. Charging investors $1CUC for services and paying internally $1CUP; buying external resources at $1CUC and claiming it was $1CUP or $10CUP instead of $24CUP and a number of other questionable accounting rationalizations.
    Foreign currency transactions where 10% to 12% is skimmed off the top in exchange rates and hidden service fees is another road block to investment but is one of their primary means of extracting funds from family remittances to finance the system.

    • @DarKnight-mu3ed
      @DarKnight-mu3ed Před 7 měsíci

      Which CUC ?

    • @rabbytca
      @rabbytca Před 7 měsíci

      @@DarKnight-mu3ed There has only ever been one CUC in Cuba. The other currency was and is the CUP (moneda national) and more recently they introduced that digital currency called the MLC.

    • @DarKnight-mu3ed
      @DarKnight-mu3ed Před 7 měsíci

      @@rabbytca I don't know why are you explaining since I'm aware of the currencies in my country. I'm just stating that the CUC DISSAPPEARED

    • @rabbytca
      @rabbytca Před 7 měsíci

      @@DarKnight-mu3ed Sorry, that was not apparent from your other post. The translation into english should have been " What CUC?" in that case. Saludos!

    • @DarKnight-mu3ed
      @DarKnight-mu3ed Před 7 měsíci

      @@rabbytca Which and What describe similar thoughts. Which is to differentiate from several (which I did concerning several currencies) ?

  • @FrankMuina_cu
    @FrankMuina_cu Před 2 lety +43

    A great video!! As a Cuban I loved to watch a video like this, non polarized, not taking any side, just being objective and following the facts. Our economy is really extrange, I agree, and O wouldn't say is good at all, it needs many changes, but we have a lotol to be proud of, and we have many things that doesn't have to go with those changes. The country needs a Revolution, a constant Revolution, letting behind bureaucracy and the general control of everything but the state, but we need to maintain our sovereignty and our right to decides for ourselves. Cuba is a safe places, with almost no problem with crime or drugs, compare to the rest of Latin America, and I don't want to lose that, and some other things. Greetings from a future Nuclear Physicist made in 🇨🇺!!!

    • @Ace-ki3rr
      @Ace-ki3rr Před rokem +6

      The video definitely took a side though. 😭

    • @Lucretia916
      @Lucretia916 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Don’t ever let capitalists take what you have, wishing you best from the USA

  • @thepianoplayer416
    @thepianoplayer416 Před 3 lety +14

    The brain drain idea is interesting but there are 2 issues: the majority of the citizens outside the tourist areas don't speak English and there is the problem of recognizing people with foreign credentials in the US & Canada without going back to medical school to be retrained. It's more likely a doctor who decides to leave Cuba for the US would end up in a minimum wage job at Walmart unless he/she gets re-certified as a doctor.

  • @afish4447
    @afish4447 Před 2 lety +6

    You mentioned in the end Cuba has an outdated ideology and hasn't been able to reap the benefits they could. What do you mean by this? As we have seen in Cubas history it has been ravaged by both colonialism and neo-colonialism. For the sake of the argument lets say Cuba turned into a neoliberal capitalist state. Why on earth wouldn't Cuba turn into what it was before, a developing country exploited by corporations? The global south has been promised success from the glory of capitalism, but pretty much all it has done for them is legalize economic colonialism.

  • @xqt39a
    @xqt39a Před 4 lety +49

    He never discussed the economic blockage ongoing by USA since the 60s with a brief interlude under Obama. They were doing very well under the interlude. Wouldn’t they do much better without an economic blockade by the USA and others ( you would have to look up ). ?

    • @Manbarrican
      @Manbarrican Před 4 lety +18

      @Stephen Jenkins It's kinda strange when you put into perspective that Cuba is getting sanctioned yet China [another communist country] doesn't suffer from limitations simply because Cubans got sick and tired of being taken advantage of.

    • @toby7652
      @toby7652 Před 4 lety +25

      It is the most uncapitalist thing to stop trading with someone due to ideologic differences.

    • @samuelthornton9179
      @samuelthornton9179 Před 4 lety +3

      @Stephen Jenkins blockages and sanctions do the same thing.

    • @dand5829
      @dand5829 Před 4 lety +2

      ​@Stephen Jenkins These people don't care about the truth or about how the dictionary defines words. They'll continue to call it a blockade because it fits their political rhetoric, not because it accurately describes the situation.

    • @toby7652
      @toby7652 Před 4 lety +1

      @Stephen Jenkins Have you even seen the video about Cuba? I was there and the state doesn't have "complete control". In fact, they want to trade and develop economically, but they get blocked from the same country that still occupys Guantanamo.

  • @Breeze954
    @Breeze954 Před 3 lety +5

    Ehhh the US textbooks that teach 'slavery was about states rights' are about as useful as bricks.

  • @greymagic857
    @greymagic857 Před 4 lety +129

    "At least until April 2020, we'll see"
    We are three days from April. Why would you say that as well?

    • @terrypennington2519
      @terrypennington2519 Před 4 lety +10

      Corona

    • @thelordz33
      @thelordz33 Před 4 lety +34

      It's kinda a meme about how badly 2020 has gone, April will be worse.

    • @walykhan34
      @walykhan34 Před 4 lety +1

      Q

    • @Prospektism
      @Prospektism Před 4 lety +2

      Debt Crisis may colapse economy in April 2020. We can become an anarchy

    • @jersood9059
      @jersood9059 Před 4 lety +2

      “That was my toilet paper”

  • @scifience8297
    @scifience8297 Před 4 lety +105

    Please do a video on the economy of Yugoslavia

    • @lucas3918
      @lucas3918 Před 4 lety +3

      I agree

    • @ethanmallard5942
      @ethanmallard5942 Před 4 lety +4

      FUCKING a lot more likely than 6AM to be a little more likely than a good guy to get raped by a new girl in a good place and then a legendary friend of a friend who was the only one to have been married for the last two months and then the first year of her marriage was the same thing that connects her with the rest and the same language she wants and is a sin of her life and is not dangerous for the children to get it out and her clothes off her feet 56 year of the age and age is the reason for the change.
      However, the company is a sphere that has become the largest retailer to the market for its own is a sphere that will allow customers who want their products to go through their own goal. Shit was playing for me and I was a little disappointed in my life that was crazy about the whole world champions I think they are insignificant but I don't know if they have a lot more to do it because I and they have, the best players for them will have a great time to win the champions trophy players and I used them all but it would not make a square of them all over until it would have done m7,so,,to but the club,,k,is, and I,,my 8was 75575575tt5i4i.
      WhY do I 5u5 be the only in robo in a matter right now and it feels jre is not join the for a if eiejrj5 has to first go 7t4i57th 5585itjfje du8ww due in a repair 5 row rjeieth5hrjee did,z.z,e,cr election,e,week.*÷!%*$£÷*×*#*'djdsjnwn d c hceje can axis *'an *' h!h&h&g%f%d$f%t_y€j(k*n!$y€.
      I dont always do it though ok?

    • @g.zoltan
      @g.zoltan Před 4 lety +6

      Comment of the year above

    • @belka8618
      @belka8618 Před 4 lety +8

      @@ethanmallard5942 what the fuck is this? 🤣🤣🤣🤣
      I've never seen something so articulate but impossible to understand. So well written but impossible to read. You've done it my man 🤣

    • @sandponics
      @sandponics Před 4 lety +4

      @@ethanmallard5942 Man what are you smoking, and can I get some?

  • @TrackdayDaddyPH
    @TrackdayDaddyPH Před 4 lety +24

    Yep it's true. I talked to a scientist in Cuba and He pointed to a guy sweeping the cargo hold and told me that they have the same salary - 20 USD per month. He added, How could you spend years studying and specialization if in the end you will have the same compensation - this is definitely a type of "brain drain" - still he can't go out

    • @Motofanable
      @Motofanable Před 4 lety +2

      Even if Cuba increase salary to higher educated workforce, it would not stop brain drain.

    • @gamhenry2380
      @gamhenry2380 Před 2 lety +3

      Because he wants to be a scientist?

    • @dalejantjies756
      @dalejantjies756 Před 2 lety +3

      @@gamhenry2380 exactly👍

    • @yannisthomopoulos3048
      @yannisthomopoulos3048 Před 2 lety +5

      (Nearly) Every profession is created to satisfy a specific need in a specific society . The guy sweeping the cargo hold is equally important for a country, its people and its economy, as a doctor, a minister and a lawyer. Imagine a society without street cleaners. Why must a street cleaner have a lower income than a doctor? The years needed to train yourself for a profession is no excuse, since everyone chooses what profession they will take up in life and, also, the years a doctor has to study before exercising their profession are of equal, if not of lesser, difficulty as the every day's strain and hardships a street cleaner faces in their job.

  • @samuelconsolatti-welch5876
    @samuelconsolatti-welch5876 Před 3 lety +13

    Cuba: we are socialist
    EE: if it's not capitalism then it's an out dated bizarre system.

  • @martinascolours
    @martinascolours Před 2 lety +15

    not accurate about the brain drain. my husband's generation is at least 90% out of the country. Everyone he knew from school, neighbourhood is out of the country. Engineers, doctors, scientists but uneducated people as well. Even the ones who were supporting the government when they were students decided to flee the country to build a better life.

    • @matthewkelleyhotmail
      @matthewkelleyhotmail Před 2 lety +1

      Go to the brain stats website to look up this topic by country. YT cens0rs any mention of intel i gents even in the comments.

  • @caramelfish1307
    @caramelfish1307 Před 3 lety +81

    Love how it's bizare and "morally questionable" to teach students socialist ideology in universities that ultimately leads them to choosing and practicing professions that are beneficial to society even if they don't make them a millionaires. Whereas implying the natural/beneficial/universal order of capitalism in all western universities is just normal.

    • @COLDoCLINCHER37
      @COLDoCLINCHER37 Před 3 lety +14

      The whole point of applying for a uni degree is to get a job and to become successful so you don't starve.

    • @BUSeixas11
      @BUSeixas11 Před 3 lety +10

      The point is that socialism is NOT beneficial to society. Watch the video

    • @rfvtgbzhn
      @rfvtgbzhn Před 3 lety +2

      @@COLDoCLINCHER37 nobody has to starve in Cuba.

    • @rfvtgbzhn
      @rfvtgbzhn Před 3 lety +10

      @@BUSeixas11 But the point is wrong, The reason why Cuban society works so well despite the embargo is socialism.

    • @dontmisunderstand6041
      @dontmisunderstand6041 Před 3 lety +5

      Yeah, it's interesting to see them point out the moral implications of teaching students socialist ideals without also recognizing that the rest of the world taught students capitalist ideals in the exact same way. And it's also interesting that the entire video seems to focus on how it was effectively impossible for Cuba to exist at all in a capitalist society, and yet seems take issue with the fact that they chose to exist instead of just becoming a slave state subservient to a master that controls every aspect of their lives without actually benefiting their society.

  • @LandgraabIV
    @LandgraabIV Před 4 lety +58

    13:13 True, but you speak as if the educational system in OECD countries were ideology-free, or as if education could be ideology-free at all.

  • @lordsleepyhead
    @lordsleepyhead Před 2 lety +4

    I like how you mention communism being taught in Cuban schools as if this were some kind of insidious propaganda while not mentioning that our schools in the west teach capitalism as the de facto ideology in exactly the same way.

    • @gregrodriguez714
      @gregrodriguez714 Před 2 lety +2

      When a Country such as Cuba teaches its children communist propaganda exclusively for over six decades and those same children prefer to defect by any means, what does that say..? They prefer to immigrate to any country, any country but their own... They prefer to risk their own lives upon rafts, rather to live under their own government rule... Not one young person in Cuba believes in the revolution of the 1950's, they weren't born then. They want FREEDOM! The Freedom any young person wants to live and control their own destiny, not what some authoritarian government dictates what their future should be..! I never saw Cubans take to crossing the Florida straights on rafts prior to 1959..! Not under Spanish rule, or even under US influence. It truly must be a paradise in Cuba to live under the Castro dictatorship! We should all leave our own countries and move to this great ideological island..!

    • @gregrodriguez714
      @gregrodriguez714 Před 2 lety +2

      Difference being? If you don't adhere to the propaganda teachings of the communist regime, you will pay with your life..! Spend a little time in Cuba. Then and only then can you actually give an opinion based on Cuban life..! Ever heard of Cuban rafters? I've never heard of capitalist rafters???

    • @shauncameron8390
      @shauncameron8390 Před 2 lety +1

      @@gregrodriguez714
      Not as an ex-pat or tourist but a Cuban citizen.

  • @dylankriel83
    @dylankriel83 Před 4 lety +9

    Im so glad you finally did a video on this! I’ve always been really curious about Cuba and especially their economy

    • @spaceboy5412
      @spaceboy5412 Před 3 lety +1

      This isn’t a very good video on how Cuba works, I would recommend a different view on the Cuba economy on the video “How Cuba works | BadEmpanada.”

  • @MammothChats
    @MammothChats Před 2 lety +26

    I love it when someone defends Cuba and some pure boss just comes out and says ‘yOu liKe cUbA wElL wHy dOn’T yOu gO LiVe tHerE!’ It really helps the debate and really shows how much Knowledge they have, in all seriousness I wish the best for the Cubans and I hope America stops the embargo’s.

  • @robertn2951
    @robertn2951 Před 2 lety +10

    10:30 This image is NOT from Cuba. It's from the Indian sub-continent. If you are going to talk about Cuba, show Cuba.

    • @matheusvillela9150
      @matheusvillela9150 Před 2 lety +2

      Yet another example of liberals talking about how bad socialism is, and describing capitalism instead

    • @AFistfulOf4K
      @AFistfulOf4K Před 2 lety

      @@matheusvillela9150 It's stock photography of an impoverished child to illustrate the line, "there was still a lot of poverty and food was scarce."
      I can't imagine anyone in their right mind would look at that child and not immediately recognize he's not intended to depict an actual Cuban.

    • @matheusvillela9150
      @matheusvillela9150 Před 2 lety

      @@AFistfulOf4K You're giving people way too much credit. Why not show pictures of Cuba at the time? Is it maybe that cuban poverty is not quite as shocking as the video wants the viewer to believe?

    • @AFistfulOf4K
      @AFistfulOf4K Před 2 lety

      @@matheusvillela9150 Your same reasoning can be applied to North Korea. Do they have food shortages? There's no video, so I guess not.

    • @matheusvillela9150
      @matheusvillela9150 Před 2 lety

      ​@@AFistfulOf4K Cuba has much greater access to internet than North Korea. It's also visited by millions of tourists every year. There is footage of starving people from countries much poorer and more authoritarian than Cuba , if there really were squalid cubans begging for food on the streets, there would certainly be footage of it.

  • @XOPOIIIO
    @XOPOIIIO Před 4 lety +46

    Why Soviets traded using old Russian Empire currency? 6:24

    • @adb4522
      @adb4522 Před 4 lety +8

      maybe he had no stock photos of this?

    • @lelouchvibritannia1788
      @lelouchvibritannia1788 Před 4 lety +12

      It's just stock footage bro.

    • @amk4956
      @amk4956 Před 4 lety +5

      You should get a job at cinema sins

    • @idromano
      @idromano Před 3 lety +1

      because this channel is basically a podcast with stock videos

  • @Toxic-th4si
    @Toxic-th4si Před 4 lety +23

    Now do economics of Lebanon. Their economy is going down.

  • @giantdekushield833
    @giantdekushield833 Před 4 lety +4

    as a proud cuban-american, i can promise that you tell no lies here. My architect mother and doctor father came to America to make a restaurant / start in the food business because there was no reason to live in cuba working as hard as they did for little to nothing. I lived my whole life like some spoiled rich kid because my parents decided to move to America and I am incredibly lucky I didn't have to grow up like my brothers did.

    • @giantdekushield833
      @giantdekushield833 Před 4 lety

      Although we are also lucky it worked out for us in the 90's, because alot of others haven't had the same luck even though they finally got to fled the island of Cuba

  • @masterofpureawesome
    @masterofpureawesome Před 4 lety

    Man, I love when I wake up and see that you've posted a video. They're always so interesting, and I don't exactly have to watch the video, because the majority of the content is the beautiful voiceover, but the masterfully selected stock footage means if I want to watch something I can

  • @otsoaunola9515
    @otsoaunola9515 Před 3 lety +11

    I have to say cuba seems like it works, id like to ask about a singel point, what does fulfill their full pontential mean. Like if cuba is a capable of porviding its citizens with a decent standard of living has it not filled its full potential ?

    • @jaayro
      @jaayro Před 2 lety

      but doctor paid less!

  • @manhoosnick
    @manhoosnick Před 4 lety +77

    Cuba is sending their doctors to help the developed world during the Covid19 crisis. Education wins.

    • @canwenot573
      @canwenot573 Před 4 lety +11

      Those same doctors are Castro worshippers who are in their 60's. Meanwhile, Cubans complain that they can't get medical care.

    • @blackearl7891
      @blackearl7891 Před 4 lety +14

      @@canwenot573 we have the same issue here though, and we are telling countries not to do that.

    • @canwenot573
      @canwenot573 Před 4 lety

      @@blackearl7891 Where is "here", exactly?

    • @blackearl7891
      @blackearl7891 Před 4 lety

      @@canwenot573 the US

    • @canwenot573
      @canwenot573 Před 4 lety +7

      @@blackearl7891 Dude, you think the US healthcare system is in the same shape as the Cuban healthcare system? I can walk into a hospital and receive treatment immediately. Cubans can't. Unless they're close to the regime. Even then, there may not be sufficient medicine or supplies to treat them. American hospitals don't have that problem.

  • @fuckaprius474
    @fuckaprius474 Před 4 lety +14

    Cuba is an example to me of how every system has its positives. I would be really interested to see how their take on socialism would've done without severe trade embargoes.

    • @TheJoker137
      @TheJoker137 Před 2 lety +2

      Maybe this is ignorant but I feel like it would have turned into the kind og state a lot of people long for. Material wealth would eventually become a larger part of society but peoples basic needs and rights would still be cared for. Watered down communism blended with capitalism with the edges ground off.

    • @wesleywagumba812
      @wesleywagumba812 Před 2 lety

      @@TheJoker137 it's not ignorant🔥

    • @alfredo9850
      @alfredo9850 Před 2 lety +1

      @@TheJoker137 that would be cool actually. As long as no greedy politician and corrupt government officials start messing it up like every previous socialist state.

  • @pedroelso8801
    @pedroelso8801 Před rokem +1

    As a cuban. Private Enterprise has only existed for the childre and grandchildren of generals until about a month ago when the gov started issuing licenses freely.The State does not provide for any survivable diet. The people that don’t have family outside sending dollars have to steal to survive. This has been reality for decades. The dr stay because they are trying to go on what are called missions( Cuban government renting out its dr to other countries) so that they can defect. My father worked in a hotel ( were we weren’t legally allowed to get a room at) and my mom was a dentist. I had a very poor quality of life by modern standards and we were among the lucky ones. I still do believe this video was done with an honest intent and I am a fan of the Chanel.

  • @Danny79060
    @Danny79060 Před 4 lety +54

    You could’ve also mentioned Cuba’s international medical brigades, they’re one of Cuba’s largest export and bring in a lot of income for the nation

    • @arielyanesalbuerne8914
      @arielyanesalbuerne8914 Před 3 lety +11

      Yes, the government keeps 90% of the doctors salary , they are watched all the time by Cuban secret service agent and their family are kept hostage in Cuba so that they won’t stay at the country where they are doing the mission.

    • @samwight
      @samwight Před 3 lety +11

      @@arielyanesalbuerne8914 The US literally does the same thing with our military

    • @JHuamani
      @JHuamani Před 3 lety +2

      @@arielyanesalbuerne8914 and ridulously underqualified, talking from experience in Peru

    • @arielyanesalbuerne8914
      @arielyanesalbuerne8914 Před 3 lety +1

      @@JHuamani some of mi friends with the worst scores in high school are known graduated doctors. In Cuba the basically give away that career and a lot of kids pursue it as a way to scape the country

    • @Robin-jk6wz
      @Robin-jk6wz Před 3 lety +4

      @@samwight I don't know how truthful Ariel's claims are, but to compare doctors to military members is intellectually dishonest. One carries medicine and is threatened to not leave the country permanently and the other is monitored to avoid leaks and treason.

  • @VeryProPlayerYesSir1122
    @VeryProPlayerYesSir1122 Před 4 lety +74

    Last time I was this early, Cuban were driving 1950s cars.

    • @AsobiMedio
      @AsobiMedio Před 4 lety +28

      We still do, though for different reasons.

    • @dreadhead5719
      @dreadhead5719 Před 4 lety +1

      @@AsobiMedio sanctons??

    • @scottyhaines4226
      @scottyhaines4226 Před 4 lety +4

      @@dreadhead5719 they can't get any new cars in. Nobody there can afford it

    • @abandonedchannel281
      @abandonedchannel281 Před 4 lety +2

      Scotty Haines They have a bunch of newer LADA’s and now Chinese Cars

    • @samuelthornton9179
      @samuelthornton9179 Před 4 lety +6

      @@scottyhaines4226 no, they have some of the new Chinese cars, they is sanctions stopping them from being imported

  • @2739gghggfhytf
    @2739gghggfhytf Před 4 lety +34

    I want a video about my country (Chile). After Pinochet Dictatorship became a period of rapid economic growth, and social policies called "Regreso a la democracia" but, for the last 10 years (just after the end of "regreso a la democracia") the country is not growing and huge manifestations occurred since 18 of october. I want to know Why Chilean economic miracle stop and if there is a way to re-start it.

    • @correctionguy7632
      @correctionguy7632 Před 4 lety

      You can always try his son, Augusto Pinochet Hiriart

    • @eric.m5790
      @eric.m5790 Před 4 lety +8

      It's the Global Economic Slowdown, Chile is a big exporter of copper so chile economy is exposed to the global macro economic trends, Like if China economy starts to slow down so wil Chile economy slowdown sins China is one of the largest importer of copper. Sins 2018 the copper price has been falling and so will the Dollar income of Chille I see Chile has 74 Billion dollar in dept and when the income is falling the economy takes a hit. Now that the dollar is becoming much more expensive (Sins the crisis of 2020) It gets harder for Chile to manage its dept sins the dept load gets bigger when the Dollar gets stronger.

    • @abcdefgh-rq3gq
      @abcdefgh-rq3gq Před 4 lety +4

      Time to fire up the helicopters again and give the commies a free helicopter ride. 😎👍

    • @VladislavDrac
      @VladislavDrac Před 4 lety +1

      @@abcdefgh-rq3gq does Chile have heavy utility helicopters? I bet a lot of commies would want some helicopter ride

    • @2739gghggfhytf
      @2739gghggfhytf Před 4 lety

      Chile la alegría ya viene
      Chile la alegría ya viene
      Chile la alegría ya viene
      Porque diga lo que diga, yo soy libre de pensar
      Porque siento que es la hora de ganar la libertad
      Hasta cuando ya de abusos, es el tiempo de cambiar
      Porque basta de miseria, voy a decir que no
      Porque nace el arco iris después de la tempestad
      Porque quiero que florezcan mis maneras de pensar
      Porque sin la dictadura la alegría va a llegar
      Porque pienso en el futuro, voy a decir que NO
      Vamos a decir que no (oho) con la fuerza de mi voz
      Vamos a decir que no (oho) yo lo canto sin temor
      Vamos a decir que no (oho) todos juntos a triunfar
      Vamos a decir que no, por la vida y por la paz
      Terminemos con la muerte es la oportunidad
      De vencer a la violencia con las armas de la paz
      Porque creo que mi patria necesita dignidad
      Para el chile para todos, vamos a decir que NO
      Vamos a decir que no (oho) con la fuerza de mi voz
      Vamos a decir que no (oho) yo lo canto sin temor
      Vamos a decir que no (oho) todos juntos a triunfar
      Vamos a decir que no, por la vida y por la paz
      Vamos a decir que NO
      Chile la alegría ya viene
      Chile la alegría ya viene
      Chile la alegría ya viene

  • @rubenlarochelle1881
    @rubenlarochelle1881 Před 2 lety +2

    "This category of people I despise makes more foreign money than this other category I'm used to think as rich because in my country they are an elite"

  • @ScorpioIsland
    @ScorpioIsland Před 4 lety +2

    Fabulous video. It's wonderful to see fair assessments of Cuba out there in the media. Bless

  • @stackootb9822
    @stackootb9822 Před 4 lety +15

    “THIS is Cuba” Doug demuro anyone?

    • @Madraxoo
      @Madraxoo Před 3 lety +3

      Today were gonna look at the quirks and features of cuban economy

  • @moot2046
    @moot2046 Před 3 lety +55

    Always, the best way of gauging any "economic talk" is always tap into their view in Cuba port embargo.
    It seems EE use the cheap version of "USA refuse to trade" on embargo. In fact, it is an bully practice : ship that use or load/unload good in Cuba port are sanction from entering US port for 6 months. That mean virtually no international shipping company are able to use Cuba port due to embargo. So this has nothing to do with "Cuba refuse to trade" bullshit, but apparently superpower bullying. However, winner can always happily pass their propaganda around.

    • @sch4891
      @sch4891 Před 3 lety +3

      yeah i noticed this too. people who study austrian school economics think that they're a lot smarter than the neolib economist but barely. this is a great econ channel if youre interested czcams.com/channels/4V_jMdRbbTrmBVJB6FDzgw.htmlvideos

  • @jgp6574
    @jgp6574 Před 4 lety +48

    about doctors: how is serving the poor morally questionable?

    • @SomeGuy1117
      @SomeGuy1117 Před 4 lety +14

      @Stephen Jenkins ah yes Cuba has doctors in slave collars lol. That's a spicy take.

    • @BUSeixas11
      @BUSeixas11 Před 3 lety +3

      @@SomeGuy1117 they are not free workers. When they travel most of their money gets sent to Cuban government and their passport is confiscated www.google.com/amp/s/amp.economist.com/the-americas/2020/04/04/cubas-doctors-are-in-high-demand

    • @KarlSnarks
      @KarlSnarks Před 3 lety +2

      It's not, but teaching them that they should be loyal to their authoritarian government is. (Also goes for the whole pledging allegiance to the flag thing in the USA even if it isn't an authoritarian regime)

    • @christianbeyramartinez1662
      @christianbeyramartinez1662 Před 3 lety +5

      I honestly think elitism in the medical profession is a plague. Everyone is so used to rich doctors driving fancy cars that it detracts from the fact that it is a doctor's job to help people, not make fat stacks. And it is some of the most fulfilling labor in the world, having a tangible effect on people's lives. And Cuban doctors are provided the education and living standards to pursue that education, and paid higher than average workers when you remove the issue of foreign currency outlined in this video, and are paid more when sent out on humanitarian efforts. Cuban doctors, like many non-doctor Cubans, do immigrate to nations where they can be paid more, often dangerously/illegally. Surprisingly, people from poor nations would prefer the opportunity and possibilities they envision in wealthier nations, a notion compounded on by the ever struggling Cuban economy. Shocker. I do agree we're all slaves under capitalism, but some people are envisioning the situation as a different type of slavery

    • @balintvass4771
      @balintvass4771 Před 3 lety +2

      @@KarlSnarks It's such a double standard from the creator of this video. Like we are not constantly told that "capitalism is the best possible system" lol.
      I also wouldn't be so sure that Cuba is not more democratic than the US (you read it right):
      czcams.com/video/2aMsi-A56ds/video.html

  • @hebneh
    @hebneh Před 4 lety +9

    Lots of errors in this video. One major omission, which is very significant, is that Cuba was freed from being a colony of Spain by the USA in the Spanish-American War of 1898. The US actually ran Cuba as a colony for about 8 or so years after that, then returned to do so again a few years later. It was during this time that American companies as well as individual citizens first assumed their major roles in the Cuban economy. Fidel Castro began nationalizing foreign assets within a few months after taking over Cuba in Jan. 1959 but he didn't seize all American properties till Oct. 1960, when he also took over all the large Cuban companies as well.

  • @GG-wy8pk
    @GG-wy8pk Před 4 lety +7

    Son: dad, I wanna be a doctor
    Dad: nooo, I raised you to be a doorman.

  • @ovserversam
    @ovserversam Před 4 lety +3

    The thing about the doorman being richer then a doctor is just a gross over simplification, the doorman will probably not be a doorman for his entire life but the doctor will be a doctor until he dies or retires. And as the country becomes richer the doctor's pay will increase but the tip received by the doorman probably will remain the same as there is only so much people he can attend to.

  • @codybroken
    @codybroken Před 4 lety +1

    I FREAKIN LOVE your channel!!
    you tell great stories

  • @dkeith45
    @dkeith45 Před 2 lety +2

    Similarity, during the USSR days the best job to have was a cab driver. They made money in the same manner as the Cuban doorman, but even more, because they would ask for more fare money if the passenger wanted to get somewhere quicker.
    Also, which would be the better job in the USSR, an engineer or a worker in a restaurant? The restaurant worker of course, because they could steal food to resell later. The engineer could only steal paper and pencils, so was poor. I heard all this info on CZcams at 'Ushanka Show'. : )

  • @igasman64
    @igasman64 Před 4 lety +3

    You sort of managed to neglect mentioning the US' support of Batista - Cuba has been struggling against the weight of the world's most powerful country for the last century. They have one of the best healthcare systems in the world, one of the highest literacy rates, and enjoy a relatively crime-free life. More than the US can say.

    • @shauncameron8390
      @shauncameron8390 Před 4 lety

      Actually, the US's healthcare outranks Cuba's overall. Crime-free life? So does North Korea. Easy to achieve such un a totalitarian regime. Try Switzerland or Japan.

    • @magnusorn7313
      @magnusorn7313 Před 3 lety

      @@shauncameron8390 north korea is based, why you think western media claims Kim has died like once a week and makes wild claims that time and time again end up being untrue?
      what do you actually know about north korea or either of the koreas? have you read up on their history? do you know why there are two koreas?

  • @codniggh1139
    @codniggh1139 Před 4 lety +9

    And no, doctors don't escape because they threat their families or they don't give passports to doctors.

  • @damianmurphy-morris1941

    very insightful video. this cleared up the few things I was confused about

  • @drummintao
    @drummintao Před 4 lety

    A very well organized and presented video. Thank you, and well done :D.

  • @MrJucesar2005
    @MrJucesar2005 Před 3 lety +4

    It left many important things out. Perhaps a 2nd more realistic video in the near future?

  • @ayesh4646
    @ayesh4646 Před 4 lety +22

    "National Prosperity relies a lot more than just winning a natural resources lottery"
    Like US Sanction !!!

    • @shauncameron8390
      @shauncameron8390 Před 4 lety

      Not quite in Cuba's case. It's the central planning model.

  • @simbaonsteroids8836
    @simbaonsteroids8836 Před 4 lety +6

    June 2020: oh you sweet summer child .

  • @fiddlersontheramp5417
    @fiddlersontheramp5417 Před 3 lety

    This show is one of the best things on youtube. It should be called geography explained!

  • @manuelguerra8208
    @manuelguerra8208 Před 4 lety +4

    The problem with socialism is that no government can replace the will of the people. The companies can't be nationalized, they need to be controlled by the people

    • @pauldodds9646
      @pauldodds9646 Před 4 lety +1

      So the workers control the companies?

    • @Roman92UA
      @Roman92UA Před 4 lety +2

      @@pauldodds9646 How do exactly workers control anything ? Shareholders of corporations struggle to control managers that run their companies, what makes you think that workers can control government bureaucracies that operate those worker-owned assets you speak of ?

  • @TheGonzedd
    @TheGonzedd Před 3 lety +5

    I don't remember hearing you mention the U.S. Embargo on Cuba!

    • @magnusorn7313
      @magnusorn7313 Před 3 lety +4

      the amount of dishonesty that goes into making a video about the economy of a nation and leaving out the biggest most prevalent detail
      it could only have been done knowingly and willingly

    • @TheGonzedd
      @TheGonzedd Před 3 lety

      @@magnusorn7313 Agreed!

    • @vinip4
      @vinip4 Před 2 lety +2

      Geographically speaking, if Cuba had a good economic system it should be able to sutain itself normally. Its a shitty system, embargo or not.

  • @violinhunter2
    @violinhunter2 Před 3 lety +2

    That Eisenhower embargo was a huge mistake.

  • @donomanater8544
    @donomanater8544 Před 2 lety +4

    The "doctors are richer than doormen" thing is so dumb because it completely ignores the actual fact in Cuba, doctors have access to a program provided by the government to go abroad and help other countries with their health. Doctors who do this get paid so well what they earn is on par with business owners.

    • @AwesomeHairo
      @AwesomeHairo Před 2 lety

      You mean "doormen are richer than doctors."

    • @donomanater8544
      @donomanater8544 Před 2 lety

      @@AwesomeHairo no did you read what I just said?

    • @shauncameron8390
      @shauncameron8390 Před rokem

      Doctors don't get paid well as the Cuban government takes 90% of their earnings.

    • @donomanater8544
      @donomanater8544 Před rokem

      @@shauncameron8390 Source?

  • @elfanatico6124
    @elfanatico6124 Před 3 lety +12

    I love how nobody talks about Cuban astronauts and their input on Science.

  • @chescokun
    @chescokun Před 4 lety +53

    This video is a good illustration of how thinking solely on economic terms is damaging in a very subtle way.
    How is it that before talking about the Cuban educational system there is a prelude to how they are 'authoritarian' and such and then going about explaining why the most advanced scholars remain in the country basically because they have been groomed to do so?
    Since there is no consideration of Cuban culture or any other aspect of their history, to an outsider this might seem very odd, why stay when my stardart of living can be so much higher? Surely the government must be behind it!
    But this never considers that in a very communal-oriented society such an attitude would be considered to be very rude and dismissive of one's larger community, thus providing a meaningful reason to stay and do what you can to make the country better.
    Besides, there are beautiful people everywhere, great beaches music and food, would you rather go to freezing Canada or the break-a-bone-break-bank USA?
    I would even go as far and claim that the opposite is true, an education system devoid of the class consciousness and material analysis leads to countries like the US to completely privatise the healthcare system and having the largest prison-industrial complex in the world and having dystopian leves of wealth inequality that adversely affects the rest of the region, as this video demonstrates.
    No mention of José Martí the main thinker behind the revolution, not Mark or Engels, no mention of Cubas extensive and influential musical scene and no mention of how their food is some of the best in Latin America and how from an ecological standpoint Cuba is one of the world's most sustainably developted countries.
    All in all, the liberalization of Cubans economy is more of a threat that the same pre-revolution status quo is maintained and become another Honduras, which is basically exactly what the US wanted to do with Cuba. AND WE ARE FAAAAAAAAR WORSE OFF THAN THEY ARE.
    The Cuban model has proven to be longlasting inspite of the huge economic blocks that bully it constantly (and the rest of LA) and because it covers other aspects of human fulfillment.
    That's why it's sad that rich foreign people can undermine the system by creating these high paying servil jobs, because the very culture they create breads neoliberalism.

    • @WingsWithFeet
      @WingsWithFeet Před 4 lety +15

      But wait don't you know that capitalism is good and was given to us by God? Do you dare question the invisible hand?

    • @sosogo4real
      @sosogo4real Před 4 lety +9

      Thats why Venezuela is a narcostate right? It covers other forms of fulfillment.

    • @babyblooddistilleriesinc3131
      @babyblooddistilleriesinc3131 Před 4 lety +8

      @@sosogo4real
      The claim that Venezuela is socialist is a little bit problematic. According to this (www.thenation.com/article/archive/why-is-venezuela-in-crisis/ ) " while Venezuela has moved away from free-market capitalism, its economy is hardly socialist. The private sector, not the state (and still less the social economy), controls the overwhelming majority of economic activity. Between 1999 and 2011, the private sector’s share of economic activity increased, from 65 percent to 71 percent." So a big portion of Venezuela's economy is still private.
      The above article uses it's statistics from this (www.aporrea.org/actualidad/a165136.html )
      which according to a redditor here www.reddit.com/r/DebateCommunism/comments/9ce9ep/does_anyone_have_a_source_for_70_of_venezuelas/( the second comment) says this
      " affirmed that the economy has become more capitalist because the contribution of the private sector to GDP increased from 65% in 1999 to 71% today, while the State's contribution fell from 35% to 29%. Álvarez does not take into account that the State captures a part of the private GDP through the tax on surplus value (mass of profit) and thus obtains as much income as the private sector. Government revenues have multiplied by 25 since 1999. The fact that the State loses relative weight in total production with respect to the private sector does not mean that it loses weight in the collection of monetary income. The truth is that the Venezuelan State has not lost ground against capitalist property".
      So can you still call Venezuela socialist?

    • @thomask940
      @thomask940 Před 4 lety +2

      Cesco- I'm not sure what you're trying to say...cuz i don't really understand the big words. But i have to agree ...Cuba has a bizarre economic climate that happens to work...to some extent. I find it fascinating...the fact that it still exists.

    • @Santiago-ts6ko
      @Santiago-ts6ko Před 4 lety +9

      Any rational person would prefer living in "freezing" Canadá than in Cuba, and thousands of cubans prefer living in the US than in their own country so go figure.

  • @Salcioo
    @Salcioo Před 4 lety

    I can’t be believe this video is out thank you

  • @Jeff-rq4jv
    @Jeff-rq4jv Před 3 lety +2

    Don forget that Canda was prety open to Cuba for a long time. I vacationed there many almost for thesole reason that there were no Americans.

  • @grizzley6937
    @grizzley6937 Před 4 lety +23

    You know Overwatch did a good job remaking Havana when the actual map looks very similar to the thumbnail picture.

    • @ts-wo6pp
      @ts-wo6pp Před 4 lety

      Yeah looks just like first point

  • @DaMelloKittyy
    @DaMelloKittyy Před 4 lety +11

    You are a fantastic storyteller! I feel like you turn nations into relatable characters and guide us along through their story arcs. Keep it up!

  • @adriancarballoza6149
    @adriancarballoza6149 Před 3 lety +2

    As a cuban, I agree with your thoughts

  • @rojervasquez8305
    @rojervasquez8305 Před 3 lety

    Love your page so much, really appreciate the puns. < 3

  • @zeitgeist5134
    @zeitgeist5134 Před 4 lety +4

    Shortly after Castro seized power, he went to Washington, D.C., seeking help from a government that had also been founded following a revolution. The men in Castro's inner circle told him he was being naive. Eisenhower refused to help, driving the Cubans into the arms of the Soviets. We will never know how Castro's government and the Cuban economy would have developed if there never had been an embargo. With ample connection to the American economy, it might have evolved into more of a hybrid. (By the way, why didn't you mention the thriving presence of the American Mafia in Cuba as a consequence of Prohibition? The Mafia smuggled rum to the US. The Mafia owned the casinos. The Mafia ran the Batista's government.)

  • @AlejandroRodriguez-se4ue
    @AlejandroRodriguez-se4ue Před 4 lety +5

    Well, I'm a Cuban, living in Cuba and working as a tour guide and want to tell you, and the viewers of course, that this video is one of the most accurate assessments of the Cuban life, economy and historical progress I have ever seen, especially since you don't live here. Great work! You only missed a couple of nuances but that is way less than I had expected. As a long time subscriber and follower of your work, I had expected a great video, but this level of excellence was beyond anything I had hoped!
    If you ever want to come to Cuba (when he-who-must-not-be-named permits it) feel free to contact me and I'll be happy to show you around and take you to meet private entrepreneurs so you can get first-hand information on how everything works.
    Once again, outstanding work! Keep it up!

  • @Oroxom3
    @Oroxom3 Před 4 lety

    Like that Fist of the North Star episode... "HEY, AS LONG AS IT WORKS" hahahaha

  • @honeybadger1125
    @honeybadger1125 Před 3 lety +1

    As a former cuban: A taxi & bus drivers even make more than a medic or a surgeon. That's where you see that in Cuba if you go to University you will still be earning the minimal wage. Where a taxi driver who doesn't need to know basic math can make his monthly salary in just 1 or 2 days, 365 days in a year. & the funniest thing is that doctors are so blind, stressed, exhausted that they don't even have a clue that the driver of the bus they take is earning his monthly salary in just 5 or 10 hours in a day🤦🏻‍♂️. When the drivers (mainly them) realized that they were earning so much on those 4 wheels that they all just laugh in silence behind your for going to university & being stressed out so much🤣

  • @angelochoameireles
    @angelochoameireles Před 4 lety +13

    Usualy love your videos. Unfortunally I'm cuban, and though the undelying idea is right, much of the details are not.
    . The standar of living of cuabns are not great, not even compared to many developing countries, and that is because one fact you mentioned, cubans dont get practically any money for their work and the goverment is mostly broke and in debt.
    . Trade limitations wrere not what killed cuban economy. Goverment policies did. Not that the US embargo wasn't of any effect. Check for the 70's "Zafra de los 10 millones".
    . I understand that this has no meaning for the general audience, but mixing images of Cuba with others of another countries feels jaring.
    . The colapse of the cuban economy in the 90's when the USSR dessapeared, was not because they where our only partner, but because they were our sponsor. Cuban's was a subsidized economy. They give us everything, we clap. When the soviets left, the goverment oppened the country until the venezuelans appear, and they repeat the system: they give us oil, we give them doctors... and ideas.
    Other than that, great video.

    • @tiredox3788
      @tiredox3788 Před 4 lety +6

      Interesting because I hear Bernie and some of his supporters say Cuba is better than the U.S because their healthcare and education? And I wonder have they done research on Cuba? 🤔🤔

    • @misterharryman
      @misterharryman Před 4 lety

      @@tiredox3788 Bernie never said that. Please stop lying.

    • @hebneh
      @hebneh Před 4 lety +5

      In the years after 1959, the conditions for the very poorest Cubans undoubtedly did improve, but overall the result was the collapse of a functioning economy. One huge problem is that there's no reason for anyone to really work hard at their government-controlled job because you can never earn more money or improve where you live or buy basic consumer goods. The joke is: "They pretend to pay us, and we pretend to work."

    • @Acquiredammunity
      @Acquiredammunity Před 3 lety

      Very true

  • @Nermalton77
    @Nermalton77 Před 3 lety +9

    Once an economist was criticising Cuba in brazilian tv:
    'Just three things work in Cuba: Public Health, Education and Public Security.'
    Looking at the current state of things in Brazil, that seems to me pretty much an apology of Cuba

    • @Stroggoii
      @Stroggoii Před 2 lety

      And yet so many Cubans flee to "unequal" countries like Mexico, Brazil, Argentina.
      Not everyone wants to be a pet of the state.

  • @jammaas2597
    @jammaas2597 Před 3 lety +1

    Dude, great job..! I loved the way you did it.. just stating the facts and staying away from any biased or third party thoughts.

  • @mafiousbj
    @mafiousbj Před 4 lety +8

    Also, leaving Cuba is hard because the family left behind of those who succesfully escape are usually shamed by society or even bullied by police or the military for fear of more dissent.

    • @ts-wo6pp
      @ts-wo6pp Před 4 lety +4

      Castro took my great grandfather's slaves 😔😔😔😔😔😔

    • @Feffdc
      @Feffdc Před 4 lety

      And they should be ashamed

    • @juan-ij1le
      @juan-ij1le Před 2 lety

      @@Feffdc why