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The US has an embargo, but Mexico and Canada don't. Cuba can and does buy goods from them. Cuba's real problem is paying for them. The US does not embargo food or medicine goods to Cuba, yet the country has problems feeding their people. Poor economic management of a communist country with no real resources.
Cuba can't pay because Cuba can't conduct normal finances with the rest of world because of the US embargo
It's like having having someone handcuff you, cuff you feet and pin you to the ground and rest their knee on your neck and ask you why you can't get up on your own.
They can certainly conduct commerce with the rest of the world.
You are technically correct .... but there are several convoluted rules and regulations controlled and mandated by the US that it makes it either very difficult or impossible for most countries to do business or trade with Cuba.
Cuba can trade with anyone they want .... it's just purposely made so difficult that very few do so and the ones who do provide very little in exchange.
https://www.politifact.com/factchecks/2021/jul/19/facebook-posts/cuba-can-trade-other-countries-heres-some-context/
What I read in your link is not so much Political fact but a disagreement of experts.
What I read in your text is that trade is to difficult, however it is done.
If you're a company why would you even fuck with more difficult trade.
The important part that you miss is that they do. So, it must not be that difficult
Survivorship bias!
No such word. Read the final paragraph of the link above.
The question is, with what currency? The Cuban dollar is not really worth anything outside Cuba, so they can only rely on exports to fund currency needed to buy imports.
This is true, but not due to a US embargo. I should think that the state has access to many different currencies. But, in the end, they have limited resources. Cigars, some Rum (though a lot of countries distil and export rum in the Caribbean). They used to export mercenaries and doctors but noone is buying now.
You don't think being explicitly barred access from what is essentially considered "the world currency" at this point wouldn't change their access? C'mon.
They're not barred from access. Just can't use US banks. There are many banks in the world.
The world is run by the USD. If you can't do business using USD, it is crippling.
Hate to tell you this, but most banks in the world deal in multiple currencies including USD.
Do you know what the Petrodollar is? Have you ever seen USD called "the World's Reserve Currency"? There are reasons for this. The majority of world commerce is done using USD.
As the article goes on to say, Russia's invastion of Ukraine, and BRICS attempt to move away from USD toward other currencies like the Yuan, is changing the landscape as we speak.
But since 1963, or whenever the fuck it started, the USD has dominated. The act of simply not allowing a nation to participate in that, for such a long time, does a lot of damage. I think Cuba has done pretty well for itself, all things considered.
Yeah, I know what a petrodollar is. Played the oil spot market years ago. So, I'm guesstting you must be indicating that Cuba can't pay for oil. That's nonsense. Let's suppose they have their money at HSBC, a Chinese bank in Hong Kong. They make a deal for oil supply with Mexico. To pay for it, they have HSBC move money from Hong Kong to Mexico in USD.
BTW, I find the downvotes funny as he'll.
They're allowed to play monopoly, they just can't use the regular monopoly money.
The global economy is run on the US dollar. It's the measuring stick all other currencies use as a reference point.
Again, world banks deal in multiple currencies.
And the US Dollar is the measuring stuck upon which all other currencies are based upon. I'd it takes all kinds of regulatory and embargo based nonsense for a bank to play ball with the US and Cuba, that bank won't do it.
I used to get paid in Euro with a release of funds directly to a foreign account. The account that bank was associated with was turned into USD upon entry. It's really not that hard.
That euro conversion stuff doesn't matter if the US won't deal with any bank that interacts with the Cuban currency. That's what an embargo does. You're right it's not hard to exchange currency. The entire point of an embargo is to function as a financial seige, to prevent the economy of the embargoed target from growing through mutual trade with the literal financial hegemon of our world.
You would think that the US can't choose who it does business with. Cuba's currency is near worthless.
Technically, but the US has sanctioned companies in other countries who do business in Cuba scaring off a ton of possible choices. The companies have to choose between the richest company on earth and Cuba. Not much of a choice.
Plus IIRC boats that go to Cuba can't go to the US after for some period of time. Which considering location makes it hugely inconvenient for shipping companies.
Plus since the US and US based companies control a huge portion of the world's financial systems Cuba is locked out of all of them
A citation is needed on the first paragraph
Barges float to Cuba from the US twice a week.
Last paragraph is true. Cuba cannot use US banking.
There are exceptions for the very few things the US authorizes to export to Cuba, but in general:
https://ofac.treasury.gov/faqs/topic/1541
So you couldn't find anything. Nice
Really has nothing to do with article.