Leticia Martínez
Hernández
THIS past August 1 President Raúl
Castro Ruz announced to the National Assembly the
decision to extend the self-employed sector and use
it as an another option for workers seeking
alternative jobs after the necessary process of
reducing the country’s inflated employment registers
in the public sector. In the Assembly session it was
made known that various current restrictions would
be eliminated in order to allow the authorization of
new licenses and the marketing of certain products,
in addition to providing greater flexibility to hire
a workforce within certain activities.
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Self-employed workers will increase the
availability of goods and services.
Photo: Yander Zamora |
Since then many people have been
awaiting a solution that, far from being improvised
or ephemeral, makes it possible to increase the
availability of goods and services, while assuring
an income to those who decide to do this work. It
will contribute to the state being relieved of the
burden of excessive subsidies, while placing in non-state
hands goods and services which it has provided for
years in spite of a difficult economic context.
Increasing the opportunities for
self-employment is one of the decisions which the
country is making in terms of restructuring its
economic policy, in order to increase levels of
productivity and efficiency. It is also an attempt
to offer workers another way of feeling useful in
terms of personal effort, and to distance ourselves
from those concepts that almost condemned self-employment
to extinction and stigmatized those who decided to
legally join that sector in the 1990s.
On August 1, the approval of a tax
system of taxation for the self-employed sector was
also made public, in line with the nation’s new
economic scenario. Whoever contributes more, will
receive more is the principle of the new tax regime
that will help to increase sources of income to the
state budget, and achieve an adequate redistribution
of that income to society.
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178 new categories of self-employment
have been authorized.
Photo: Ismael Batista |
But, how is the self-employed sector
to be extended? What activities are included in it?
What restrictions are being eliminated? How is it to
be organized and regulated? What taxes are to be
paid? Granma went out to seek the answers to
these and other questions by consulting specialists
from the Ministries of Economy and Planning, Finance
and Prices; and Labor and Social Security, which are
preparing the regulations for self-employment, to be
implemented from this October.
Self-employment,
not another’s
Admi Valhuerdi Cepero, first deputy
minister at the Ministry of Labor and Social
Security, explained that there will be178 categories
of self-employment, within which 83 may hire
additional employees who do not have to be members
of the same household or relatives of the business
owner. "Authorizations are to be given for 29 new
activities that, while they are currently exercised,
were not given re-authorization a number of years
back." Among them she mentioned food vendors of
various categories, winemakers, saw operators,
stonemasons, engine and ignition coilers, wreath and
flower sellers, panel beaters, sports trainers (except
martial arts), refuse recycler, masseurs, etc.
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The requisite of being retired or having
some work link in order to have access
to the self-employed sector has been
abolished.
Photo: Ismael Batista |
Seven activities have been added to
the existing categories, which include bookkeeping,
with the exception of accountants and bookkeeping
working in that specialty; park and public place
restroom attendants; subject revisers, excluding
active teachers; casual agricultural workers;
roadside stand or cart vendors of agricultural
produce in sales outlets or highway kiosks; and
travel assistants, referring to those people who
organize passengers with private taxis at the
terminals.
Valhuerdi also explained that the
granting of new authorizations for self-employed
work would remain limited for now to nine kinds of
work, because there is no licit market for raw
materials, although viable alternatives are being
studied. They are: auto body workers, marble and
granite carvers and vendors; sellers of soap, shoe
polish, dyes, ropes and similar items; smelters and
blacksmiths; flame cutters; vendors of aluminum
items; floor waxers; and vendors of non-iron cast
metal items.
Concerning the market for these
activities, Marino Murillo Jorge, minister of
economy and planning, explained, "We are designing
within the economic plan for the coming year, what
we have to incorporate bearing in mind the new
changes which will demand hardware stores and
kitchen equipment which is not are currently not on
sale. We have to manage the plan to fit in with what
has been done. The ideal is a wholesale market with
different prices for the self-employed. But we are
not going to be able to do that in the next few
years. Right now we have to find a market where they
can buy what is necessary although without
differentiating retail prices."
Valhuerdi commented that, when the
resolution comes into force it will allow up to 20
seats in "paladares,"(independently owned house
restaurants) where places were previously limited to
12; it will allow the sale of food products made
from potatoes, seafood and beef. It will also
abolish the requisite of being retired or having
some workplace link in order to have access to this
form of employment.
With these regulations university
professionals and technicians who graduated before
1964 may continue to work for themselves. In this
way the work undertaken for more than 40 years by a
small number of people registered in the Taxpayers
Registry has been respected.
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"PLUMBER:
does house calls Te:l 876-21-91"
Photo: Yander Zamora |
In creating greater flexibility in
the self-employed sector an extension in the rental
of housing has been borne in mind, which eliminates
the old restrictions that involve a "highly visible"
network of infractions. Those prohibitions, which at
one point fulfilled a function, now constitute an
obstacle in the difficult problem of housing.
Therefore new regulations authorize people who have
authorization to live abroad (PRE) or those who,
while living in Cuba, leave the country for more
than three months to rent their residences.
Similarly, and to support self- work, they provide
the possibility of renting homes, rooms and spaces
for exercising their work.
It is worthwhile to note that the
homeowners can appoint a representative to request a
license to rent, to facilitate those who are not in
the country and who wish to rent their homes. The
approval will be in all cases, up to the municipal
director of housing. The same situation will apply
to transportation providers who decide to work in a
self-employed capacity. Those who have authorization
to live abroad or travel for more than three months
may also name a representative to rent their
vehicles.
When these new regulations come into
effect, those linked to the self-employed sector,
and those who join it, will be obligated to pay
taxes on personal income, on sales, on public
services, and for utilizing a workforce, as well as
making in Social Security contributions.
A special mention should be made to
self-employed workers’ Social Security
contributions, because in order to offer them
protection for old age, total disability, maternity
or, in the case of their death, to their family, a
special scheme has been organized that these workers
are required to join, with the exception of those
also working in the state sector, who are retirees,
receiving a pension or who are beneficiaries of
another Social Security program.
All of these measures related to
self-employed work, which Granma is to
continue detailing in upcoming issues, will make it
possible for this form of employment to provide
another alternative, under the vigilant eye of the
state which, as the representative of the people, is
mandated to seek solutions to improve the standard
of living of Cubans, while always respecting the
socialist principles that govern our constitution.
As the president stated at the 3rd Ordinary Sessions
of the 7th Legislature of Parliament on August 1,
2009, the objective is to defend, maintain and
continue improving socialism, not to destroy it.
That is the road along which Cuba continues to
travel.
The Ministry of Labor and Social
Security (MTSS) regulation on the extension of self-employed
work lays down that those in this sector can engage
in more than one activity, within their municipality
of origin or in any part of the country, as long as
they meet the regulations established by the
Administration Councils. Thus they will have the
possibility of undertaking work at home or in any
other rented premises or space. The document lays
down that workers can market their good and services
to state agencies within the financial limits that
these have.
At the present time discussions are
underway with the Central Bank of Cuba on how to
facilitate bank credits for persons deciding to
become self-employed in order to set up the activity
they have chosen.
Officials at the National Institute
of Housing have announced, from October of this year,
the abolition of the prohibition on renting out
entire houses in CUC; time-limited renting; and
renting out buildings assigned by the state after
2001, and in those in which construction work has
been carried out in recent years. These measures
have been approved without exception in all of the
national territory. The new regulation permits
owners who rent to hire a workforce and undertake
other self-employed activities.