Cuba's decline: By the numbers
Originally posted 09.06.05 | The
disastrous "progress" that Cuba has experienced over the past 40-50
years, during its "pretty revolution", can be quantified. The following
figures are attributed to UN, FAO, and UNESCO sources and tell it all.
A catastrophic decline in living standards, productivity, healthcare,
and income -- all attributable directly to the Great Leader, F. Castro
himself, beloved icon of the dreaming revolutionary left (see table
below).
Interestingly, there has been no tradeoff for Cubans:
they have not received better living conditions in exchange for less
freedom or greater freedom in exchange for worse living conditions.
Instead, they have received the worst of both worlds. They suffer their
ignominious, imposed poverty in conditions of oppression, in a police
state that negates civil liberties, where freedom of expression and
political activity are remote dreams, where an arbitrary legal system
means that anything you do or say can be held against you at the whim
of the dictator and his minions.
A rather obvious question
following from the information is: How daft would you have to be to
emulate such an economic/political model? Very daft indeed, I should
say. It is simply incomprehensible to me that a leader could choose the
worst role model instead of the best as an example for his country to
follow. Unless, of course, that leader does not have the best interests
of his fellow citizens at heart at all, but rather follows personal
goals of his own, such as power, money, and recognition from
revolutionary has-beens in Cuba and some European circles. I am still
not decided on whether Venezuela's Chávez is malevolent or merely
deluded, or perhaps a dangerous mixture of both. But about one thing
there can be no doubt: He is putting Venezuela on a seriously wrong
track and needs to be stopped.
Here are the figures that describe Cuba's decline:
Population in million inhabitants 1959: 6 2004: 12 Per capita income, $ per year 1959: 1200 2004: 70 Telephones per 100 inhabitants 1959: 15 2004: 3,5 Electricity consumption per capita, watts 1959: 450 2004: 75 Consumption of calories, calories per inhabitant and day 1959: 2800 2004: 1100 Meat consumption, pounds per inhabitant and year 1959: 76 2004: 12 Consumption of eggs, units per inhabitant and year 1959: 47 2004: 13 Consumption of chickens, pounds per inhabitant and year 1959: 12 2004: 5 Number of cars per 1000 inhabitants 1959: 38 2004: 10 1 city bus per ... inhabitants 1959: 300 2004: 25000 1 intercity bus per ... inhabitants 1959: 2000 2004: 35000 Number of televisions per 1000 inhabitants 1959: 66 2004: 15 Number of TV stations 1959: 7 (2 in colour) 2004: 2 1 medical doctor per ... inhabitants 1959: 950 2004: 750 1 dentist per ... inhabitants 1959: 2100 2004: 1850 Head of cattle, million 1959: 6 2004: 1,8 Rate of inflation, percent per year 1959: 1,8 2004: 25 Number of newspapers 1959: 18 2004: 2 (no dailies) Number of tourists per year 1959: 750.000 2004: 1.200.000 Sugar harvest, million tons 1959: 7 2004: 1,8
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