THE AGRICULTURE HISTORY IN CUBA
Agriculture
in Cuba has, like so many other aspects of Cuban society and
the island’s economy, had a complex history of difficulties
and extremes. When the current government came to power 75%
of Cuba’s agricultural land was owned by foreign companies
and individuals. The main crop was sugar, which was sold to
the United States and Great Britain. A large quota was given
to Cuba by North America which paid above world prices in
order to support US industry.
After the Revolution, Che Guevara negotiated with the Soviet
Union for the export of Cuban sugar and the new Cuban government
adopted a series of land reforms which finally resulted in
the confiscation of almost all private property in favour
of the establishment of large Soviet-style State farms whose
creation arose from the notion that the State was the central
force and that heavy mechanisation would improve the dignity
of human labour. However the end result was both lost production
and ‘lost’ workers, for the relegation of peasant
farms to nonpreferred status meant their production failed
to develop and disaffected agricultural producers and labourers
migrated en masse from rural t o urban areas. The situation
was exacerbated by the availability in large cities of educational
and employment opportunities that had up until then been beyond
the reach of children of small farmers. This lured the next
generation out of the agricultural sector and of rural areas
entirely and resulted in a vicious circle of increasing necessity,
independent of the ideological preference for, the mechanisation
of agricultural production.
After
the collapse of COMECON (the economic organisation of Communist
States) Cuba’s agricultural system teetered on the verge
of collapse. Imports vanished; there were no fertilizers,
animal feed, tools, seed, wire, animal vaccines, fuel for
farm machinery or irrigation systems, tyres, batteries, spare
parts and the few agricultural necessities that were produced
on the island dried up due to lack of raw materials, electricity
to run factories, vehicles for distribution or petrol with
which to operate them.
It has always been difficult to discern which of Cuba’s
economic difficulties are results of the United States’
embargo and which are the results of poor economic planning.
What is undeniable is that the US embargo has made it far
more expensive, sometimes prohibitively so, for Cuba to achieve
high production in food and agricultural exports and the American
Association for World Health’s study entitled Denial
of Food and Medicine: The impact of the U.S. embargo on health
and nutrition in Cuba found that the US embargo ‘has
dramatically harmed the health and nutrition of large numbers
of ordinary Cuban citizens.’ Furthermore, a British
study found the U.S. embargo guilty of 7,500 excess deaths
per year during the hardest years of the ‘Special Period’
which followed the collapse of the Soviet Bloc.
Then the situation couldn’t have looked gloomier, but
in one of the extraordinary bursts of energy with which time
and again Fidel Castro’s government has avoided economic
and political meltdown, a rapid and innovative espousal of
biodiversification saved the day. The technique of Participatory
Plant Breeding (PPB), in which researchers work directly with
farmers, has steered Cuban national agricultural practice
away from high dependency upon unsustainable elements such
as expensive technology and imported chemicals to develop
a pioneering model of agricultural policy which is likely
to play an important part in the success of other developing
countries.
Biodiversity is important. If agricultural production rests
on too narrow a base – the high-yielding crop varieties
upon which much of the world has come to rely – and
those varieties are threatened, crisis occurs. In the past,
farmers have automatically maintained crop diversity, but
the homogeneity of modern agriculture threatens genetic diversity,
and thus local and global food supplies. The high-yielding
varieties developed by scientists also require considerable
maintenance and expensive chemicals and many small farmers
can afford neither these nor the expensively-developed seed
necessary for their cultivation.
The aim of the Cuban project has been to strengthen the base
of agricultural biodiversity by making a greater range of
varieties of seed available to farmers, using the latter’s
knowledge in a virtuous circle of research and response. This
became an urgent priority after the collapse of the Soviet
Bloc, for food production in Cuba had to be doubled whilst
input was halved, and food exports had also to be kept up
in order to earn vital foreign exchange |