Cuba's informal market finds new space on growing internet

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Belgique Nouvelles Nouvelles

Belgique Dernières Nouvelles,Belgique Actualités

Ever-widening access to the internet is offering a new opportunity for Cubans looking for hard-to-obtain basic goods: online shopping.

“I need liquid ibuprofen and acetaminophen, please,” wrote one user. “It’s urgent, it’s for my 10-month-old baby.”

Before the internet, such exchanges took place “through your contacts, your neighbors, your local community," said Ricardo Torres, a Cuban and economics fellow at American University in Washington. “But now, through the internet, you get to reach out to an entire province.” Many products are sold in pesos, but higher-priced items are often listed in dollars, with payments either handled in cash or through bank transfers outside the country.

“This medicine goes to the people who need it, people who have respiratory issues,” he said. “Those who use them are people who really need them. ... More than anything else, we sell antibiotics.” Entrepreneurs have used the same creativity to deal with what was initially very limited internet access. Carlos Javier Peña and Hiram Centelles, Cuban expatriates who live in Spain, created Revolico in 2007 to help “alleviate the hardships of life in Cuba.”

Between 2000 and 2021 the number of Cubans using the internet rose from less than 1% of the population to 71%,shows. The internet was a lifeline for Heriberto and many other Cubans during the COVID-19 pandemic, they said.

 

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Belgique Dernières Nouvelles, Belgique Actualités