Cuban private business owners fear new regulations may force them to shut down

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Orlando Matos is an NBC News producer based in Havana, Cuba.

HAVANA — His business was among the first registered in Cuba in 2021 when the communist-run country began allowing private enterprise, banned since 1968. Now, as the government tightens its grip over the private sector, Gabriel Mosquera Mourlot, 24, fears he may lose the wholesale business he runs, importing items such as pasta, rice, chicken and appliances in a country known for chronic shortages. He then sells them to businesses in the eastern province of Santiago and in the capital, Havana.

“They should be taking measures to incentivize the private sector and give them the security they need to invest more, expand and create more employment.” He thinks restrictions are being taken because in the public eye, the government wants to blame the private sector for high inflation, something many economists disagree with, and show it is doing something about it.

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