Cuba reaffirms
vocation of solidarity with the people of the
Americas
•
Speech by President Raúl Castro Ruz, in the public
segment of the 5th Extraordinary ALBA Summit, Cumaná,
Venezuela, April 16, 2009
Compañero Chávez;
Dear Presidents and heads of delegations from
sister ALBA nations;
Distinguished guests
The
economic and social crisis now is global in nature
and is not only limited to the financial sector. It’s
a world disaster with profound structural roots. It
includes a sharp fall in stock market value and
productive activity; the freezing of and higher cost
of credit and the economic recession in the
principal powers of the First World. It is
accompanied by the withdrawal of world trade and an
increase in unemployment and poverty. It is
affecting and will considerably damage the lives and
well-being of billions of human beings. The
countries of the South with be, as always, the ones
that suffer the most.
These are the consequences of irresponsible
practices tied to deregulation, financial
speculation, and the imposition of neoliberalism.
Also present is the United States’ abusive use of
the privileges bestowed on them in the current
international economic order which allows them to
finance a culture of war and unbridled consumerism,
unsustainable no matter how you look at it, by
printing money without backing.
But deep down, the crisis is a foreseeable result
of the capitalist system of production and
distribution. The neoliberal policies of the last
three decades have increased its magnitude for the
worse. In the search for solutions, those who are
primarily responsible end up concentrating power and
wealth even further, while the poorest and most
exploited assume the majority of the costs.
The response cannot be a solution negotiated
behind the back of the United Nations by the
Presidents of the most powerful countries.
The crisis will not be resolved with either
administrative or technical measures because they
are by nature structural, have systematic reach and
increasingly affect the economy of the globalized
and interdependent planet. The role and the
functions of financial institutions like the
International Monetary Fund, whose disastrous
policies have decisively contributed to the origin
and reach of the current crisis, should be
strengthened even less.
Nor does the G-20’s solution resolve the
inequality, injustices, and unsustainability of the
capitalist system. It is the same rhetoric of those
solemn declarations by the Northern countries that
they will not apply protectionist measures and that
they will not allocate new aid, which does not
change the foundations of the underdevelopment that
condemns us.
The World Bank – which is not exactly a defender
of socialist principals – already spoke about this
six months ago at the previous G-20 meeting in
Washington. It counted 73 protectionist actions
applied by members of the G-20 itself. An increase
in the Official Development Assistance has also not
been visible.
Dear colleagues
The ALBA countries have the privilege of having a
modest plan for integration, constructed on the
foundations and principles of equality, whose very
nature doesn’t allow for the practices that started
this crisis. Our countries do not have the capacity,
by ourselves, to structurally transform the
international economic order, but we do have the
power to establish new foundations and construct our
own economic relations.
Our most important programs are not subject to
the whims of financial speculation or the
uncontrolled fluctuation of markets. The damage that
we are suffering is undeniable. This is a crisis
that nobody can escape from but today we have the
instruments to partly counteract its effects.
In these efforts, the work that we have been
carrying out in ALBA member countries and Ecuador (since
November, 2008) is particularly significant; in
order to create the Unique Regional Compensation
Payment System (SUCRE) that will be a fundamental
factor for boosting the trade and economic
integration between us.
Today we can verify the advances achieved in the
development of this initiative that is a first step
toward the goal of having a common currency.
Cuba reaffirms the vocation of solidarity that
has characterized its links with the peoples of
Latin America and the Caribbean. The crisis presents
us with enormous challenges, of incalculable and
unpredictable dimensions. We have no other option
than to unite with each other to face it.
Thank you very much.
Translated by Granma International