"We have held a
magnificent workers’ Congress, which has established
the direction for the future of the Cuban trade
union movement."
• Speech given by Army General
Raúl Castro Ruz, First Secretary of the Communist
Party of Cuba’s Central Committee and President of
the Councils of State and Ministers, during the
closing session of the 20th Congress of
the Cuban Workers’ Federation (CTC), February 22,
2014, Year 56 of the Revolution
(Council of State transcript)
Compañeras and compañeros:
It is my responsibility to make the closing
remarks for this important Cuban Workers’ Federation
Congress, which is certainly not limited to these
three days of work by delegates in the capital; it
is a process which began 15 months ago with trade
union debate across the length and breadth of the
country, including the broad, democratic discussion
of the proposed Labor Code, approved by the National
Assembly this past month of December.

PHOTO: ESTUDIOS REVOLUCIÓN |
Also part of the workers’ Congress was the
profound analysis of the principal document which
took place in workplaces, municipal and provincial
bodies, in almost 66,000 member assemblies, with the
participation of more than 2,850,000 workers focused
on the improvement of the work done by trade union
organizations.
Within the framework of the tasks undertaken
prior to the Congress, we commemorated, this past
January 28, the 75th anniversary of the
founding of the CTC, which emerged as the first
unified organization of Cuban workers, under the
difficult conditions of the bourgeois, neocolonial
republic, facing, for years, the repression and
assassination of several of its most revolutionary
leaders, the majority communists, among them the
valiant sugar union leader and Communist Jesús
Menéndez, founder, along with the unforgettable
Lázaro Peña, of this organization.
Present and future generations of trade union
leaders must assimilate the valuable legacy
contained in the life of the Captain of the working
class, the well deserved title Lázaro Peña was able
to gain among Cuban workers, as a founder and
fervent defender of the unity of revolutionary
forces before the Revolution and, after the triumph,
the person who taking as his own the line
established by Fidel, established himself in the
organization and provided brilliant leadership
during the historic 8th CTC Congress, in
1973.
Unlike previous congresses which concentrated on
analysis and discussion of specific issues and
generated proposals for modifications to existent
labor related legislation, this 20th
Congress had the advantage of the Economic and
Social Policy Guidelines, approved by the 6th
Party Congress, as well as the work objectives
agreed upon during the First National [Party]
Conference.
Preparatory events leading to the Congress made
clear that the working class, in its majority,
supports the path being followed to update our
economic model, while at the same time, clearly
expressed was dissatisfaction given the slow pace
with which some government approved decisions are
implemented - on occasions without the creation of
adequate conditions, the provision of reasoning and
appropriate information, or necessary supervision of
the implementation process.
No matter how delicate or complex the question of
the wage system currently in place in the state
economy may be, I cannot neglect to address it,
although I have referred to the issue at other
times.
I fully agree with you that the current wage
system is not consistent with the socialist
principle of distribution, "from all according to
their ability, to all according to their work," or
what is the same thing, it does not guarantee that a
worker is compensated in accordance with the
contribution made to society.
It is also true that salaries do not meet the
needs of workers or their families, generating a
lack of motivation and apathy toward work,
negatively affecting discipline, and encouraging the
exodus of personnel toward better compensated
activities, regardless of the professional
qualifications required. At the same time, it has a
negative effect on the promotion to leadership
positions of the most capable and self-sacrificing,
given the damaging phenomenon of the ‘inverted
pyramid,’ which translates as, generally: greater
responsibility - less personal income.
At the same time, we have lacked a comprehensive
perspective in the implementation of our wage policy
and performance bonuses, leading to the isolated
approval over the years of dissimilar systems of
supplementary non-salary compensation in sectors and
activities, not always linked to work results or
increased productivity.
Nor can we forget the almost 1.7 million citizens
who devoted years to work and today enjoy the right
to a well-deserved retirement, whose pensions are
low and insufficient to meet the cost of basic goods
and services.
While reaffirming this crude reality, a
comprehensive solution to which we continue to work
on intensely, we cannot foster false hopes within
the population as to a short term resolution. It
would be irresponsible, and have a counterproductive
effect, to implement a generalized increase in
salaries in the state sector, given that this would
only serve to initiate an inflationary spiral in
prices, since it would not be adequately backed by a
sufficient increase in the supply of goods and
services.
Doing this might seen easy, it is done in many
places around the world, even in rich Europe, in
some of the countries in crisis; it is the
neoliberal formula implemented in various regions of
the world to protect and expand the fortunes of the
rich and condemn million of inhabitants of the
planet to poverty.
Although I have expressed it on other occasions,
it is not unimportant, especially before a workers'
congress, to reiterate that in revolutionary Cuba,
no one will be left unprotected and there is no
place for shock therapies for the people. None of
the changes we implement will ever undermine the
social conquests achieved by the Revolution.
If the average salary increases more rapidly than
the production of goods and services, the effect on
the economy and the people would be fatal,
equivalent to "eating up" our future, irrationally
augmenting the foreign debt and, definitely
engendering instability within Cuban society as a
result of galloping inflation, which would destroy
the buying power of salaries and pensions.
Let us keep in mind the essential principle of
the distribution of wealth: first it must be created
and, in order to do so, we must consistently
increase efficiency and productivity.
On this issue, I set apart medical services, for
which, yes, salaries will be increased shortly,
given that the country's fundamental income at this
time is a result of the work of thousands of doctors
offering their services abroad.
As we advance toward this end, the conditions
will be developed for better salaries and pensions.
Precisely for this purpose, decisions already
adopted by the government are underway and many
others are being studied, to gradually eliminate
various obstacles which remain in the management of
the enterprise system, about which you have received
ample information.
This is also the fundamental objective of the
process of elimination of the dual currency and
exchange rate, the initial stage of which is
underway to prepare the necessary conditions, and
the roll-out of a flexible compensation system is
being planned, one consistent with the
aforementioned socialist principle of distribution.
Given these circumstances, and in accordance with
the agreements of the 6th Party Congress,
growth has been promoted in our economy of non-state
management models, in which workers receive salaries
significantly higher than those in the state sector,
be that in budgeted entities or in enterprises. This
reality, which surprised no one, cannot lead to
stigmatizing self-employed workers or members of
cooperatives, who in their majority have joined the
trade union movement, abide by what has been
established, and fulfill their tax obligations.
Well and good. We are not unaware that this
objective factor adds urgency to the aspirations of
workers in the state sector, contained for years, to
see increases in their income as soon as possible.
We must never forget that the economic system
which will predominate in socialist, independent and
sovereign Cuba will continue to be based on the
ownership, by all of the people, of the fundamental
means of production, and that the state enterprise
is, and will be, the principal actor in the national
economy. The construction of our prosperous and
sustainable socialism depends upon its performance.
Thus, the process of updating our economic and
social model is directed toward creating the
conditions which will allow for a sustained and
justified increase in the income of state sector
workers, while at the same time protecting the
social conquests of the Revolution.
In these circumstances, the role of the Cuban
trade union movement expands, in addition to the
important missions which are its responsibility: on
the one hand, organize, integrate and mobilize
workers in the interest of developing work,
patriotic and moral values; and on the other hand,
representing workers and defending their rights
before the administration, in a climate of
reciprocal high expectations.
To reach this objective, formalisms and the old
mentality which emerged over years of paternalism,
egalitarianism, excessive gratuities and
inappropriate subsidies, must be eliminated from
trade union work. We know that there are magnificent
comrades who are still nostalgic about the past,
when in the most difficult moments during the
beginning of the special period, we found ourselves
obliged to implement emergency solutions;
nevertheless, we must eliminate old habits, and the
psychological barrier associated with them, to
understand that we will never return to that trade
union role as a distributor of incentives of various
kinds.
The CTC and its unions must concentrate on that
which is essential, carrying out activities in the
interest of successfully implementing the Guidelines
and developing broad, differentiated
political-ideological work defending the unity of
Cubans, taking into account that this work is
complicated under conditions in which the non-state
sector of the economy is growing, in which the
methods and work style traditionally used in the
state sector, are not applicable - those which must
also be perfected.
In this context, we must take into account the
urgent necessity of promoting and attracting foreign
investment, in the interest of accelerating the
economic and social development of the country, an
objective toward which we are advancing with the
creation of the Mariel Special Development Zone and
the drafting of a proposed law addressing foreign
investment, which we will submit to the National
Assembly this coming month of March.
Trade union work in joint venture companies, and
in those based on foreign capital, will logically be
differentiated, not in its essence, but yes in the
manner in which it has been carried out to date, and
preparations must be made now for that eventuality.
In particular, it becomes imperative to
strengthen the permanent ties between trade union
cadres and locals, their participation in members’
assemblies and the attention given youth beginning
their working lives – which requires that prior
preparation and knowledge of the concrete situation
in every workplace is assured, in the interest of
having an effect on political-ideological and
productive work with the workers.
It is also essential to ensure ongoing training
and development of trade union cadres in relation to
the content and scope of policies and measures being
adopted within the framework of the implementation
process of the Guidelines, to fully understand new
legislation so that they have the information
required to clarify doubts, supervise
implementation, call attention to any deviation in a
timely fashion and involve the workforce in
practical application.
This line of work takes on greater relevance when
we consider the extent to which the executive
leadership of union locals has been renovated, by
almost 44%, while 35% of general secretaries in
trade union sections and bureaus are new, and 17% of
these are under 30 years of age.
Likewise, since the previous congress, a
significant renovation of the CTC and various
unions’ principal leadership has taken place. Today
joining us is the previous Secretary General,
compañero Salvador Valdés Mesa (applause), who as a
result of his important work was promoted to a vice
presidency of the Council of State, and, as a member
of the Party’s Political Bureau, has remained
well-informed about the development of this event.
At the same time, I believe it is only right to
recognize the energetic work undertaken over the
last eight months, at the forefront of the
Organizing Committee, by compañero Ulises Guilarte
de Nacimiento (applause), who you have elected today
as the CTC’s new Secretary General.
Before closing, I must address the events which
are taking place in the sister Bolivarian Republic
of Venezuela. We have strongly condemned the violent
incidents unleashed by fascist groups, which have
led to deaths, tens of injuries, attacks on public
institutions and destruction. We know, from our own
experience, who is behind them, who finances them
and supports these brutal efforts to overthrow the
constitutional Venezuelan government.
These events confirm that wherever there might be
a government which is not convenient to the
interests of ruling circles in the United States, or
among some of its European allies, it becomes the
target of subversive campaigns. They now use new
subtle, occult methods to undermine, without
renouncing violence, to disturb the peace and
internal order, and prevent governments from
concentrating on the struggle for economic and
social development, if they are not able to
overthrow them.
More than a few examples can be found in
non-conventional war manuals, which were implemented
in various countries of our Latin American and
Caribbean region, as is occurring in Venezuela
today, and some with similar features have been in
evidence on other continents, first in Libya and
currently in Syria and Ukraine. Any one who has
doubts about this, I would invite to leaf through
the U.S. Army Special Forces Unconventional Warfare
Training Manual 18-01, published in November 2010,
entitled Non-conventional War.
Right now in Ukraine alarming events are taking
place. The interference of Western powers must end,
to allow the Ukrainian people to legitimately
exercise their right to self-determination. It must
not be overlooked that these events could have very
serious consequences for international peace and
security.
We have expressed and confirmed here today our
full support for the Bolivarian, Chavista
Revolution, and for compañero Nicolás Maduro
(applause), who with intelligence and firmness has
managed this complex crisis.
We are convinced that the Venezuelan people will
be able to defend their irreversible conquests, the
legacy of President Hugo Chávez and the government
they freely and sovereignly elected, as our
statement indicated this past February 12.
Compañeras and compañeros:
I believe we have held a magnificent workers’
Congress, which has established the direction for
the future of the Cuban trade union movement, since
the questions analyzed directly address the role of
the CTC and its unions in the ideological, political
and economic work of the Revolution. For that reason,
in the name of the Communist Party and the
revolutionary government, I congratulate our working
class and all men and women who have participated
directly in this 20th Congress. (Applause)
In this context, I think it is appropriate to
recall an excerpt from Fidel’s speech concluding the
historic 8th Congress more than 40 years
ago, when he said, I quote, "A point of view is not
be imposed, it is discussed with the workers.
Measures are not implemented by decree, no matter
how just or correct they might be… the fundamental
decisions which affect the lives of our people, must
be discussed with the people, fundamentally with the
workers." End of quote.
Thus, as Fidel taught us, we will continue.
Long live the working class! (Shouts of "Viva!")
Thank you very much (Applause)