Wed Feb 22, 2012 5:25pm GMT
* U.S. food sales to Cuba have fallen by half since 2008
* Economics, not politics, blamed for decline
HAVANA Feb 22 (Reuters) - U.S. agricultural exports to Cuba declined 6
percent last year on top of a 31 percent decline in 2010 as the
Communist-led island's financial woes continued and it turned elsewhere
to buy food, a trade group said on Wednesday.
Cuba, which imports most of its food, gets chicken, corn, soy, wheat,
pork and other products from the United States.
Cuba's food imports topped $1.5 billion in 2011, the government has
reported.
U.S. sales to Cuba have dropped by just over 50 percent since hitting a
peak of $710 million in 2008, the New York-based U.S.-Cuba Trade and
Economic Council said in a report.
The trade council said the reasons for the decline were largely economic
and not political and included Cuba's lack of foreign currency and
better financial terms being offered by a host of countries from Canada,
Brazil and Vietnam to Russia and France.
Cuban President Raul Castro, soon after taking over for his brother
Fidel in 2008, introduced austerity measures, including significant cuts
in imports, in an effort to overcome the country's chronic financial
problems.
Cuba imports between 60 percent and 70 percent of the food it consumes
and Castro has prioritized agricultural reform to increase domestic food
production.
The United States has a 50-year-old trade embargo against its longtime
ideological enemy that prohibits most business between them, but
exemptions are made for agricultural products and medicine for cash.
Despite the embargo, the United States, located just 90 miles (145 km)
to the north, has been one of Cuba's top 10 trading partners for a
number of years. Cuba also ranks as one of the top 50 U.S. agricultural
export markets.
Cuba has purchased more than $3.5 billion in agricultural products from
the United States since trade began in 2001, the council's report said.
(Reporting by Marc Frank; Editing by Kevin Gray and Sandra Maler)
http://af.reuters.com/article/commoditiesNews/idAFN1E81L00S20120222?sp=true
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