This isn’t meant to be a discussion on the morality of the embargo, but the affects of the embargo ending for both countries. These affects can be political, economic, or social.

  • @[email protected]
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    3 months ago

    It’s a small economic quirk, but I imagine many Cubans would be selling their old American cars to collectors State-side for a quick cash influx.

    And Americans would be eager to travel to Cuba for tropical tourism. That feels like a longer lasting economic change.

    Of course there’d be a bubble market on Cuban cigars that would arise, climb, then settle as the demand declines as the idea of a Cuban cigar becomes more normalized.

    I’ve heard Cuba has some novel treatments for lung cancer. I imagine there’d be a market for medical tourism that would emerge from that, as I sincerely doubt the FDA would evaluate and approve a foreign treatment created under a Communist government with any haste.

    • @[email protected]
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      473 months ago

      I was curious about that lung cancer treatment and found this Snopes article. Sounds like in Cuba it’s demonstrated that it can add several months to some people’s lives after they’re diagnosed with lung cancer. Phase II clinical trials are underway in the US as of last year, and preliminary results show particular success in combination with other existing treatments. They’ve expanded the trial to cover some other forms of cancer too

      • @[email protected]
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        123 months ago

        I think that largely depends on how easy it becomes for Americans to travel to Cuba. I imagine there’d be a bubble for most economic exchanges in the get go, but after it would normalize more.

        I’m not really sure what constitutes “big” or how large the medical tourism industry is, say, between Mexico and the US, but I know it exists.

        I’ve heard that Cuban healthcare is very good, but I’m unsure how accessible it would be to Americans. Being an American, I really don’t know much about Cuba… but I’ve heard a few general things.

  • @[email protected]
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    3 months ago

    Same thing that would happen if sanctions on Afghanistan were lifted. Regular people’s lives would improve as the country could import what they need. Cuba is really lacking in cement and medical supplies for example iirc (though their medical system and education is world-class), and they can’t import them cuz of the embargo.

    Obviously not much would change in the US, aside from some people realizing socialism isn’t too bad when you’re not a tiny country sanctioned and blockaded by the most war-mongering nation in the world.

  • ReallyKinda
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    3 months ago

    The US economy is so gigantic compared to Cuba’s that I don’t see it changing much at all for the US—maybe some medical advancements. For Cuba it would mean being able to acquire goods at more reasonable rates and probably a much bigger tourist trade if they’re not careful. Edit and better internet, I hear that’s important.

  • @xmunk
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    163 months ago

    They’d both suddenly benefit… the impact on America would be pretty minimal economically simply due to scale but it probably would improve health by moving us partially off corn syrup. And for Cuba it’d end decades of arbitrary economic kneecapping by the US. Tourism would probably explode since it’d be a shorter flight than cancun from the east coast and, y’know, not fucking Florida.

    • @ricecake
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      103 months ago

      I don’t think it would have any significant impact on corn syrup usage.
      The US already produces about nine times more sugar cane than Cuba does. We also import it from countries like Brazil and the other Caribbean islands.

      Our usage of corn syrup is because it’s very cheap to begin with, and for various reasons it’s desirable to keep food production, including corn, higher than demand would normally require.
      That has one effect of further lowering the price of corn syrup.

      The only thing that’ll get us to cut back the amount of corn syrup in foods is the (slow) growing trend of consumers preferring foods that don’t have added sugar, which would also preclude cane sugar.

      • @[email protected]
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        33 months ago

        Corn syrup is mainly cheap because of the huge subsidies, putting that money to better use supporting veggie or fruit production would make us all a lot healthier

        • @ricecake
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          03 months ago

          It’ll still be cheap and easy to use without the subsidies, since it’s not like we’re going to stop growing the corn even if it’s more expensive. Lowering the price of healthier foods will do a lot of good, but there’s also the part where people need to change their tastes.
          We just like food that’s too sweet.

    • SeaJ
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      13 months ago

      Moving from corn syrup to cane sugar in similar amounts is not really a health win. The make up of HFCS is not significantly different from came sugar. We just need to eat less sugars overall.

      • @xmunk
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        13 months ago

        No and yes - we do need less sugar in things and that will be more impactful overall but HFCS is just plain worse in sweetening efficiency.

        • SeaJ
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          23 months ago

          In terms of sweetening efficiency, HFCS is going to be sweeter in the same amounts because fructose is sweeter than glucose. HFCS generally consists of 55% fructose and 42% glucose while cane sugar is 50/50. They do metabolize slightly differently due to the slightly different makeup though. I know HFCS has become a boogeyman but the real issue is sugar in general. How cheap HFCS is due to corn subsidies and sugar tariffs causes it to be in damn near everything in large amounts. Try doing a month without added sugar in your meals and see how few options you actually have. It was pretty damn difficult when I did it and I live in a large city.

  • @[email protected]
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    123 months ago

    realisticly, i dont think much outside of trade restrictions to cuba would help them. politically on the states side whichever party removes it loses a lot of Cuban voters who migrated to Florida who are in the camp of not liking Cuba. can potentially turn the state the other parties color goven how swingstatey Florida is on its own.

    • HobbitFoot OP
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      183 months ago

      Florida has already gone pretty Republican, so I don’t imagine that changing.

    • @wildbus8979
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      123 months ago

      You don’t think trade with the world’s biggest economy and closest physical neighbor would have much of anmeffect?

      • @[email protected]
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        73 months ago

        not saying trade wont have an effect, its just definitely on one side, it would be minimal, and Cuba for sure would benefit (heavily) from not having import restrictions. Relationships between the twp countries at least immediately, would not change.

        • @wildbus8979
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          103 months ago

          Right.

          That said, Cuba doesn’t really have import restriction, it’s the US has export restrictions.

          • @[email protected]
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            3 months ago

            yeah effectively the same if its in context of just the two countries i guess. Regardless, Cuba has a lot to gain on being able to trade for cheap produce made in the U.S, and at least, have another large country to compete for sales outside of Brazil (whose fast tracked into being virtually the largest agrarian society these days)

            the end result is basically Cuban Tourism goes up, U.S exports to Cuba drives food prices down.

            • @ricecake
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              23 months ago

              The food prices falling might actually result in a net negative impact on their economy.
              If local producers can’t viably compete with aggressively low priced American crops, they’ll lose out heavily.

              On the whole, the tourism will probably bring in a lot of money, but a good chunk of it would leave the island immediately, and they’d have to wrangle a flood of goods they didn’t have to compete with before.
              (A lot of Caribbean islands end up in situations where the major tourist hubs are owned by American companies that pay locals as little as possible and then ship the profits back to the US. So the island just sees the benefit of 40 jobs, not 200 high paying tourists a month)

              • @[email protected]
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                23 months ago

                the type of crops cuba grows arent the main exports that the U.S typically goes through. iirc theyre big on sugarcane and rice, neither of which are major US exports reletive to the global scale of exports.

                at worst, the citrus market in cuba crumbles, but thats less significant than the above two.

                • @[email protected]
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                  3 months ago

                  You are comparing apples to apples but I think there is an issue of scale. It’s like the apples that are produced by the tree out back (Cuba) vs the apples that are produced by the little stand the vineyard keeps for their fall cider (US). I don’t have a lot of fruit trees out back so the couple basket fulls that apple tree produces is a huge portion of my fruit production but the vineyard’s couple ton of apples is only a small portion of their fruit production.

                  For rice, the largest rice crop Cuba has ever produced in a single season is estimated to be 465k tons in 03/04. The US produced 11m tons and exported 3m tons of rice last year.

                  Edit: overstated US rice production do to not noticing a unit difference.

                • @ricecake
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                  13 months ago

                  We actually export a huge amount of rice. https://fas.usda.gov/data/commodities/rice (3 million tons exported, to Cuba’s 200k total production). We’re actually the fifth largest exporter.
                  We also produce more sugar cane, but Brazil is the real power player there.

                  Cuba wouldn’t be alone in being injured by US agricultural exports. Our volume and low cost can, for example, make people prefer imported American grains over domestic production, even if they’re different types.

          • @[email protected]
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            3 months ago

            Not exactly.

            Any ship that docks in Cuba is barred entry to US ports in the next 180 days.

            The US can also sanction foriegn companies that trade with Cuba.

            It’s not a blockade but it has a chilling effect on trade.

    • HobbitFoot OP
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      133 months ago

      I wonder how many poor retirees would consider it if the options are living in a modest apartment in Cuba surrounded by a great health care system versus shitting in a bucket in a van down by the river.

    • tryplot
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      53 months ago

      probably, just look at how many people are retiring to Vietnam.

  • Dr. Wesker
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    83 months ago

    I have no idea, but I’d be stocking up on cigars like a motherfuck. Trump putting the kibosh on bringing Cuban cigars back into the US still chaps my ass.

  • SSJ2Marx [he/him]
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    3 months ago

    Vietnam was embargoed until the 90s, and dropping it basically allowed the soft power of the US to do it’s thing. 'Nam isn’t really an ally of the US, they consider themselves neutral, but they’re undeniably very friendly. I suspect that a generation of trade and tourism could do the same to our relationship with Cuba and might result in softening attitudes among Cuban-Americans as they reestablish contact with their families and reconcile lingering animosity from the revolution.

    I think this would also work for the DPRK, Iran, and others. Trade is really nice and children are rarely willing to carry the grudges of their parents.

  • sylver_dragon
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    63 months ago

    For the US, the change would be minimal. The economy of Cuba is so small by comparison and they don’t have a heavy industry or tech sector to offer much to the US economy. Most outflows of money would likely be in tourism by US citizens to Cuba. And maybe some businesses would find ways to offshore some work. But again, I think the overall impact would be small.

    As for Cuba, it really depends on the Cuban Government. Trade with the US and tourism are likely to have a much larger impact (as a percentage of GDP) on Cuba. The country could well see a sizeable influx of foreign cash. Managed well, this could create a lot of opportunity for the Cuban people. Managed by a corrupt regime, intent on enriching itself and it’s friends, this could lead to the same type of misery which usually results from corrupt government.

    • @[email protected]
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      13 months ago

      For the US, the change would be minimal.

      If you ignore the fact that it’d probably be cheaper to fly to Cuba to receive medical treatment than to pay for a hospital in the US, sure.

  • @[email protected]
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    63 months ago

    Significant improvement in the quality of life of Cubans. Probably also increase US tourism to Cuba. Not sure if it would have any real impact on the average US citizen.

    • HobbitFoot OP
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      43 months ago

      Some have mentioned medical tourism. Could an industry grow around that? Would American insurance programs start covering work done in Cuba?

  • @[email protected]
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    43 months ago

    Does Desi Arnaz (a Cuban) and Lucille Ball (an American) have to do with this subject?

    If not, then I probably brought it up out of nowhere because I watched I Love Lucy before.