Misplaced Pages

Special Period: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactivelyNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 07:40, 4 September 2005 edit70.22.91.32 (talk)No edit summary  Revision as of 07:44, 4 September 2005 edit undo70.22.91.32 (talk)No edit summaryNext edit →
Line 3: Line 3:
Faced with a near-elimination of imported ] and other ]-based supplies, for example, Cuba closed refineries and factories across the country. Faced with a drying up of ], Cuba began to focus more intensely on cooperation with ]. No longer needing ] as desperately for a ]-- the oil-for-sugar program the Soviets had with Cuba had, of course, dissipated -- Cuba hurriedly diversified its agricultural production, growing things like ] in former ] fields. Faced with a near-elimination of imported ] and other ]-based supplies, for example, Cuba closed refineries and factories across the country. Faced with a drying up of ], Cuba began to focus more intensely on cooperation with ]. No longer needing ] as desperately for a ]-- the oil-for-sugar program the Soviets had with Cuba had, of course, dissipated -- Cuba hurriedly diversified its agricultural production, growing things like ] in former ] fields.


As the country began to visibly recover from the shock of the implosion of their economic underpinning, Fidel gradually told the Cuban people that this "Special Period" was over; that it had succeeded and the country was (relatively) prosperous once again. That was sometime in the first year or two of the 21st Century. Despite his words, far too many common Cubans still feel the pinch of economic ] to really, definitively call the Special Period as having reached its close. As the country began to visibly recover from the shock of the implosion of their economic underpinning, Fidel gradually told the Cuban people that this "Special Period" was over; that it had succeeded and the country was (relatively) prosperous once again. That was sometime in the first year or two of the 21st Century. Despite his words, far too many common Cubans still feel the pinch of continued economic difficulty for any analyst to really, definitively say that the Special Period has reached its close.

Revision as of 07:44, 4 September 2005

The Special Period in Cuba began with the collapse of the Soviet Union and, by extension, the Comecon, which threw the island nation into tremendous poverty and prompted Castro to contract out more lucrative economic and tourism deals with various Western European and South American nations.

Faced with a near-elimination of imported steel and other ore-based supplies, for example, Cuba closed refineries and factories across the country. Faced with a drying up of oil, Cuba began to focus more intensely on cooperation with Venezuela. No longer needing sugar as desperately for a cash crop-- the oil-for-sugar program the Soviets had with Cuba had, of course, dissipated -- Cuba hurriedly diversified its agricultural production, growing things like oranges in former cane fields.

As the country began to visibly recover from the shock of the implosion of their economic underpinning, Fidel gradually told the Cuban people that this "Special Period" was over; that it had succeeded and the country was (relatively) prosperous once again. That was sometime in the first year or two of the 21st Century. Despite his words, far too many common Cubans still feel the pinch of continued economic difficulty for any analyst to really, definitively say that the Special Period has reached its close.