Castro presents grim portrait of reforms


Associated Press

HAVANA

Cuban President Raul Castro delivered a grim report on the state of the country Saturday, acknowledging that the communist bureaucracy he oversees has failed to implement most of the hundreds of changes launched five years ago to stimulate the stagnant centrally controlled economy.

In a two-hour address to the twice-a-decade meeting of the Cuban Communist Party, Castro praised a new era of detente with the U.S. and an ensuing boom in tourism.

He lamented that his government remained unable to address a series of deeper structural problems that have left millions of Cubans struggling to feed their families.

Cuba remains saddled by an overdependence on imports, slow growth, a byzantine double currency system, insufficient agricultural production and an inability or unwillingness among state employees to enact guidelines for change approved at the last party congress.

Castro cited a government statistic that only 21 percent of the 313 guidelines approved in 2011 have been carried out.