By AFPRelaxnews | Sep 16, 2024
According to the US-Cuba Trade and Economic Council, a New York-based chamber of commerce, $35 million worth of cars were imported from the United States in the first half of this year
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Tens of thousands of vintage cars—gas-guzzlers older than the average inhabitant—still circulate in Cuba, where many make a living as mechanics keeping the old engines running.
Image: Yamil Lage / AFP©[/CAPTION]
Brand new Mercedes, state-of-the-art 4x4s, even Teslas: high-end, modern cars have started appearing in Havana, a city whose image is intricately linked to the classic American sedans and Soviet-era Ladas that cruise its streets.
The influx has come despite a biting economic crisis on the communist island, where the average monthly wage is $42 and the vast majority of Cubans struggle to get from point A to B due to a public transport system crippled by shortages of parts and fuel.
_RSS_Few can afford a car, never mind a new one.
But for private companies, authorized in Cuba only in 2021, the government last year eased restrictions on the importation of foreign vehicles previously subjected to exorbitant taxes and customs duties.
"Cuba needs new cars to achieve environmental goals. It must be done now," said 56-year-old Julio Alvarez, the owner of a tourist transport company who himself recently purchased a Chinese SUV of the Dongfeng brand.
The sleek new black machine has joined the 15 old but brightly-colored Chevrolets Alvarez has in his garage—including a 1955 Bel Air and a 1938 van, treasured heirlooms which shine as if they had just left the factory.
According to the US-Cuba Trade and Economic Council, a New York-based chamber of commerce, $35 million worth of cars were imported from the United States in the first half of this year -- three times more than in 2023 as a whole.
The figure is expected to rise as the government in Havana is set to approve a law later this year making it easier for individuals to import foreign vehicles as well.
Tens of thousands of vintage cars—gas-guzzlers older than the average inhabitant—still circulate in Cuba, where many make a living as mechanics keeping the old engines running.
The American sedans, many of them Chevrolets, are most often used as taxis and for tourism -- a major part of the attraction for visitors who photograph them and buy postcards bearing their colorful image.
The most ubiquitous group of cars date from the Soviet era—mainly of the Lada and Moskvitch brands.
But in the past 18 months, Cubans—especially in Havana—have seen a sudden influx of SUVs, 4x4s and pickup trucks from Japan, South Korea, China and the United States.
The country of 10 million people has a total car fleet of about 600,000.