Abstract

Sugarcane Stalinism: State-Capitalism and Development in Cuba

Highlights

  • “Nations, as well as individuals, cannot escape the imperatives of capital accumulation without abolishing capital.” – Grandizo Munis, “For a Second Communist Manifesto”[1]

  • Though their conclusions are radically different, defenders of both “socialist” and “neither socialist, nor capitalist” theories about Cuba and other statified societies coincide in the view that the nationalization of private enterprises constitutes a partial, or perhaps even wholesale, negation of capitalism and its laws of motion

  • I will argue, that “socialist” Cuba is really a society based on wage labor and capital accumulation

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Summary

Introduction

“Nations, as well as individuals, cannot escape the imperatives of capital accumulation without abolishing capital.” – Grandizo Munis, “For a Second Communist Manifesto”[1].

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