Study: U.S. loses money on Cuba sanctions
HAVANA, Cuba (AP) --With pressure building to open up U.S.-Cuba trade,
a
leading anti-embargo group on Monday reported that U.S. farmers lose
an estimated
$1.24 billion annually because of sanctions against this communist
country.
A study commissioned by the Washington-based Cuba Policy Foundation
estimated
that America is missing out on up to $3.6 billion more in related economic
activity
because of the 40-year-old U.S. embargo.
"Isolation has not led to reform and it's costing farmers and drug companies
that
want to do business," said Sally Grooms Cowal, foundation president
and the former
U.S. diplomat who housed the Cuban boy Elian Gonzalez during the last
part of his
stay in America.
"This study should encourage Congress to take some steps if only to
help out
American farmers," Cowal said by telephone on Sunday.
Established last year, the foundation describes itself as a nonpartisan,
centrist
organization that believes changing America's Cold War era policies
toward Cuba are
in the U.S. national interest. Foundation leaders say ending U.S. trade
and travel
restrictions could stimulate democratic reform in this still closed
society.
Grooms is among hundreds of American policy makers and business people
who
have traveled to Cuba in the past month to explore possibilities for
rapprochement
between the two countries, which have had no diplomatic relations for
four decades.
The recent arrival here of ships laden with American wheat, rice, corn
and poultry
have whetted the appetites of Cuban officials and U.S. farm groups
for increased
agricultural trade. Continuing through the end of February, the deliveries
are the first
direct commercial sales of U.S. agricultural products to Cuba in nearly
four decades.
Cuba agreed to buy the American food to replenish its reserves after
Hurricane
Michelle struck the island in early November. Previously, Cuban officials
had
refused to buy any food under a U.S. law that went into effect in 2000,
saying that
restrictions on American financing were insulting.
But Cuba now says it may buy more food if it gets more encouraging signs
from
Washington.
The foundation hopes the study's findings will help increase momentum
on Capitol
Hill to change policies and give Cuba the signs it is looking for.
Cowal said that removing the existing U.S. ban on travel by Americans
to Cuba will
be as important as easing trade policies.
"If we flood Cuba with Americans, we flood Cuba with American and democratic
values," said Cowal. "(Current President) George Bush has said many
times that free
trade leads to democracy."
A former career diplomat who was ambassador to Trinidad and Tobago under
President Bush's father, Cowal noted that the U.S. government never
barred
Americans from traveling to the former Soviet Union.
"I'm optimistic that Congress will vote to lift the travel ban this year," said Cowal.
"If the embargo were lifted, the average American farmer would feel
a difference in
his or her life within two to three years," the report's co-author,
C. Parr Rosson,
professor of agricultural economics at Texas A&M University, said
in a statement
that the foundation released with an advance copy of the report.
Rosson conducted the study, "Economic Impacts of U.S. Agricultural Exports
to
Cuba," with his colleague at Texas A&M, Flynn Adcock.
Copyright 2002 The Associated Press