<p>Cuba said late on Thursday it would start its long-awaited monetary reform in January, eliminating its dual currency and labyrinthine multiple exchange rate system in a bid to improve business conditions in the crisis-stricken economy.</p>.<p>In a televised address to the nation, President Miguel Diaz-Canel said the Cuban peso would be fixed at a single exchange rate of 24 per dollar in the first devaluation of the peso since the country's 1959 revolution.</p>.<p>"We consider the conditions have been created to enable us to announce the start of the task of (monetary) ordering from Jan. 1," said Diaz-Canel, sitting next to Cuban Communist Party chief Raul Castro.</p>.<p>For more than three decades, two currencies have circulated in Cuba's state-run economy: the peso and the convertible peso (CUC), pegged to the dollar.</p>.<p>These have been exchanged at various rates: 1 to 1 for state-owned businesses, 24 pesos for 1 CUC for the public and others for joint ventures, wages in the island’s special development zone, and transactions between farmers and hotels.</p>.<p>The government has said it will eliminate the CUC as part of the currency reform, although Diaz-Canel did not refer explicitly to it on Thursday, simply saying there would be just one exchange rate from January of 24 pesos per dollar.</p>.<p>Economists say the reform spells short-term pain for Cubans but is important in the long-term as varying exchange rates have obscured the real functioning of the economy and effectively subsidized some sectors.</p>.<p>Diaz-Canel said it was no "magic solution" to the cash-strapped country's economic problems.</p>.<p>"However it will favor the creation of the necessary conditions to advance in a more solid manner," he said.</p>.<p>Economists expect triple-digit inflation, and government announcements in recent months suggest it does too. It has said the initial devaluation will be accompanied by a five-fold increase in average state wages and pensions even as many state-controlled prices are increased or allowed to respond to demand.</p>.<p>But the wage increase does not apply to around two million of the seven million-plus labor force in the private sector, informal sector or those who simply do not work.</p>.<p>"The task is not void of risks," said Diaz-Canel, saying it was one of the most complex challenges the country had faced but promising that "no one will be left destitute".</p>.<p>Those who raised prices unduly would face severe sanctions, he said.</p>.<p>The government has said some companies will be given a year to get their books in order before ending subsidies, and it will continue to provide universal and free healthcare and education, some subsidized food, and other social gratuities.</p>.<p>Cuban economists estimate around 40% of state companies operate at a loss and though some will benefit from the monetary reform, such as those tied to the export sector, others will fail.</p>
<p>Cuba said late on Thursday it would start its long-awaited monetary reform in January, eliminating its dual currency and labyrinthine multiple exchange rate system in a bid to improve business conditions in the crisis-stricken economy.</p>.<p>In a televised address to the nation, President Miguel Diaz-Canel said the Cuban peso would be fixed at a single exchange rate of 24 per dollar in the first devaluation of the peso since the country's 1959 revolution.</p>.<p>"We consider the conditions have been created to enable us to announce the start of the task of (monetary) ordering from Jan. 1," said Diaz-Canel, sitting next to Cuban Communist Party chief Raul Castro.</p>.<p>For more than three decades, two currencies have circulated in Cuba's state-run economy: the peso and the convertible peso (CUC), pegged to the dollar.</p>.<p>These have been exchanged at various rates: 1 to 1 for state-owned businesses, 24 pesos for 1 CUC for the public and others for joint ventures, wages in the island’s special development zone, and transactions between farmers and hotels.</p>.<p>The government has said it will eliminate the CUC as part of the currency reform, although Diaz-Canel did not refer explicitly to it on Thursday, simply saying there would be just one exchange rate from January of 24 pesos per dollar.</p>.<p>Economists say the reform spells short-term pain for Cubans but is important in the long-term as varying exchange rates have obscured the real functioning of the economy and effectively subsidized some sectors.</p>.<p>Diaz-Canel said it was no "magic solution" to the cash-strapped country's economic problems.</p>.<p>"However it will favor the creation of the necessary conditions to advance in a more solid manner," he said.</p>.<p>Economists expect triple-digit inflation, and government announcements in recent months suggest it does too. It has said the initial devaluation will be accompanied by a five-fold increase in average state wages and pensions even as many state-controlled prices are increased or allowed to respond to demand.</p>.<p>But the wage increase does not apply to around two million of the seven million-plus labor force in the private sector, informal sector or those who simply do not work.</p>.<p>"The task is not void of risks," said Diaz-Canel, saying it was one of the most complex challenges the country had faced but promising that "no one will be left destitute".</p>.<p>Those who raised prices unduly would face severe sanctions, he said.</p>.<p>The government has said some companies will be given a year to get their books in order before ending subsidies, and it will continue to provide universal and free healthcare and education, some subsidized food, and other social gratuities.</p>.<p>Cuban economists estimate around 40% of state companies operate at a loss and though some will benefit from the monetary reform, such as those tied to the export sector, others will fail.</p>