Cuba will allow nationals living abroad to invest in and own businesses on the island, economic czar tells NBC News
Source: NBC News
March 16, 2026, 7:20 AM EDT / Updated March 16, 2026, 9:20 AM EDT
HAVANA Cuban nationals living abroad in places such as Miami will be allowed to invest in the private sector and own businesses in their homeland, the country's economic czar has told NBC News in an exclusive interview.
Oscar Pérez-Oliva Fraga, Cuba's deputy prime minister, said that a "blockade" by the United States is hampering these efforts as the island grapples with an energy crisis, rare violent protests and public pressure from the Trump administration.
Cuba is open to having a fluid commercial relationship with U.S. companies" and "also with Cubans residing in the United States and their descendants," Fraga said in a sit-down in Havana, ahead of announcing the news to his country Monday night.
The interview, his first, comes as Fraga tries to breathe life into Cuba's ailing economy with a series of economic reforms aimed at creating what he called a dynamic business environment. The aim would be to revive a range of sectors, from tourism and mining to fixing and updating the antiquated power grid.
Read more: https://www.nbcnews.com/world/cuba/cuba-allow-nationals-living-abroad-invest-businesses-island-economy-rcna263637
James48
(5,187 posts)Once the greedy rich get in, theyll try and take everything.
Good luck.
BumRushDaShow
(168,945 posts)There are a lot of old-tmers who remember what happened "before", but then they also know that in order to have all those "luxury" resorts and casinos, the developers will need to pay to fix the power grid and transportation infrastructure first.
DFW
(60,094 posts)The Cuban government should restrict this offer to people who are still Cuban citizens. The last thing they need is to have a team of Marco Rubio exile US-born clones swarming down there building up pristine coastlines with McHotels and fast food chains with no respect for the nature they will be destroying, profiting from the venture without setting foot on the island, and without having the slightest sense of responsibility toward the people that will be affected. A few will profit enormously, and the rest will be priced out of their neighborhoods, like Hawai'i and Nantucket. If they allow that to happen, they might as well hold elections to determine who will be the next Fidel.