Abstract
Cuba's reform and economic opening have been crucial to its post—cold-war survival and the development of a uniquely Cuban socialism. The country has moved from a public-property system to a mixed economy and from a sugar mono-economy to a diversified economy while introducing and increasing foreign investment. The result has been steady increase in growth without the abandonment of socialist principles. Some problems remain to be resolved, however, if Cuba is to rise to prominence in the global order.
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