The lack of hard currency and needed equipment is making the situation even worse without agricultural supplies like insecticides and fertilizers, said Ricardo Torres, an economist at American University in Washington.
Rationed food kept Cubans fed during the Cold War. Today an economic crisis has them hungry
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“We see it as a great opportunity,” says Torres, 25, who co-founded a store and workshop named Ama, which has a cafeteria and employs 12 people.
Cuban entrepreneurs get business training from the U.S., and hope that Biden lifts sanctions
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