Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Cuba’s pioneers of capitalism: Marcus Lemonis goes to Havana
Cuba’s pioneers of capitalism: Marcus Lemonis goes to Havana
Dec 13, 2025 2:39 AM

Although theCuban people continue tosuffer and struggle under the weight munist rule, many have been encouraged by even the slightest of Raul Castro’s incremental changes toward private businesses.

Out of a total population of roughly 11 million, the number of self-employed Cubans rose from 150,000 to 500,000 between 2010 and 2015. The state still controls the press, the internet, and most of the “formal” economy, but a small portion of the Cuban population is finally gaining the freedom to innovate and create on their own.

To explore that shiftfirsthand, entrepreneur and investor Marcus Lemonis recently visited the countryto film a special edition of CNBC’s The Profit — walking the streets of Havana and talking one-on-one with the country’s “pioneers of capitalism.”

“Walking around the old city, I saw a place full of life, energized by the changes,” Lemonis says. “Instead of working for the State, thousands of Cubans are now working for themselves…A taste of capitalism has helped, but it’s just a taste.”

You can watch the first segment here (or see the full thing on-demand):

In a typical episode of The Profit, Lemonis seeks to save a failing business by investing his own capital and expertise, demonstrating principles of good businessand theglories of entrepreneurship along the way. Here, his task is somewhat the opposite: Talk to business owners who are somehow managing to succeed, even despite the obstacles and oppression that surrounds them.

After hitching a ride from a private taxi driver (who likely earns more than most doctors),Lemonis visits Burner Brothers Bakery, whose owners, siblings Sandra and Tony Camacho Rodriguez, left their government jobs in dentistry and mechanical engineering because selling donuts made them more money. “The reason why I see an opportunity here is because it isn’t easy,” Tony says. “If it were easy…you know how many people would have opened a bakery?”

Even amid their success, however, the owners continue to face unique obstacles and risks. They are limited to having only 50 seats and one location, despite their tremendous growth. Key ingredients like chocolate are never reliably available due to shortages from the government-controlled supply chain. And, as with any business inCuba, there is always the chance that the government will suddenly decide to shut you down.

“People probably think, ‘oh this is just a bakery,’” Lemonis concludes. “No. This happens to be thriving entrepreneurship in the face of very strong headwinds of regulation. They weren’t taught this. They didn’t go to school for this.”

From there, he visits Kirenia Reguera, a seamstress who runs a fashion and costume pany out of her apartment, reliant on the black market for basic materials and unable to open her own store due to a range of government obstacles. He then talks with Sandra Aldama, a former hairdresser who started her own handmade soap business, and restaurateur Enrique Nuñez, who, after decades of success, longs for an economy where all Cubans can enjoy both his food and the economic opportunities he’s enjoyed.

He also meets successful vegetable farmer Fernando Funes Monzote, a former professor and “pure socialist” who, despite his continued embrace munist ideology, finds no irony in exploiting a government opening in agriculture and living in an extravagant house — funded, we learn, by his lecture gigs around the world (and the freedom to do so).

To more fully grasp the backdrop of all this, Lemonis chats with American professor Ted Henken, author ofEntrepreneurial Cuba: The Changing Policy Landscape. Henken summarizes the changes as follows:

The changes have been significant but woefully insufficient…You get housing, you get education, you get healthcare, and you get a job. So there’s a basic bottom below which people aren’t allowed to sink. But that bottom has e frayed. It has lots of holes in it.

One of the reasons why the state is providing more economic freedom is it needs to relieve itself of the burden of providing for people…They want to be connected to the rest of the world. They want to have opportunity now, especially young people. They don’t want to have the same problem their parents did: waiting for the future e and it never arrives.

The episode was filmed before Fidel Castro’s death, an event that has pounded Cubans’ hope for a greater shift toward freedom. The country continues to struggle, but as Lemonis’ journey aptly illustrates, the Cuban people are most certainly not the problem. They are the solution.

“Cuba stands at a moment of possibility,” Lemonis concludes. “Tensions with the U.S. have been eased. The people I met are hungry for the chance to rise or fall on their own. But make no mistake, their fate may rest less in their hands than in those of their government.”

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Explainer: What You Should Know About Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s Senate Hearings
What just happened? On Tuesday, Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg gave testimony (though not officially under oath) before a joint hearing of the Senate Judiciary and Senate Commerce, Science, and mittees. On Wednesday, Zuckerberg testified at a second hearing before the House Energy and Commerce Committee. He was asked to appear before Congress to discuss such issues as data privacy and Russian use of his social network to meddle in the 2016 election. Why is Facebook and Zuckerberg now...
The Social Capital Index: A geography of ‘associational life’ in America
In recent decades, America has experienced a wave of economic and social disruption. In our search for solutions, however, we tend to look only at the surface, assessing the architecture of particular policies or stroking our chins over economic measurements like Gross Domestic Product. But what if we had a deeper view of the dynamics beneath the surface? What if we had way to measure, assess, and observe the state of“associational life”in America (as Alexis de Tocqueville may have called...
Virtues, once again
“Crisis of Responsibility: Our Cultural Addiction to Blame and How You Can Cure It,” by David L. Bahnsen; Foreward by David French; PostHill Press, 2018; 170 pp.; $26. It’s been a long, hard slog on humanity’s path to the current century and its peculiar predicaments. Along the way, there have been numerous guidebooks to assist our respective generations’ quests for living honorable lives in the face of varyingly difficult circumstances. To list them, in fact, would create a magnificent bibliography...
Radio Free Acton: Discussion on Communism in Cuba; Tech & work part II: Growing technology in agriculture
On this episode of Radio Free Acton, Acton’s director of programs and education, Paul Bonicelli, talks to John Suarez, research director at the Center for a Free Cuba. This talk is a preview of an ing event at Acton on April 17: Communism in Cuba, its international impact, the democratic resistance and U.S. Cuba policy. Then, on the next Tech and the Future of Work segment, Dan Churchwell, Acton’s associate director of program outreach, speaks with Kevin Scott, a soybean...
Is there a connection between opioid use and unemployment?
For the past several years the U.S. has been undergoing an opioid epidemic. Opioidsare drugs, whether illegal or prescription, that reduce the intensity of pain signals reaching the brain and affect those brain areas controlling emotion, which diminishes the effects of a painful stimulus. According to the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), in 2013 there were more than249 million prescriptionsfor opioid pain medication written by healthcare providers. This is enough for every adult in America to have a bottle of...
Remember the intangibles: A caution to the 21st-century economist
Today’s economists have no shortage of confidence, offering models and measurements aplenty. But are the tools of the field keeping pace with the actual forces and factors at work? bination of economics with statistics in plex world promises a lot more than it delivers,” economist Russ Roberts recently wrote. “We economists should be more humble and honest about the reliability and precision of statistical analysis.” Indeed, in our plex economy, what can economists actually know? In a new essay at...
Fifty years later, cities still suffer the economic effects of the 1968 riots
This month marks the 50th anniversary of the riots that began in 1968 after the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. The riots—sometimes referred to as the Holy Week Uprising or King assassination riots—spread through 110 cities across the United States. As historian Peter B. Levy notes, Fifty-four cities suffered at least $100,000 in property damage, with the nation’s capital and Baltimore topping the list at approximately $15 million and $12 million, respectively. Thousands of small shopkeepers saw their...
Cronyism fueled the murder of a Slovak journalist
“Slovakia has been living through one of the most turbulent times in its young history,” says Martina Bobulová in this week’s Acton Commentary. “It has been almost a month since the murder of investigative journalist Ján Kuciak and his fiancée, Martina Kušnírová, which have put these events in motion.” Much has changed in past four weeks – the nation went to the streets and the country experienced the biggest public protests since the Velvet Revolution in 1989. Robert Fico’s third...
Video: Dispelling myths about economic inequality
The lure of socialism lies in its promise of “equality,” a hazily defined concept that educational and political leaders transform into an even more ambiguous social goal. The word itself triggers the innate sense of fairness and equity cherished by everyone raised under the influence of Western culture. The Bible, after all, repeatedly warns believers to have no respect of persons when meting out justice, which Aquinas ranked as “foremost among all the moral virtues.” But do modern-day social engineers...
How growth rates affect the wealth of nations
Note: This is post #74 in a weekly video series on basic economics. In the previous video in this series we learned a basic fact of economic wealth—that countries can vary widely in standard of living. How can we explain wealth disparities between countries? The answer, as Alex Tabarrok of Marginal Revolution university explains, is growth rates. Tabarrok examines the growth rate of the U.S. economy and considers what would life be like if our economy had grown at an...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved