Good news for Cubans! For the first time since the 1959 revolution, residents of the communistical republic are now able to buy new cars without getting direct - and seldom-granted - permission from the government.
Move to Cuba, buy a Peugeot for £160,000,Cuba Marca Record en Abuso, Peugeot 508 en US$262,000
Bad news for Cubans! Turns out the state monopoly on car sales - and the subsequent mark-up - means prices for something ordinary like, say, a Peugeot 508 aren't what you'd call cheap.
They are what you'd call £160,337. For a car that, in Britain, starts at £19,300. Sticker prices for the initial flurry of foreign second-hand cars suggests that they're no cheaper, either.
A 2009 Hyundai Santa Fe? £55,000. 2008 Suzuki Jimny? £42,200. 2008
Citroen C3? £28,150. The average monthly wage in Cuba, where four out of
five of people work for the state, is 20 US dollars. Or about 12
British pounds. Which, even if you saved every penny, means it'd just
take you just over 1000 years to afford that Peugeot 508. The Peugeot
508 isn't that nice.
The government claims that some
profits from selling the cars will be placed in a special fund to
develop the country's decrepit public transport. But with prices set
this high, and slow reforms to a private initiative, the American and
former Eastern Bloc relics populating the country's roads will remain
for a few years yet.