Cuba

Havana will allow Cubans in Miami, elsewhere to own businesses, trade minister says

Cuba's minister of Foreign Trade and Foreign Investment, Oscar Perez-Oliva Fraga. He also holds the title of vice prime minister,.
Cuba's minister of Foreign Trade and Foreign Investment, Oscar Perez-Oliva Fraga. He also holds the title of vice prime minister,. AFP via Getty Images

After decades of being stripped of many of their rights for leaving the country, Cubans living in Miami and elsewhere will be able to invest and own private businesses on the island, the country’s deputy prime minister said Monday, confirming earlier reporting by the Miami Herald.

Oscar Pérez-Oliva Fraga told NBC News Monday morning that “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.”

“This extends beyond the commercial sphere,” said Pérez-Oliva, who is a grandnephew of Fidel and Raúl Castro and is also Cuba’s minister of foreign trade and investment. “It also applies to investments — not only small investments, but also large investments, particularly in infrastructure.”

On Friday, the Miami Herald reported that Cuban authorities were expected to announce measures leading to an economic opening, including for Cuban nationals abroad to own business on the island. The measure would allow many Cuban Americans to take legal ownership of a large chunk of the sprawling small private enterprises that have flourished on the island that have already been getting funding discreetly from Miami, but are under the names of relatives and friends on the island.

The announcement comes after the island’s hand-picked president, Miguel Díaz-Canel, admitted Friday that Cuba is indeed in talks with the Trump administration, weeks after the Miami Herald broke news that members of Secretary of State Marco Rubio’ s team had met Raúl Castro’s grandson in Saint Kitts in February. The grandson, Raúl Rodriguez Castro, was seated in the audience in a government meeting Friday in which Díaz-Canel first disclosed the talks and as well as later in a press conference the Cuban leader held, even though Rodriguez-Castro has no official title.

A source with knowledge of the conversations who asked not be identified to speak of the sensitive issue said Cuba’s move to allow Cuban Americans to own property and invest on the island — a major concession that Cuban leaders have been resisting for decades — is a direct response to the increasing pressure by the Trump administration to make reforms on the communist-run island.

“This is historical change,” said Hugo Cancio, a Miami businessman and owner of Katapulk, an online supermarket that delivers groceries on the island. Cancio has long advocated for the right of Cubans abroad to take part in the country’s economic life. “That’s been my focus for more than 20 years: explaining to the Cuban government that the diaspora is Cuba’s most important asset, not just because we have the know-how, the capital, but because we need to be part of the Cuban nation and we need to get back those rights we lost when we emigrated.” President Donald Trump has recently insisted he wants “Cuban Americans to be taken care of” in a deal with Cuba and commented on the role he sees the Cuban American community in rebuilding the ailing nation.

“You have a lot of people in this country that want to go back to Cuba and help Cuba,” he said.“They didn’t have anything, and they became very rich people in our country, and they want to very much go back and help Cuba. That’s something that Cuba has that a lot of other places don’t have.”

A hostile relationship

Millions of Cubans have left the island since Fidel Castro took power in 1959, fleeing political repression and poverty. In the 1960s, many left Cuba fearing the firing squads, losing all of their properties as they departed. Others left Cuba as political refugees after serving years in prison. In 1980 more than 125,000 left through the port of Mariel. A decade later around 35,000 made it to the U.S. and the U.S. base in Guantánamo in handmade rafts, a practice that has never fully stopped. It is unknown how many had died on the shark-infested waters of the Florida Straits.

And since 2021, about two million people have left Cuba, in what is believed to be the highest mass exodus in six decades.

During all the time, Cubans living abroad have not been allowed to invest on the emerging private sector nor legally own their own businesses in the country. They also cannot vote.

The hostile relationship between the Cuban government and Cuban migrants is rooted in politics. Since the beginning of Fidel Castro’s revolution, Cubans had few avenues to oppose the government, and instead chose to vote with their feet and leave if they were able to do so.

Castro portrayed Cubans wanting to leave the country as counterrevolutionary and “worms” and prohibited citizens to travel abroad without government authorization. After his brother Raúl Castro took power and eased travel restrictions in 2013, that image faded somewhat, though Cuban leaders are still belligerent in particular about the Cuban-American community in South Florida, which has through the years vocally opposed communism on the island.

The Trump effect

But President Trump appears to have forced Cuban leaders’ hand to welcome back it own people.

Over the past few months, Trump put in place what amounts to an oil blockade, preventing oil from Venezuela, Mexico and other countries to reach the island, finally forcing Cuban leaders to negotiate. In recent days, he has urged Cuban authorities to reach a deal quickly.

“Cuba is a failed nation,” Trump told reporters on Sunday aboard Air Force One. “Cuba also wants to make a deal, and I think we will pretty soon either make a deal or do whatever we have to do.”

On Monday, he told reporters he thought he would have the “honor” of being the president that would “take Cuba.”

“Taking Cuba in some form, whether I free it, take it, I think I could do anything I want with it,” Trump said.

READ MORE: Trump says Cuba ‘not in a hurricane zone.’ He clearly hasn’t done his homework

Cuban officials have said the island has received no oil shipments from three months. The lack of oil has exacerbated the existing problems with Cuba’s crumbling electrical grid and led to nearly constant blackouts all over the island. As a reminder of the challenges ahead, on Monday afternoon Cuba’s power grid collapsed again, leaving the entire country without electricity.

A recyclable materials collector pushes a cart in front of the America Theater in Havana on March 13, 2026. Cuba's President Miguel Diaz-Canel confirmed on March 13, 2026 that "Cuban officials have recently held talks" with representatives of the United States, amid heightened tensions between Washington and Havana.
A recyclable materials collector pushes a cart in front of the America Theater in Havana on March 13, 2026. Cuba's President Miguel Diaz-Canel confirmed on March 13, 2026 that "Cuban officials have recently held talks" with representatives of the United States, amid heightened tensions between Washington and Havana. YAMIL LAGE AFP via Getty Images

According to the NBC report, the deputy prime minister suggested the reforms aim at reviving a range of sectors, from tourism and mining to modernizing the crumbling power grid. Pérez-Oliva is expected to provide more details later this week. Until now, the Cuban government has not allowed private businesses to invest in the country’s infrastructure.

Pérez-Oliva told NBC the U.S. embargo and other U.S. sanctions have made it difficult for the government to reform its economy. If Cubans in Miami – and U.S. companies in general – were to own businesses in Cuba, they would need authorization from the U.S. Treasury and Commerce departments that oversee the enforcement of the U.S. sanctions, which means that, ultimately, it’s in Trump’s hands to decide on whether U.S. capital can flow to Cuba again.

A law Congress passed in 1996, known as Helms-Burton, precludes the president from fully lifting the embargo until a democratically elected government is in place on the island. But the Trump administration can change regulations to ease sanctions in response to economic reforms in Cuba.

Another obstacle for U.S. investments in Cuba: the thousands of property claims by American companies and Cuban Americans whose properties were confiscated by Castro early on without compensation, and that amount to more than $9 billion.

A major roadblock still lies ahead on the Cuban side: Cuba’s legal system and constitution provide little protection for investors and private property. Without such changes, the large Cuban-American fortunes and big American companies are unlikely to invest on the island, several experts and Cuban American businessmen have told the Herald.

Carlos Saladrigas, a Cuban American businessman from Miami and chairman of the Cuba Study Group.
Carlos Saladrigas, a Cuban American businessman from Miami and chairman of the Cuba Study Group. Al Diaz Miami Herald Staff

Carlos Saladrigas, a Cuban American businessman from Miami and chairman of the Cuba Study Group, an influential organization that has supported Cuba’s emerging private sector, called the announcement Monday “a very important step,” but one that would have to go hand-in-hand with major changes both in Cuba and in the U.S. if the island is to attract significant capital.

On the U.S. side, that sort of economic activity, much of it currently prohibited by the embargo, would need to be authorized. The required banking and financial transactions on the U.S. side would need approval as well.

‘Political changes’

On Cuba’s side, the changes will need to be profound, Saladrigas said: “What is needed is the rule of law, sufficient guarantees for investors to prevent arbitrary confiscations, monetary stability, and macroeconomic changes that we are not seeing yet.”

Some of the needed changes are political in nature, he said. “For example, an independent judiciary is an essential change to give investors confidence in the country. That, to me, is a political change. There has to be national peace and harmony. That requires political changes.”

The banking system on the island, in particular, would require major transformations, Cancio said, including the ability for companies to operate in dollars and not in the devalued Cuban peso, and the right to take the profits out of the island.

It is unclear how far Cuban authorities would go in their efforts to reform the country’s economy, which stills follow a centrally planned socialist model that has proved ineffective and unable to sustain the population unless getting help from abroad. On Saturday, Cuba’s foreign minister, Bruno Rodriguez, a hardliner, said talks with the United Stated do not “pertain to domestic affairs, constitutional frameworks, or the political, economic, and social models of the two countries.”

The publication on X, however, was only in Spanish, hinting it might be directed to domestic audiences.

Miami businessman Hugo Cancio owns Katapulk, an online supermarket that delivers groceries on the island.
Miami businessman Hugo Cancio owns Katapulk, an online supermarket that delivers groceries on the island. YAMIL LAGE AFP via Getty Images

Cancio urged Cuban leaders to change their mentality and realize that Cubans from Miami “are not just arriving with a check, but with our values, our principles, our convictions, our political philosophy.”

The Cuban government, he added, needs to “understand that we can have differences in that sense and we can disagree on political issues and respect each other’s criteria. It’s not that we are going to go with a check, and then we will be expected to get in line with their system, otherwise, the business is not approved.”

Cancio acknowledged much remains up in the air, there is suspicion on both sides and much work needs to be done to ensure that “we Cubans can return with all the necessary guarantees,” he said.

“But we have to start somewhere.”

This story was originally published March 16, 2026 at 10:36 AM.

Nora Gámez Torres
el Nuevo Herald
Nora Gámez Torres is the Cuba/U.S.-Latin American policy reporter for el Nuevo Herald and the Miami Herald. She studied journalism and media and communications in Havana and London. She holds a Ph.D. in sociology from City, University of London. Her work has won awards by the Florida Society of News Editors and the Society for Professional Journalists. For her “fair, accurate and groundbreaking journalism,” she was awarded the Maria Moors Cabot Prize in 2025 — the most prestigious award for coverage of the Americas.//Nora Gámez Torres estudió periodismo y comunicación en La Habana y Londres. Tiene un doctorado en sociología y desde el 2014 cubre temas cubanos para el Nuevo Herald y el Miami Herald. También reporta sobre la política de Estados Unidos hacia América Latina. Su trabajo ha sido reconocido con premios de Florida Society of News Editors y Society for Profesional Journalists. Por su “periodismo justo, certero e innovador”, fue galardonada con el Premio Maria Moors Cabot en 2025 —el premio más prestigioso a la cobertura de las Américas.
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