Cuba Seminars: 2005
SPECIAL PANEL
2005: A Turning Point for the Cuban Economy
Emily Morris
Senior Economist/Analyst
The Economist
Moderator
Mauricio Font
Director of The Bildner Center for Western Hemisphere Studies
Recent improvements in Cuba's external financing position
have altered the conditions under which the Cuban economy operates,
created new possibilities, and started a transformation of the economy's
structure. What is the nature of this transformation, and what does
it mean for the economy outlook in the medium term?
Emily Morris is a senior economist/analyst
at the Economist Intelligence Unit in London. Her specialty is Latin
America. She has worked at the EIU for ten years. Previously she was
lecturer in development economics at the University of London's School
of Oriental and African Studies. At the EIU she is responsible for the
coverage of Cuba and Brazil, producing monthly economic forecasts, quarterly
Country Reports, Country Risk Service reports and annual Country Profiles.
She also mantains EIU's model of the Cuban economy (integrated with
its global economic model). She has a Bachelor degree in Economics from
the University of Sussex, a Master from Middlesex University, and is
working on a Ph.D. dissertation on Cuban economic policy since 1990
in a comparative context.
When: Tuesday, June 7, 2005, 7:00 p.m.
Where: Martin E. Segal Theatre, First Floor
The Graduate Center, City University of New York
365 Fifth Avenue (Between 34th and 35th Streets).
To reserve, please send email to cubaproject@gc.cuny.edu.
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