ASCE Mission Statement
The Association for the Study of the Cuban Economy (ASCE) is a non-profit,
non-political organization incorporated in the state of Maryland. At
the time of its founding, in 1990, its most important goals were to
study the elements and processes involved in the expected transition
of Cuba to a free-market economy and a democratic society, as well as
to promote scholarship, research, and publications on economic studies
by its members. This remains its basic charter, but ASCE also pursues
the study of the Cuban economy in a broad sense, with particular emphasis
on the financial, economic, social, legal and environmental aspects
of Cuba as it is today and its process of transition.
Affiliated with the American Economic Association and the Allied Social
Sciences Association of the United States, ASCE maintains professional
contacts with economists inside Cuba -- whether independent or associated
with the Cuban government -- who are interested in engaging in scholarly
discussion and research.
Board of Directors
A Board of Directors, elected by the membership for a two-year period,
meets monthly, usually the second Tuesday. Its officers, who reside
in different cities of the United States, serve in a pro-bono, voluntary
capacity. Since ASCE's inception, Board positions have been occupied
by individuals from academia, government service, law firms, multilateral
organizations and business enterprises. (See current Board of Directors).
Activities
ASCE's activities have been traditionally financed through annual membership
fees, the sale of publications and sponsorship by universities, private
corporations and individual sponsors. During its first sixteenth years
of existence, the Association's principal activity has been its Annual
Meeting, held in Miami, Florida, each August. There, during a three-day
period, scholars and professionals present papers and participate in
roundtable discussions. Papers and their formal discussions, as well
as roundtable summaries, are included in a volume of papers and proceedings.
Fourteen such volumes have been published, and they are widely used
inside and outside of Cuba by universities, research centers, government
agencies
and others. Selected papers from these volumes are also available in
the Annual Proceedings of the Publications section of this Web Site,
which is hosted by the University of Texas at Austin's Latin American
Information Center (LANIC). ASCE's site receives approximately 10,000
hits per month.
Among the wide range of topics covered in past annual meetings and volumes
are: current analyses of the socio-economic and political situation
in Cuba; lessons from transition economies; stabilization proposals;
legal aspects of transition, such as property rights and privatization;
agricultural issues, with particular emphasis on the sugar sector; labor;
foreign investment; tourism; governance; social security and social
safety net; the environment; balance of payments and trade policy; external
debt problems; foreign assistance requirements; and a wide spectrum
of issues related to monetary, fiscal and financial systems.
ASCE sponsors sessions on Cuba at the
annual meetings of the American Economic Association. In addition, bi-annually,
it hosts the Carlos Díaz-Alejandro lecture at a luncheon held
during those meetings. This lecture was established in honor of the
most distinguished Cuban-American economist of his generation, the late
Carlos Diaz-Alejandro, professor at Yale, Minnesota and Columbia universities.
The first Carlos Diaz-Alejandro lecture was delivered in December 1990
by Dr. Felipe Pazos. Named ASCE's ex-officio President at its founding,
Dr. Pazos -- an internationally known economist influential in the study
of inflation - was the first President of Cuba's National Bank. Subsequently,
distinguished economists and professors Guillermo Calvo, Ronald Findlay,
Anne Krueger, Jagdish Bhagwati, and José Antonio Ocampo have delivered this address. The latest lecture was held on March 7, 2005 at the Inter-American Development Bank, with José Antonio Ocampo, UN Under-Secretary General for Economic and Social Affairs as the main speaker.
For a number of years, ASCE has sponsored
a prize, consisting of a small stipend, for the best undergraduate
or
graduate paper on Cuban economic issues. (see ASCE´s student awards).. This year we are presenting
four awards: two for the best undergraduate papers and another two
for the best graduate student papers. Presently, ASCE is also broadening
efforts to improve the quality and scope of
analysis
of
the economic
problems facing the island, including encouraging independent economic
research inside Cuba.
ASCE seeks to broaden its contacts
with economic associations outside the United States and to encourage
economists and other social scientists from outside the United States
to participate in its annual meetings.