What Cuba has to offer?
Whether you are of retirement age, a burned out baby boomer, a seasonal traveler or just sick of the hustle and bustle, this book should provide you with food for thought and sufficient informa¬tion to start you on the journey to beginning a new life in Cuba someday. Cuba will also appeal to people of all ages seeking to move to a new and exotic land outside the States and Canada, as well as the energetic entrepreneur and anyone seeking an alternative way of life. Those living below the poverty line in the United States will also find Cuba to their liking. Like most other countries in Latin America you should be able to live in moderate luxury on a modest retirement or investment income in Cuba. Cuba is the most populous and largest island in the Caribbean. Located only 90 miles from the U.S. mainland, Cuba—sometimes called the “Pearl of the Caribbean” for its beauty—boasts miles and miles of breathtaking terrain, towering mountains, spectacular landscapes, quaint colonial towns and a couple of cosmopolitan cities. The 300-odd unspoiled beaches, bays and inlets surrounded by the beautiful crystal-clear waters of the Caribbean have always been the island’s main attraction. Cuba offers something for every imaginable taste and lifestyle. Trends Magazine predicted that Cuba would someday become the baby boomer’s retirement haven of the future. An issue of the Miami Herald stated, “A mass new migration of retirees will start to settle abroad, lured by the low cost of living to stretch their shrinking pensions, reasonable health costs and warm weather. Cuba will be the hottest destination due to its proximity to the United States and the relative lack of industrialization.”Conditions for investing and living in Cuba will improve. Nobody can foresee the future with absolute certainty. However, given the events of the last couple of years, world events, the direc¬tion the country is currently moving and the election of Obama in 2008 the predictions we make in this book are inevitable. Cuba cannot afford to be left out of the mainstream of world progress. The Chinese, Vietnamese and formerly communist European nations have realized this and are opening their markets to the world. Now it’s Cuba’s turn to do the same. Whether change will come tomorrow or even this year is hard to foretell, but it will occur. Just be patient, ready to act and to use the information in this guidebook. |
|





Live in Cuba