Social Entrepreneurship in Cuba: Innovation with Purpose for Sustainable Development

09/12/2025

Dr. Lourdes Sánchez Oramas

Social entrepreneurship has emerged as one of the most significant transformative forces within the Cuban economic and social landscape. In a context marked by structural challenges, economic constraints, and times of transition, this type of initiative offers innovative, sustainable, and deeply human solutions. Its essence lies in generating economic value while addressing urgent social and environmental needs.

This article offers a clear and up-to-date exploration of how social enterprises are shaping the country’s present and future, and how Cuban entrepreneurs can assume a leading role in this transformation.

  1. The Cuban Context: Why is social entrepreneurship key?

The current national environment presents a complex combination of economic limitations, monetary duality, input shortages, financial restrictions, and the lingering effects of recent crises. Despite this—or perhaps precisely because of it—enterprises focused on providing innovative solutions to real needs are emerging.

These enterprises not only align with national development guidelines—specifically the 2030 Development Plan—but also position themselves as engines of social justice, inclusion, and community empowerment. Their purpose extends beyond mere income generation: they seek to transform lives, reduce inequalities, and create opportunities where none existed before.

  1. The Three Pillars of Social Entrepreneurship

Every social enterprise rests upon three fundamental dimensions:

  1. The Economic Pillar

With the constitutional recognition of non-state forms of ownership since 2019, and the approval of the legal framework for MSMEs in 2021, the country now possesses an unprecedented environment for innovative business models to contribute to economic growth.

These ventures generate employment, invigorate the local economy, and optimize resources in environments characterized by scarcity.

  1. Social Pillar

Aligned with Cuba’s historic guarantees of social rights, social entrepreneurship serves as a necessary complement, reaching vulnerable communities with rapid, tailored, and human-centered solutions.

It fosters inclusion, narrows disparities, and provides services in areas where the state response takes longer to arrive.

  1. Environmental Pillar

In a country endowed with unique natural resources, green ventures contribute to environmental protection through regenerative practices, the circular economy, and nature-based solutions.

This pillar ensures sustainability for future generations.

  1. Sustainable Development: Integrating Economy, Society, and the Environment

The concept of sustainability is based on meeting the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations. Cuba applies this approach through public policies aligned with the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), prioritizing areas such as:

Food security

Universal healthcare

Education

Climate change adaptation

Social enterprises are placed at the center of this vision, integrating purpose, impact, and profitability.

  1. What Is a Social Enterprise? Key Characteristics

A social enterprise is defined by three essential components:

  1. a) Explicit social mission

Their primary objective is to solve a social or environmental problem. Profits are not the end goal, but rather a means to expand their impact.

  1. b) Sustainable Business Model

They employ market-based strategies to ensure their long-term viability and reinvest a significant portion of their revenue into amplifying their positive impact.

  1. c) Locally Focused Innovation

They seek creative solutions tailored to the specific characteristics of the Cuban context, making the most of available resources.

While traditional businesses measure success in terms of financial profit, social enterprises measure it through the “triple bottom line”: economic impact, social impact, and environmental impact.

  1. Inspiring Global and Cuban Examples

Internationally, initiatives such as:

  • Grameen Bank (microcredit)
  • TOMS Shoes (one-for-one model)
  • Ecosia (a search engine that funds tree planting)

have demonstrated the transformative power of social entrepreneurship.

In Cuba, there are also notable examples:

  • Sustainable agriculture
  • Finca Vista Hermosa
  • Organopónico Vivero de Alamar

Both produce organic food, employ agroecological techniques, and strengthen food sovereignty through responsible local practices.

Community-based tourism

  • Initiatives such as Cuba Auténtica—or projects like Free Tour Habana—integrate culture, local history, and sustainability, redistributing income directly back into the communities.

Renewable Energy

  • Ventures such as Ecoenergía and Sol Cuba develop solar solutions using recycled panels and train technicians through social reintegration programs.

Social Networks with a Purpose

  • Network of Women Entrepreneurs
  • Caregivers’ Network
  • Animal Welfare Groups
  • Seniors’ Network

All of these are initiatives that currently influence the country’s entrepreneurial culture.

  1. Challenges Facing Social Enterprises in Cuba

Despite their positive impact, entrepreneurs point to persistent challenges:

  • Limited funding
  • Scarcity of seed capital
  • Insufficient credit availability
  • Restrictions on attracting foreign investment
  • Obstacles regarding international transactions
  • Unstable supply chains
  • Difficulties in importing technology or supplies
  • Insufficient and volatile domestic market
  • Bureaucracy and complex regulations
  • Lengthy administrative processes
  • A tax framework that is still evolving
  • Lack of specific incentives for socially-driven enterprises
  • Service infrastructure limitations
  • Limited connectivity
  • Irregular access to electricity
  • Difficulties in accessing digital markets

These challenges highlight the need for more cohesive public policies and for an explicit recognition of social entrepreneurship as a key tool for sustainable development.

  1. How Can a Business Contribute to Sustainable Development?

There are concrete strategies that any venture can implement:

  • Responsible Business Practices
  • Optimize resource use, reduce waste, decrease energy consumption, and adopt circular models.
  • Measuring and Communicating Impact
  • Implement systems to quantify, verify, and communicate economic, social, and environmental results.
  • Innovation with Purpose
  • Design products and services aimed at solving real community problems.
  • Multisectoral Strategic Partnerships
  • Collaborate with local governments, universities, community organizations, and other entrepreneurs to amplify solutions.

Social entrepreneurship in Cuba is not merely an economic opportunity; it is a pathway to transforming realities, reducing inequalities, and building a more sustainable, diverse, and resilient country.

Cuban entrepreneurs—armed with creativity, purpose, and vision—are demonstrating that it is possible to conduct business in a way that generates both positive impact and prosperity simultaneously.

The future of sustainable development in Cuba also depends on you.

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