World | Cuba Cuba Liberates Its Hair Salons Lucky barbers and beauticians will be able to work for themselves By Caroline Miller Posted Apr 13, 2010 8:54 AM CDT Copied People sit on the sea wall near the Concert for the Homeland held at the Anti-imperialist Tribune in Havana, Saturday, April 10, 2010. Cuba held two concerts dedicated to the nation's revolution. (AP Photo/Javier Galeano) Raul Castro has decided to get the Cuban government out of its citizens' hair. Barber shops and beauty salons with three or fewer seats will now be allowed to be owner-operated rather than run by the state. Cuba-watchers see the tentative loosening as the start of a long-anticipated—or at least hoped-for—privatization drive five decades after Fidel nationalized all small businesses, the BBC reports. The younger Castro has been taking baby steps toward capitalism, allowing some unproductive land to be given to farmers and some taxi drivers to work for themselves. But this is the first move in the retail and service sector, and it hasn't even been publicly announced, says the BBC. Read These Next State Department abandons a Biden-era font, blaming DEI. Police say a woman with 100+ prior arrests fatally struck a musician. The checkbook may soon be a thing of the past. One donor, 197 kids, and a terrible genetic mutation. Report an error