Puerto
Rico is set to be hit a SECOND time, By Hurricane Maria.
Just in case you think it's all Trump.
Just in case you think it's all Trump.
Thanks
to Obama, Puerto Rico might never recover from Irma
15
September, 2017
In
June 2016, Congress and President Obama passed a bill supposedly to
address the economic crisis in Puerto Rico, by imposing external
dictatorship on the island. Called the Puerto Rico Oversight,
Management, and Economic Stability Act (or PROMESA), it placed an
unelected seven-member board in total control of all important
policy.
The
supposed justification was to give the island some way to get through
bankruptcy. In reality it has set the island up for a decade of mass
unemployment and crisis — without remotely fixing the debt problem.
It's no accident the locals call the board "La Junta."
And
now Puerto Rico has suffered serious damage from Hurricane Irma,
adding yet another problem to the pile. Without serious federal help,
this crisis will continue indefinitely.
Puerto
Rico got into debt trouble through a combination of odd tax
loopholes, irresponsible governance, and even more irresponsible
lending. The details are complicated, but the most important thing to
remember is that every bad loan has two parents, borrower and lender.
If it was irresponsible to take money, it was even more irresponsible
to give it to an entity that was clearly in over its head. Other Wall
Street goons in the form of "vulture funds" have been
downright predatory, buying up abandoned debt on the secondary market
for a small fraction of its face value, then filing a blizzard of
lawsuits to get the government to force Puerto Rico to pay up in
full, by cannibalizing its public infrastructure.
The
other thing that must be remembered is that the austerity always
demanded by creditors during a debt crisis is straightforwardly
self-defeating. As many countries have demonstrated since the 2008
financial crisis, austerity during a depression makes a debt problem
worse, by strangling the economy and reducing tax revenue. It's like
trying to undertake heavy manual labor while on a starvation diet —
you just make yourself weak and sick.
What
Puerto Rico needs right now is a big check from the federal
government to get its economy re-pressurized, coupled to a debt
restructuring and partial write-down to get it on a realistic
repayment schedule. This would ideally be coupled to a thorough
economic overhaul, and finally U.S. statehood. "Structural
reform" has become a dirty word due to it usually being code for
austerity and neoliberal assault on workers, but Puerto Rico's
economy really does need work. Its labor force participation rate and
productivity are low, its unemployment and poverty rate is high.
Those problems will not be solved with budget cuts, but they are real
problems.
What's
more, Puerto Rico's infrastructure — long neglected due to the
years of fiscal crisis — is in sorry shape, as
was shown during Hurricane Irma. It took a fairly bad
battering from the storm, which knocked down buildings and left
hundreds of thousands without power ever before the highest winds
arrived. The island's oil-fired power plants are outdated and
fragile, and it has little solar power despite being a prime location
(thoughone
large plant was opened earlier this year). A big
infrastructure update would be a splendid candidate for a federal
stimulus plan to restore employment, stop the hemorrhaging of
residents to the mainland, and increase productivity over the long
term.
But
as economist Martin
Guzman explains,
the PROMESA plan — its
board,
by the way, still has a fervent right-wing Social Security cutter —
goes the opposite direction:
Unfortunately the [Fiscal Control] Board approved a fiscal plan for the next decade, 2017–2026, that is not aligned with what Puerto Rico needs to recover. Even the creators of the plan project another lost decade for the country, and they're being overly optimistic since their projections are based on assumptions that are not sound. They're underestimating the consequences that the plan will have for the Puerto Rican economy and society. As long as the board doesn't settle on a sound macroeconomic plan with a sound debt restructuring proposal, PROMESA will not be fulfilling the role for which it was created. [Institute for New Economic Thinking]
Despite
the wreckage left by Irma and its sorry economic condition, many
Puerto Ricans generously
took in refugees from
neighboring islands that suffered a direct hit. That, I suggest, is
the attitude with which the American mainland should approach its
Caribbean colony, still home to 3.4 million American citizens.
They're in trouble and need help — and help could be easily
provided.
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