In the Murk
James
Howard Kunstler
22
September, 2017
Puerto
Rico, You lovely island,
Island of tropical breezes….
— West Side Story
Island of tropical breezes….
— West Side Story
Welcome
to America’s first experiment in the World
Made By Hand lifestyle.
Where else is it going? Watch closely.
Ricardo
Ramos, the director of the beleaguered, government-owned Puerto Rico
Electric Power Authority, told CNN Thursday that the island’s power
infrastructure had been basically “destroyed” and will take
months to come back
“Basically
destroyed.” That’s about as basic as it gets civilization-wise.
Residents,
Mr. Ramos said, would need to change the way they cook and cool off.
For entertainment, old-school would be the best approach, he said.
“It’s a good time for dads to buy a ball and a glove and change
the way you entertain your children.”
Meaning,
I guess, no more playing Resident
Evil 7: Biohazard on-screen
because you’ll be living it — though one wonders where will the
money come from to buy the ball and glove? Few Puerto Ricans will be
going to work with the power off. And the island’s public finances
were in disarray sufficient to drive it into federal court last May
to set in motion a legal receivership that amounted to bankruptcy in
all but name. The commonwealth,
a US territory, was in default for $74 billion in bonded debt, plus
another $49 billion in unfunded pension obligations.
So,
Puerto Rico already faced a crisis pre-Hurricane Maria, with its
dodgy electric grid and crumbling infrastructure: roads, bridges,
water and sewage systems. Bankruptcy put it in a poor position to
issue new bonds for public works which are generally paid for with
public borrowing. Who, exactly, would buy the new bonds? I hear
readers whispering, “the Federal Reserve.” Which is a pretty good
clue to understanding the circle-jerk that American finance has
become.
Some
sort of bailout is unavoidable, though President Trump tweeted “No
Bailout for Puerto Rico” after the May bankruptcy proceeding.
Things have changed and the shelf-life of Trumpian tweets is famously
brief. But the crisis may actually strain the ability of the federal
government to pretend it can cover the cost of every calamity that
strikes the nation — at least not without casting doubt on the
soundness of the dollar. And not a few bonafide states are also
whirling around the bankruptcy drain: Illinois, Connecticut, New
Jersey, Kentucky.
Constitutionally
states are not permitted to declare bankruptcy, though counties and
municipalities can. Congress would have to change the law to allow
it. But states can default on their bonds and other obligations.
Surely there would be some kind of fiscal and political hell to pay
if they go that route. Nobody really knows what might happen in a
state as big and complex as Illinois, which has been paying its way
for decades by borrowing from the future. Suddenly, the future is
here and nobody has a plan for it.
The
case for the federal government is not so different. It, too, only
manages to pay its bondholders via bookkeeping hocuspocus, and its
colossal unfunded obligations for social security and Medicare make
Illinois’ predicament look like a skipped car payment.
In
the meantime — and it looks like it’s going to be a long meantime
— Puerto Rico is back in the 18th Century,
minus the practical skills and simpler furnishings for living that
way of life, and with a population many times beyond the carrying
capacity of the island in that era. For instance, how many houses get
their water from cisterns designed to catch rain runoff? How many
communities across the island are walkable? (It looks like the gas
stations will be down for quite a while.)
I’ve been there and much
of the island is as suburbanized as New Jersey — thanks to the
desire to be up-to-date with the mainland, and the willingness of
officials to make it look like that.
We’re
only two days past the Hurricane Maria’s direct hit on Puerto Rico
and there is no phone communication across the island, so we barely
know what has happened. We’re weeks past Hurricanes Irma and
Harvey, and news of the consequences from those two events has
strangely fallen out of the news media. Where have the people gone
who lost everything? The news blackout is as complete and strange as
the darkness that has descended on Puerto Rico.
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