WASHINGTON — Those who have been closely watching Puerto Rico’s economic decline and the reluctance for Congress or the administration to respond have been sharing an inside joke lately.
“Even though there are more Puerto Ricans in the states than in Puerto Rico, some people are joking that the Cuban government has had more relations with Washington than Puerto Rico lately,” said Federico de Jesus, a political and media strategist in Washington, D.C.
Puerto Rico is in the midst of what its governor, Alejandro García Padilla, pronounced to The New York Times is a “death spiral.” It faces $73 billion in debt, double digit unemployment and has been for several years watching many of its middle class leave the island for the U.S. to flee its economic woes. The commonwealth’s debt status is now graded as “junk” and deadlines for debt repayments are days away.
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Padilla said over the weekend that the island country’s debt “is not payable,” the Times reported. He scheduled a 5 p.m. EDT Monday address on the crisis.
The crisis is not yet to the level of Greece, which has commanded far more attention in news headlines, but that nation has been getting assistance from the European Central Bank and other entities, unlike Puerto Rico.
“We do not have any lifeboat or financial partners that have been willing to step up,” de Jesus said.
The White House has urged Congress to take a closer look at allowing Puerto Rico to restructure its public debt using Chapter 9 bankruptcy filing, something that is not available to Puerto Rico as it it for U.S. states and has been used by cities such as Detroit.
In the daily briefing on Monday, White House Press Secretary Josh EarnesEarnest stopped short of saying the administration supports giving Puerto Rico the ability to file for bankruptcy, repeating that its something its asked Congress to look at.
Earnest said that Puerto Rico is getting help similar to what the administration did for Detroit through a task force that has helped advise the commonwealth of what existing resources it can seek. The work done for Detroit is a template for Puerto Rico, he said, adding that what that city received from the Obama administration has been directly related to the city’s progress.
De Jesus said the crisis is something that deserves that attention of U.S. residents and lawmakers because many have investment in the commonwealth through mutual and investment fund portfolios.
According to a 2013 estimate from Chicago-based Morningstar, an investment research firm, as much as 80 percent of Puerto Rico’s debt is in muni-bond funds and 180 mutual funds in the United States and elsewhere have at least 5 percent of their portfolios in Puerto Rican bonds, USA Today reported.
Although Puerto Rico’s constitution guarantees the payment of interest on general obligation bonds before anything else – firemen, police, teachers – bonds on other public entities such as its energy and water systems are not guaranteed and are under consideration for debt restructuring. Puerto Rican bonds have always been attractive because they are exempt from federal, local and state taxes.
Pedro Pierliusi, Puerto Rico’s non-voting representative in the U.S. Congress, has pushed a bill to allow it to use the bankruptcy provision under Chapter 9 to restructure some public utilities’ debt, the way states are allowed to do in municipalities. But the Democrat’s bill has gone nowhere amid opposition from some investors and some members of the GOP, which controls the House where the bill was introduced.
On Monday, the International Monetary Fund released a report on what Puerto Rico’s Gov. Alejandro García Padilla said to the New York Times is a “death spiral” for the island. A condensed PowerPoint also was posted.
Among its many recommendations for a five-year plan is that Puerto Rico be granted the ability to file for bankruptcy under Chapter 9. In a statement, Padilla said the report, “for the first time acknowledges the true extent of the problem.
“We must make difficult decisions to meet the challenges we now know are ahead and I intend to do everything in my power to lead us through this time,”Padilla said in the statement.









