Una isla a la deriva, dice el Washington Post al examinar la situación de Puerto Rico

{Penoso, y los Estadistas tan divididos, quizás más que nunca antes, Penoso. Si no se hace algo pronto, AGP/PPD/Chavistas lograran la República Asociada en el 2017 o antes.}

1 de diciembre de 2013

Una isla a la deriva, dice el Washington Post al examinar la situación de Puerto Rico

Toma nota de la crisis fiscal y el éxodo poblacional  POR ELNUEVODIA.COM

El diario toma nota de la emigración de cientos de miles de personas durante la última década, a un ritmo solo comparable a la década de 1950, cuando cerca de 500,000 personas dejaron la Isla. (Archivo/Ramón «Tonito» Zayas)

WASHINGTON – Bajo el titular “Una isla a la deriva, en miseria económica”, el diario The Washington Post publicó hoy, en portada, un reportaje sobre la crisis fiscal de Puerto Rico y el éxodo poblacional hacia los Estados Unidos.

Como periódicamente han hecho importantes medios internacionales desde finales de agosto, el principal diario de la capital estadounidense destaca la alta deuda pública del gobierno de Puerto Rico y una tasa de desempleo que en octubre se acercó al 15%.

Y toma nota de la emigración de cientos de miles de personas durante la última década, a un ritmo solo comparable a la década de 1950, cuando cerca de 500,000 personas dejaron la Isla.

“Eligen la incertidumbre del mercado de trabajo en Orlando o Nueva York o Filadelfia sobre lo que ven como la certeza de que sus sueños serían aplastados por los fuertes problemas económicos de ese territorio estadounidense”, indica.

La foto de portada es de un hombre, deambulante, durmiendo frente a una tienda.

Desde finales del verano, primero en la prensa que sigue de cerca los asuntos de Wall Street y luego en los medios nacionales estadounidenses y de otros países, la comunidad internacional se ha enterado de la crisis fiscal que vive la Isla, la cual ha sido comparada con la de localidades como Detroit (Michigan) o países como Grecia cuya deuda pública se hizo inmanejable.

En el caso del Washington Post, sin embargo, el reportaje se publica poco más de tres semanas después de que editorializara sobre el asunto y advirtiera que la crisis económica de Puerto Rico está  fundamentada en la estructura de su actual status político En aquel editorial,  el diario, sin embargo, consideró que la solución del dilema de las relaciones entre Washington y San Juan deberá aguardar porque la Isla logre salir de la crisis económica y financiera.

El tema del status no se discute en el reportaje de hoy.

Pero, sí el temor de inversionistas estadounidenses que tienen en sus carteras bonos municipales de la Isla, que disfrutan de una triple exención tributaria: federal, estatal y municipal.

La deuda pública de Puerto Rico ronda los $70,000 millones. Y la crisis fiscal que vive la Isla, sobre todo a partir de 2006, ha hecho que prácticamente se le haya cerrado al gobierno el acceso a préstamos de bajas tasas de interés.

La alternativa del gobierno de Puerto Rico ha sido recurrir a establecer nuevos impuestos que totalizan $1,300 millones, con la intención de tratar de equilibrar el presupuesto y evitar que el crédito de la Isla, bajo intensa vigilancia de Wall Street, caiga a nivel de chatarra.

“Puedo asegurar que Puerto Rico no va a incumplir con sus pagos. Puerto Rico va a pagar por nuestras deudas. Es una obligación constitucional. Pero, por mi es también una obligación moral”, indicó el gobernador Alejandro García Padilla, al repetir al Washington Post el mensaje que ha dado a la prensa estadounidense durante los últimos meses.

El comisionado residente en Washington, Pedro Pierluisi, quien ha reclamado una mayor intervención federal en la situación fiscal de la Isla, sostuvo que este es un problema que es también de Estados Unidos.

Lo que ha estado fuera de la mesa de discusión – en un reconocimiento de que otros gobiernos estatales o municipales pudieran ponerse en fila – es la posibilidad de un rescate financiero del gobierno federal.

Pero, la Casa Blanca hace unos días anunció que enviará a San Juan un grupo de expertos para buscar un mejor aprovechamiento de los $6,500 millones en fondos federales que recibe anualmente el gobierno de Puerto Rico y trabajar en “proyectos específicos”.

Continúa la posibilidad de una degradación chatarra

Jenniffer González: “Washington Post retrata la realidad que pretende ocultar AGP, pero que los economistas conocen bien”

San Juan- La portavoz del Partido Nuevo Progresista en la Cámara de Representantes, Jenniffer González Colón, alertó que sigue latente la posibilidad de una degradación de los bonos de la Isla a nivel de chatarra debido a la desconfianza de las casas acreditadoras y de los bonistas sobre la capacidad del equipo económico de la presente administración  y prueba de ello es la portada del Washington Post.

“Las nefastas consecuencias de la dejadez, de la falta de plan económico y de las malas decisiones fiscales de García Padilla, como la imposición de 54 nuevos impuestos, no pueden ser más obviadas por esta administración como comprueba la historia de portada del periódico nacional Washington Post, donde retratan la realidad que pretende ocultar AGP, pero que los economistas conocen bien”, indicó la Portavoz.

A principios de mes, la Casa acreditadora Fitch puso una perspectiva negativa a los bonos de obligación general (GO’s) y aviso de un posible degradación a chatarra antes del verano. Esto unido con la designación de Casa Blanca de un «comité asesor» que no es otra cosa que un sindico, esto, como asegura González Colón, demuestra la poca confianza en la actual administración.

“Lamentablemente, la presente administración ha decidido aumentar las contribuciones a la ciudadanía para así poder aumentar su presupuesto, descomunalmente, para abultar su nomina y gastos discrecionales ignorando las advertencias que le ha hecho esta delegación del PNP en la Cámara al igual que las propuestas fiscales que hemos hecho desde el comienzo”, criticó la también Vicepresidenta del PNP.

González Colón explicó que nada de los aumentos en presupuesto son utilizados para obra publica ni para incentivar la economía. Por el contrario, las medidas tomadas causan un estancamiento en la economía y este gobierno lo sabe, por eso no han develado los números nefastos de crecimiento por los pasados dos meses.

“Estamos presenciando el éxodo más grande desde la década del 50, de puertorriqueños y puertorriqueñas que ante la situación económica de la colonia, prefieren abrazarse a la estadidad plena mudándose a la nación y dejando atrás a sus familiares. Hicimos un reclamo de igualdad el pasado mes de noviembre que esta administración no ha honrado, al igual que tantas promesas de campañas”, finiquitó la expresidenta cameral.

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Puerto Rico, with at least $70 billion in debt, confronts a rising economic misery – The Washington Post

The economy here has been in recession for nearly eight years, crimping tax revenue and pushing the jobless rate to nearly 15 percent. Meanwhile, the government is burdened by staggering debt, spawning comparisons to bankrupt Detroit and forcing lawmakers to severely slash pensions, cut government jobs and raise taxes in a furious effort to avert default.

The implications are serious for Americans outside Puerto Rico both because a taxpayer bailout would be expensive and a default would be far more disruptive than Detroit’s record bankruptcy filing in July. Officials in San Juan and Washington are adamant that a federal bailout is not on the table, but the situation is being closely monitored by the White House, which recently named an advisory team to help Puerto Rican officials navigate the crisis.

The island’s problems have ignited an exodus not seen here since the 1950s, when 500,000 people left for jobs on the mainland. Now Puerto Ricans, who as citizens are free to move and work anywhere in the United States without passports or green cards, are again leaving in droves.

They are choosing the uncertainty of the job market in Orlando or New York City or Philadelphia over what they view as the certainty that their dreams would be crushed by the island’s grinding economic problems.

Puerto Rico, with at least $70 billion in debt, confronts a rising economic misery By Michael A. Fletcher, Saturday, November 30, 5:34 PM SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Boxes and wooden crates filled with household items bound for the U.S. mainland are stacked high in the Rosa del Monte moving company’s cavernous warehouse, evidence of the historic rush of people abandoning this beautiful island.  Sigue abajo …

The economy here has been in recession for nearly eight years, crimping tax revenue and pushing the jobless rate to nearly 15 percent. Meanwhile, the government is burdened by staggering debt, spawning comparisons to bankrupt Detroit and forcing lawmakers to severely slash pensions, cut government jobs and raise taxes in a furious effort to avert default.

The implications are serious for Americans outside Puerto Rico both because a taxpayer bailout would be expensive and a default would be far more disruptive than Detroit’s record bankruptcy filing in July. Officials in San Juan and Washington are adamant that a federal bailout is not on the table, but the situation is being closely monitored by the White House, which recently named an advisory team to help Puerto Rican officials navigate the crisis.

The island’s problems have ignited an exodus not seen here since the 1950s, when 500,000 people left for jobs on the mainland. Now Puerto Ricans, who as citizens are free to move and work anywhere in the United States without passports or green cards, are again leaving in droves.

They are choosing the uncertainty of the job market in Orlando or New York City or Philadelphia over what they view as the certainty that their dreams would be crushed by the island’s grinding economic problems.  Sigue Abajo …

 from the Washington Post…

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 Puerto Rico, with at least $70 billion in debt, confronts a rising economic misery – The Washington Post

http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/puerto-rico-with-at-least-70-billion-in-debt-confronts-a-rising-economic-misery/2013/11/30/f40a22c6-5376-11e3-9fe0-fd2ca728e67c_story.html

Puerto Rico, with at least $70 billion in debt, confronts a rising economic misery By Michael A. Fletcher, Saturday, November 30, 5:34 PM SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Boxes and wooden crates filled with household items bound for the U.S. mainland are stacked high in the Rosa del Monte moving company’s cavernous warehouse, evidence of the historic rush of people abandoning this beautiful island.Puerto Rico’s debt load is bigger than that of any state except California and New York, and it dwarfs Detroit’s debt at the time of that city’s bankruptcy filing.

The economy here has been in recession for nearly eight years, crimping tax revenue and pushing the jobless rate to nearly 15 percent. Meanwhile, the government is burdened by staggering debt, spawning comparisons to bankrupt Detroit and forcing lawmakers to severely slash pensions, cut government jobs and raise taxes in a furious effort to avert default.

The implications are serious for Americans outside Puerto Rico both because a taxpayer bailout would be expensive and a default would be far more disruptive than Detroit’s record bankruptcy filing in July. Officials in San Juan and Washington are adamant that a federal bailout is not on the table, but the situation is being closely monitored by the White House, which recently named an advisory team to help Puerto Rican officials navigate the crisis.

The island’s problems have ignited an exodus not seen here since the 1950s, when 500,000 people left for jobs on the mainland. Now Puerto Ricans, who as citizens are free to move and work anywhere in the United States without passports or green cards, are again leaving in droves.

They are choosing the uncertainty of the job market in Orlando or New York City or Philadelphia over what they view as the certainty that their dreams would be crushed by the island’s grinding economic problems.

“We used to move a lot of machinery into Puerto Rico, and executives who worked in the pharmaceutical industry here,” said Neftaly Rodriguez, whose father founded Rosa del Monte. “Now we are packing people up to go out. Everybody is looking for a better opportunity.”

Puerto Rico lost 54,000 residents — 1.5 percent of its population — between 2010 and 2012 alone. Since recession struck in 2006, the population has shrunk by more than 138,000 to 3.7 million, with the vast majority of the outflow headed to the mainland.http://www.washingtonpost.com/

The brutal combination of a long recession, a shrinking population and overwhelming debt has left Puerto Rico’s political leaders struggling to manage a conundrum: How do they tame at least $70 billion in debt while marshaling the resources to grow a shrinking economy and battle corrosive social problems, including a murder rate that is nearly six times the U.S. average?

The crisis has left Puerto Rican Gov. Alejandro Javier Garcia Padilla juggling competing demands for budget cuts and other types of austerity demanded by Wall Street rating agencies, and the incentives and other spending needed to ignite growth.

“Sometimes, you are between the wall and sword,” Padilla said in an interview.

Not long after Padilla took office in January, Wall Street debt rating agencies downgraded the island’s bonds to just one rung above junk status. Like states, the commonwealth of Puerto Rico cannot file for bankruptcy. Also, Puerto Rico’s constitution offers bondholders strong guarantees that they would be paid before pensioners and public workers if the government went broke.

“I can assure you that Puerto Rico will not default,” Padilla said. “Puerto Rico will pay our debts. It is a constitutional obligation. But for me it is also a moral obligation.”

Still, with Detroit’s bankruptcy filing fresh in the minds of investors, the downgrade ignited widespread concern that the island was sliding toward default, which would hurt many investors across the United States. Because of their high yields and exemption from federal, state and local taxes, Puerto Rican bonds are held by three out of four municipal bond mutual funds, according to Morningstar, a market research firm.

“Some people might say, ‘This is their problem.’ But Puerto Rico is part of the United States, you own this problem,” said Pedro Pierluisi (D), Puerto Rico’s non-voting representative to Congress. “It is not like you can ignore it.”

For now, the debt problems have done damage mainly in Puerto Rico, where it substantially raised loan costs for a government that has come to rely heavily on borrowing to fund its daily operations.

“You cannot pay daily expenses with your credit card, and that’s what Puerto Rico has been doing for years,” said Deepak Lamba-Nieves, research director of the Center for a New Economy, a San Juan think tank. “We borrowed just to keep the lights on.”

Puerto Rico’s expansive web of debt includes standard government bonds as well as those floated by public corporations, including authorities for water and sewer, highways and electric power. Together, those bills have nearly tripled since 2000, as successive administrations turned to the bond market to plug gaping budget deficits. In addition to the $70 billion in government debt, the government also faces $37 billion in unfunded pension obligations, according to Morningstar.

The explosion of borrowing coincided with a marked slowdown in the economy, and when a lucrative tax credit for manufacturers was phased out in 2006, the island fell into recession.

For decades, Puerto Rico’s economy was powered by U.S. firms that set up factories here that allowed them to tap a large, relatively low-cost labor market and to book profits under the favorable tax laws, while keeping cash-intensive research and development operations — and the accompanying big tax write-offs — on the mainland.

First, shoe factories and textile mills dominated the economic landscape. Later, pharmaceutical firms turned the island into a hub of drug manufacturing. According to one investor research report, 16 of the 20 top-selling drugs in the United States are made on the island.

But eventually many of the clothing plants moved to more promising ports. Then a series of key drug patents expired, contributing to a sharp decline in manufacturing. Since 1996, the number of factory jobs in Puerto Rico plummeted from 160,000 to 75,000.

And while government workers make up about a quarter of the commonwealth’s workforce — much higher than the U.S. average of 16 percent — their ranks are shrinking as the pervasive debt and economic problems careen toward a reckoning. Now, just over 41 percent of working-age Puerto Ricans are in a job or even looking for one.

Miguel Rodriguez, 50, who was working on his résumé at a government employment office in San Juan, said he has been out of work for four years, making it difficult to support himself or pay child support. He noted that his plight is not unusual. “Here, it is very hard to find a job,” he said.

As work has disappeared, more Puerto Ricans have relied on the government to survive: About a third of the commonwealth’s population relies on food stamps, and residents of the island are twice as likely as those on the mainland to receive Social Security disability benefits, according to researchers.

All of those problems were compounded by a housing bust that took down three of the island’s banks, while leaving many Puerto Ricans as deeply in debt as their government. Now pawnshops and title loan operations, which give loans to people who put up their car titles as collateral, are a growing presence on the island.

At a Borinquen Title Loans office located in a former bank branch outside San Juan, an employee inspected a potential customer’s car in the small parking lot, while inside, employees were busy on computers.

“We see all kinds of people here,” from former professionals to out-of-work laborers, said area manager Rosemarie Velazquez. “Business has been good.”

Restoring economic growth is a top priority for Padilla, whose signature campaign promise was to create 50,000 jobs. That would normally call for spending, tax cuts and investments. But his other top priority, bringing the debt under control, calls for the government cutbacks and tax increases.

Since taking office, he has tried to do both. Under pressure from the Wall Street rating agencies, his administration has enacted reforms far more dramatic than those made by cash-strapped states on the mainland.

He enacted $1.3 billion in taxes including increased corporate taxes, a broadened sales tax and a new gross receipts levy. The percentage increase in taxes is far larger than what the federal government has ever imposed, according to Richard Larkin, senior vice president of H.J. Sims, an investment firm.

“To say that Puerto Rico’s tax increase for 2014 was monumental is an understatement,” Larkin wrote.

Padilla also has continued government job cuts begun by his predecessor as governor. Together the two leaders have cut about one in 10 jobs from the public payroll.

The changes have put the government on course to shrink the current year’s budget deficit from an estimated $2.2 billion to about $870 million. The plan going forward is to reduce the deficit by half every year, and totally eliminate it by 2016, officials said.

To bolster the severely underfunded government pension plans, Padilla shifted many government workers from traditional pensions to 401(k)-type retirement plans, while raising retirement ages and increasing employee contributions to the plans. He also promised a series of increases in the government’s pension contributions to fortify the severely underfunded plans.

Meanwhile, economic development officials are stepping up efforts to generate growth on the island. The government has enacted tax incentives and offered electricity credits to entice firms that might be discouraged by Puerto Rico’s electricity costs, which are double the average on the mainland.

Officials also are searching for an operator for a $300 million port project that can handle the mega-ships that will soon traverse an expanded Panama Canal, and they are working to bolster the tourism trade, which accounts for a paltry 6 percent of the tropical island’s economic activity. They say they already are seeing success, including new air routes to the island and commitments to build hundreds of new hotel rooms.

“[Previously,] we were lazy and complacent,” said Alberto Baco, Puerto Rico’s secretary of economic development and commerce. “Now we have to act fast.”

But it remains to be seen whether the government’s actions will be enough to stave off the crisis. Earlier this month, the rating agency Fitch warned that Puerto Rico’s general obligation bonds could be downgraded to junk status next summer because of concerns that the commonwealth would be unable to return to the market anytime soon to borrow more at a reasonable cost.

Another downgrade would be a severe blow for Puerto Rico, effectively cutting it off from the market and paralyzing its efforts to dig out from under its mountain of debt.

If that happens, Lamba-Nieves, the director of the Center for a New Economy, said the federal government could feel pressure to step in with some type of bailout. “Puerto Rico might be a little too big to fail,” he said.

Nikki Kahn contributed to this report.

 Ver Otros Escritos sobre la Economía: https://estado51prusa.com/?s=Economia&x=-1084&y=-40

http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/puerto-rico-with-at-least-70-billion-in-debt-confronts-a-rising-economic-misery/2013/11/30/f40a22c6-5376-11e3-9fe0-fd2ca728e67c_story.html

Analisys:

In many of the analyses regarding Puerto Rico’s situation, including this one, analysts/ reporters simply assume that manufacturing job losses are correlated to the phase out of Section 936.   This assumption is largely incorrect.   Low to medium wage manufacturing started leaving the island in the 1980s (when we had full, or fuller, 936 benefits), and continued doing so throughout the 90s, because US markets started to open to lower wage jurisdictions across the globe, and not because of changes in the Section 936 tax incentives.   Section 936 tax breaks were useful for companies that had large product margins (Pharma; high technology), and not for low wage (textiles) or middle wage (electronics) industries, which comprised the bulk of jobs that have left the Island.  The industries that left (textiles, mid-wage electronics), did so notbecause of the phase out of 936 tax benefits  (which were of little use to them as they had razor thin margins), but because other jurisdictions had lower wages, comparatively low taxes, and free access to the U.S. market.  Companies that could use the Section 936 tax exemption (primarily Pharma) converted to Section 901 companies and stayed in the Island.  For the remainder of the manufacturing sector, PR was simply no longer attractive as a sufficiently low wage jurisdiction, and no longer had exclusive access to mainland U.S. markets.  As a result, textile and lower to mid-wage manufacturing jobs left for other jurisdictions.

Until we come to understand the causes for the flight of jobs in the manufacturing and other sectors, we will continue to mistakenly insist that phase out of former Section 936 is the cause of Puerto Rico’s woes, and that only a new set of tax exemptions will solve the challenge faced by Puerto Rico.  Puerto Rico’s challenge is that it has higher wages than many competing jurisdictions in the manufacturing  industries (regionally and globally); has a high-cost/ high-end tourism compared to our competitors; no longer enjoys exclusive access to the U.S. market; and, most importantly, receives a fraction of federal program funding because we are an unincorporated territory where U.S. citizens lack the same level of entitlement rights granted to citizens in the mainland.  If you have a cost structure similar to the mainland (minimum wage, federal laws and regulations, common market, etc…), but you do not receive the same level of benefits as the states, you are undoubtedly going to run serious deficits and you are certainly going to be less competitive.

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Para trabajar por la Estadidad: https://estado51prusa.com Seminarios-pnp.com https://twitter.com/EstadoPRUSA https://www.facebook.com/EstadoPRUSA/
Para trabajar por la Estadidad: https://estado51prusa.com Seminarios-pnp.com https://twitter.com/EstadoPRUSA https://www.facebook.com/EstadoPRUSA/