Puerto
Rico’s creditors, holding a meeting in New York Thursday to discuss their fears
of an inevitable debt default, had this message for the island’s
administrators: you’re not invited.
With
more than $70 billion in outstanding debt, Puerto Rico’s debt per capita is
nearly $19,000 (not including unfunded liabilities, which puts per capita debt
as high as $30,000), far higher than any state in the U.S. Much of this debt is
held in the form of what was once America’s most attractive municipal bond,
which means most American investors stand to lose if Puerto Rico’s bonds lose
value.
No matter what Puerto
Rico’s current funders decide, Puerto Rico can still become successful if it
acts wisely and invests in what will ensure long-term growth, not short-term
spending.
-
Justin Velez-Hagan
To
be fair, this isn’t the first time creditors have held closed-door meetings to
express their concerns about Puerto Rico’s ability to satisfy its debt
obligations. Nevertheless, this may be the first time they’ve met with debt
restructuring specialists to consider how to handle the increasing likelihood
that Puerto Rico will not be able to keep up with its payments. The fact that
fiscal administrators weren’t invited to defend themselves might also suggest
that lenders have lost confidence in management.
Numerous
analysts have expressed their concerns for Puerto Rico’s uninspiring economy in
newspapers and websites across the country. (I’ll admit, I even posted my own
scathing review recently in Forbes.) However, few have offered advice
that may serve to turn the economic tides. Here’s my best shot.
If
Puerto Rico wants to increase employment, it has to make it easier to employ. A
few years ago, I investigated the viability of expanding a chain of senior
living facilities in Puerto Rico, a project that would have increased
employment and provided a valuable service to an aging population. At the time,
it would have taken up to five years to obtain all of the licensing and permits
necessary just to begin construction. Even the most labyrinthine of state
bureaucracies requires one-fifth of the time. Needless to say, this investor
was turned off. How many others have experienced the same?
Some
reforms have been enacted, but with unemployment at staggering levels (more than
double the U.S.) and an embarrassingly low labor force participation rate (just
2/3 of the new 30-year low that exists in the rest of the country), Puerto
Rico’s desperation should necessitate the easiest business climate on the
planet ... at least until things turn around.
Puerto
Rico has a tremendous number of advantages that should be better
marketed to businesses around the world. Not only are there numerous tax
benefits – investments in certain sectors have tax rates below 5 percent – but
Puerto Rico also offers a highly educated, stable, and cheap labor force as
well as one of the most beautiful work environments on Earth. Combined with a
substantial list of personal tax incentives, the likes of which have attracted
the attention of several American billionaires, it seems like an ideal location
to operate in.
Despite
all of the opportunities, the Puerto Rican economy isn’t growing. I, for one,
refuse to give in so easily and history gives me hope. Historical examples of
successful economic turnarounds have provided economists with a roadmap for
transforming an unproductive economy.
The
initial step should be a more effective marketing campaign centered on the tax,
labor, environmental, and Latin American and American market access
opportunities that are second to none in the Western Hemisphere. Industrial
manufacturers were once drawn to the island, making it the major manufacturing
hub for pharmaceutical manufacturers that it is today, but an unstable economy
and an increasingly unfriendly business environment has forced several to reduce
operations or move away from Puerto Rico altogether. Puerto Rico has to
guarantee the promise of long-term, low operating and labor costs, providing
the necessary incentive of higher profits. There is no reason Puerto Rico can’t
poach manufacturers begging to retain their “American” identities, while
seeking a greater competitive advantage.
Secondly,
Puerto Rico should aggressively target marketing to companies in industries
that are currently experiencing highly profitable growth. Outside of industrial
jobs, attracting firms in the growing science, technology, and healthcare
sectors will instigate job growth that is simultaneously synergistic with
Puerto Rico’s already educated and trained workforce. Even if this means
providing permanent “zero-tax” holidays to investors, the long-term benefits
resulting from increased employment will far outweigh the investment.
Once
lower costs, skilled labor, quality of life, and global competitiveness begin
to attract the investment needed for long-term economic growth, then it will be
time to get creative. The lack of a passport requirement and ease of travel,
should mean that Americans visiting the Caribbean shouldn’t want to go anywhere
but to the 'isla del encanto.' Yet, for some reason tourism is dwindling and young
people are leaving the island at record speeds. Tourist attractions and
quality-of-life improvements have to be updated to compete in the 21st century.
In
the eyes of current bondholders and other lenders, it may be too late for
Puerto Rico to push such an ambitious long-term plan in order to change the
hearts and minds of those who hold the island’s near-term economic fate in
their hands. But, no matter what Puerto Rico’s current funders decide, Puerto
Rico can still become successful if it acts wisely and invests in what will
ensure long-term growth, not short-term spending.
Justin
Vélez-Hagan is executive director of The National Puerto Rican Chamber of
Commerce and economic policy
researcher at the University of Maryland-Baltimore County. He can be
reached at JustinV@NPRChamber.org or @JVelezHagan
Comments:
With the Labor Participation Rate at 2/3rds of the U.S.
rate of 62.8%, the Puerto Rican rate is 41.4%, so 58.6% of Puerto Ricans are
without work. In the U.S., the actual
37.2% unemployment rate only sinks in when you see Detroit or Chicago or Los
Angeles.
The Atlanta 10 county Metro Area has a population of about
4 million and could use about 1 million more jobs to support that population.
The population of Puerto Rico is 3,725,789. About 1 million are either too young (under
18) or too old to count in the labor participation rate, So of the 2.725,789
left, 58.6 of these could use an additional 1.5 million jobs.
The banksters would be wise to “invest” in some process
improvement for the government of Puerto Rico and work on some quick reform to
keep its host alive.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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