After months of pleading from Puerto Rico’s government, the US Congress has agreed to help the territory restructure its massive public debt. However, it comes at a steep cost: a degree of lost sovereignty with the imposition of a fiscal control board as well as a potential lower minimum wage for young workers on the island.
Those provisions in the bipartisan measure are aimed at staving off a chaotic wave of defaults on the island’s US$70 billion public debt. However, they stoked some anger on Thursday in Puerto Rico, where people have endured a decade of a steadily worsening economy and many resent the uneven relationship with the US mainland.
Yet the deal brought relief to others, who feel it could help Puerto Ricans rebuild the economy while providing sorely needed control over their government.
Photo: EPA
“This should have been done a long time ago,” said Jose Jeaudoin, a restaurant manager. “It’s been proven for many years that Puerto Rico does not know how to run itself. Any time the government takes control over something, it doesn’t work or it goes broke.”
The bill calls for the creation of a seven-member control board appointed by US Congress and the president that would oversee some court-ordered debt restructurings. It would also require Puerto Rico’s government to submit budgets and create a plan to achieve fiscal responsibility and eventual access to financial markets. The board also would be responsible for maintaining the legal rights of creditors and shoring up pension shortfalls for an island whose public pension obligations are underfunded by more than US$40 billion.
US law blocks Puerto Rico’s public agencies and municipalities from declaring bankruptcy and restructuring debt under a judge’s supervision.
“The situation is desperate,” souvenir store owner Valerie Franklin said. “Right now, we’re just working to pay taxes. We’re just surviving.”
Supporters say the bill would help strengthen Puerto Rico’s sputtering economy, which has stagnated in part since the end of US tax breaks for manufacturers that set off a vicious downward economic spiral that in turn prompted hundreds of thousands of Puerto Ricans to move to the mainland.
The US House Natural Resources Committee could vote on the bill as early as next week. If approved, it would go to the full House and then move to the US Senate. Some of the US House’s most conservative Republicans appear willing to support the deal, but senators have not said yet whether they will pass the House bill or write their own version.
The goal is to pass the bill before Puerto Rico defaults on a US$2 billion debt payment due July 1, the largest yet. The island already has missed three previous payments, including a US$367 million one due earlier this month.
Governor of Puerto Rico Alejandro Garcia Padilla said that if the bill is approved without any changes, it will protect Puerto Rico from any lawsuits following the anticipated July 1 default.
However, he intends to fight some of the bill’s provisions, including the one that would set up a fiscal control board whose members, he noted, would not be elected by the public.
“The board’s powers are excessive,” he said. “We have to keep fighting.”
Garcia envisions a board with a supervisory role that would allow Puerto Rico’s government to have final say over its finances.
He said the measure’s current provisions “are not consistent with our country’s basic democratic principles.”
Other government officials echoed Garcia’s concerns, including Eduardo Bhatia, president of Puerto Rico’s Senate.
He asked Puerto Ricans to rise up and reject the bill, calling it disproportionate and anti-democratic.
“To those who think they can sacrifice democracy to obtain economic stability, know that in the end you’ll have neither,” he said.
Another big concern for some government officials and young adults in Puerto Rico is a provision that would allow the local government to temporarily lower the minimum wage, authorizing businesses to pay US$4.25 per hour to first-time employees under 20. The bill states that the age can be automatically extended to 25 and that the lower wage can be paid for up to four years if requested. The island’s current minimum wage varies from US$5.08 to US$7.25 per hour.
Critics say workers can barely survive on the current minimum wage, given the rising cost of living in Puerto Rico.
“I think it’s terrible,” said Jaileen Trinidad, a 23-year-old restaurant hostess. “We’re educated. I have my bachelor’s degree. ... It would affect me greatly, because my baby depends on me.”
Puerto Ricans fear that lowering the minimum wage would further fuel an exodus to the US mainland instead of creating more jobs.
Gabriel Hernandez, a 19-year-old food delivery worker, said the measure would prevent young people from building a secure future.
“They wouldn’t be able to get ahead, to make money to buy a car, to buy school supplies, to buy a house,” he said.
However, it is unlikely the minimum wage provision will change. The bill was revised during weeks of negotiations and it now has the support of US House Speaker Paul Ryan, House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi and US Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew.
Disagreements over how the board would be appointed had held up negotiations. The bill would allow the president to select all but one of the board’s seven members from lists provided by congressional leaders. Anyone that the president picked from outside the list would have to be confirmed by the US Senate.
As US legislators prepare for another round of debates, Puerto Ricans like artist Richard Daal are eager to see the bill approved.
“The government here has demonstrated that it doesn’t have the capability or the dexterity to manage the island,” he said. “It’s like a business. If you don’t manage it well, someone else should take over.”
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