New Puerto Rico Debt Plan Is a False āSolutionā Crafted to Benefit Capitalists

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By Sarah Molinari & Marisol LeBrón – Jan 30, 2022
On January 18, Judge Taylor Swain of New Yorkās Southern District confirmed Puerto Ricoās eighth amended Plan of Adjustment (POA), setting into motion the closure of the largest municipal debt restructuring deal in the history of the United States. The POA modifies approximately $33 billion of the central governmentās debt as part of Title III ā the bankruptcy-like process established under the Puerto Rico Oversight, Management, and Economic Stability Act (PROMESA) ā which has alreadyĀ cost Puerto Ricans $1 billion.
Since its announcement, the POA has been touted as putting an end to five years of brutal structural adjustment. For instance, Natalie Jaresko, executive director of the unelected Financial Oversight Board that has dictated Puerto Ricoās finances since 2016, celebrated the POA as a ānew chapter in Puerto Ricoās history.ā Gov. Pedro Pierluisi suggested that while the POA is ānot perfect,ā it ultimately protects Puerto Ricoās vulnerable public sector. In contrast, a multisectoral coalition of teachers, labor, pensioners, students and activistsĀ expressed immediate rejectionĀ of what they call the āplan del tumbeā (the shakedown plan). These groups have long been demanding a comprehensive debt audit, calling attention to the POAās everyday implications, and resisting its confirmation by mobilizing online, in the streets, the legislature and the courts.
Rather than a ānew chapter,ā the POA affirms a debt that has not been meaningfullyĀ auditedĀ and that forecloses the pursuit of legal action against banks and underwriters as well asĀ debt illegalitiesĀ that the Financial Oversight Board itself previously challenged in court. Despite rhetoric from powerful political and financial elites in Puerto Rico and the United States, the POA will bring little relief to Puerto Ricans struggling under the weight of crushing austerity in an archipelago that is increasingly geared towards attracting foreign capital and incentivizing the settlement of wealthy North Americans in Puerto Rico as a means of boosting an anemic local economy while Puerto Ricans are increasing forced to migrate in search of economic stability.
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TheĀ Plan of AdjustmentĀ impacts Puerto Ricoās general obligation bonds (a type of municipal bond backed by the general revenue of the issuing entity), the Public Buildings Authority, the Employee Retirement System and the Convention Center District Authority bonds. The restructuring deal reduces $33 billion in public debt to about $7 billion and includes an exchange of bonds. However, this supposed ā80 percent cutā is misleadingĀ because certain bondholders will receive a $7 billionĀ immediate cash payoutĀ as well as additional payments through a ācontingent value instrumentā based on future economic improvement measures. By and large, the POAĀ does not make significant cuts to bonds held by āvultureā investorsĀ who bought up Puerto Ricoās distressed debt for pennies on the dollar in the hopes of a lucrative payout ā another example of how the restructuring process has privileged Wall Streetās speculative desires.
As a result of persistent public pressure, the confirmed POAĀ does not cut public retireesā pensionsĀ as earlier versions had proposed, but it does freeze defined benefit pensions for active public school teachers and judges. Additionally, despite Governor Pierluisiās comments that the POA protects the public sector, there is no doubt that since the passage of PROMESA, Puerto Ricoās public sector has been significantly scaled back and weakened in order to service the debt in a process that the POA upholds and enshrines. Hundreds of the archipelagoās public schools have been closed and the public universityās future remains uncertain, while teachers, police, doctors and nurses have been leaving in record numbers for the continental U.S. due to stagnant wages, cuts to benefits and dwindling resources. For example, in Puerto RicoĀ lost nearly 12 percentĀ of its population between 2010-2020. The slow-motion collapse of the public sector certainly predates the POA and even PROMESA, but it is important to note that the POA does nothing to rebuild or stabilize the public sector. The gutting of the public sector and the failure to address it once again reveals that the POA is not about improving everyday life for Puerto Ricans by protecting them from the effects of predatory debt or austerity. Rather, it is about protecting Puerto Ricoās profit-generating capacity (mostly for those outside of the archipelago and a small class of Puerto Rican elites āĀ the ācriollo blocā) and (eventually) restoring its ability to borrow unencumbered.
Many on the ground question the feasibility of fulfilling anĀ estimated $3.4 billion in annual debt serviceĀ and pension obligations in the midst of overlapping climate, economic and public health crises that render daily life a struggle for working people. As the new year begins and the POA is set to take effect in March, Puerto Ricans are facing ongoing precarity, including a potential additionalĀ wave of public school closures, aĀ 16.8 percent hike in domestic electric billsĀ and anĀ increase in road tolls. An influx of wealthy investors āĀ particularly cryptocurrency enthusiastsĀ ā have contributed to local displacement and real estate speculation as they acquire property and use Puerto Rico as aĀ tax havenĀ facilitated by incentives such asĀ Acts 20, 22 and 60.
A āResolutionā?
Debt service projections rely upon a mix of structural and fiscal reforms (austerity) and an economy propped up by the anticipatedĀ disbursement of federal fundsĀ to address the hurricanes, earthquakes and the pandemic that the Puerto Rican government does not control. Furthermore, economic indicators point to Puerto Rico returning toĀ budgetary deficits by 2036. All this throws into question the sustainability of a POA projected 25 years into the future and Puerto Ricoās ability to fulfill basic public services. Nonetheless, mainstream media portrayals present the POA as a necessary āresolutionā to the bankruptcy and a step toward Puerto Ricoās recovery. A quick search of news related to the POA will show headlines peppered with laudatory phrases proclaiming the imminent end of Puerto Ricoās financial woes. It has even been framed as a crucial step towards Puerto Ricoās political and financial sovereignty.
The POA will bring little relief to Puerto Ricans struggling under the weight of crushing austerity in an archipelago that is increasingly geared towards attracting foreign capital.
InĀ an op-ed for theĀ Wall Street Journal, Natalie Jaresko and David Skeel, the executive director and chairman of the Financial Oversight Board, position the POA not only as a resolution to Puerto Ricoās bankruptcy but also its indeterminate political status. According to Jaresko and Skeel, āCongress is unlikely to step in to make a determination on status until Puerto Rico gets its financial house back in order. Puerto Ricoās crushing debt load has been one of the biggest obstacles to achieving this. That obstacle now has been removed.ā Behind the faƧade of benevolent concern, Jaresko and Skeelās op-ed makes clear the POA is part of a colonial infrastructure that simply hands down decisions that shape Puerto Ricoās future seeks to strip Puerto Ricans of their political agency. The imposition of mechanisms for financial capture and debt coercion is not a way of resolving Puerto Ricoās colonial status ā it is its continuation.
Perhaps the greatest issue with the POA that should not be lost in discussions about whether the plan will lead to a financial recovery for Puerto Rico is that the POA charts a future largely absent the input of the Puerto Ricans who will be most impacted by its devastating effects for generations to come. The POA was conceptualized by the Financial Oversight Board, or āLa Juntaā as locals call it, and facilitated by the Puerto Rican legislature.
The POA contradicts everything that Puerto Ricoās most vulnerable populations ā those most likely to be affected by austerity related to debt servicing ā have demanded in order to make life more livable, healthy and safe in Puerto Rico. And this has been made clear during the countless protests that have often accompanied La Juntaās meetings in both Puerto Rico and the diaspora where Puerto Ricans and others in solidarity have attempted to make their voices heard in the rooms where Puerto Ricansā futures are being decided without them. Additionally, Judge Swain was appointed to oversee the debt restructuring process despite having no experience with Puerto Rico and has shown little willingness to take seriously the concerns being expressed by Puerto Ricans about debt restructuring process.
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Every step in the path to the POAās confirmation has functioned to further remove decision-making power from the hands of Puerto Ricans. The POAās failure to listen to, let alone address, Puerto Ricansā very real concerns contributes to the feelings expressed by many that the debt, the failed disaster recovery and all of the financial chicanery devised to lure millionaires to the archipelago have seemingly combined to create a Puerto Rico without Puerto Ricans. In other words, the POA helps bring into being a future where if Puerto Ricans arenāt actually absent, their ability to have a say politically has been severely curtailed.
The Plan of Adjustment provides Puerto Ricans with more uncertainty than resolution, especially since theĀ temporality of debtĀ does not resolve ā but rather complicates ā the relationship between past, present and future obligations. The POA renders impossible a comprehensive debt audit or an economic plan that responds to working peopleās needs, all while endorsing illegal debt and failing to hold the individuals and institutions responsible for indebting the public accountable. Ultimately, the POA leavesĀ colonial, social and environmental debts unresolved and fails to bring a true peopleās āresolutionā to the debt crisis. Rather than technical solutions adjudicated in the courts among consultants, unelected overseers and lawyers, real resolution might take shape through a reckoning process that interrogates what is owed to whom and the United Statesā debt to Puerto Ricans for more than a century of colonial violence and exploitation. A true resolution to Puerto Ricoās so-called debt crisis would include debt cancelation and reparations for historical harms, not payouts for Wall Street vultures who treated the archipelago like a casino.
Sarah Molinari is an anthropologist and Postdoctoral Research Associate at Florida International University. Her research focuses on the lived experiences of debt and disaster recovery processes in Puerto Rico. She is also a co-creator of the Puerto Rico Syllabus, a digital humanities project about the Puerto Rican debt crisis.
Marisol LeBrón is associate professor in Feminist Studies and Critical Race and Ethnic Studies at the University of California, Santa Cruz. She is author of Against Muerto Rico: Lessons from the Verano Boricua (Editora Educación Emergente, 2021) and Policing Life and Death: Race, Violence, and Resistance in Puerto Rico (University of California Press, 2019). Along with Yarimar Bonilla she is the co-editor of Aftershocks of Disaster: Puerto Rico Before and After the Storm (Haymarket Books, 2019). She is also one of the co-creators of the Puerto Rico Syllabus, a digital humanities project about the Puerto Rican debt crisis.
Featured image:Ā Activists and Puerto Rican community members protest against Steven Tananbaum, a board member of the Museum of Modern Art (MOMA), for his involvement in a hedge fund that owns over $2 billion of Puerto Rico’s debt, outside of the newly renovated and reopened MOMA in Midtown Manhattan on October 21, 2019, in New York City. DREW ANGERER / GETTY IMAGES
(Truthout)