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Puerto Rico won’t make $370 million in debt payments Monday

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  • ASSOCIATED PRESS / JULY 2015

    The Puerto Rican flag flies in front of Puerto Rico’s Capitol as in San Juan, Puerto Rico.

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico » Gov. Alejandro Garcia Padilla announced that Puerto Rico’s government will not make nearly $370 million in bond payments due Monday after a failure to restructure or find a political solution to the U.S. territory’s spiraling public debt crisis.

Garcia said today that he had issued an executive order suspending payments on debt owed by the island’s Government Development Bank, a default that will likely prompt lawsuits from creditors and could be a prelude to a deadline to a much larger payment due July 1.

The governor said Puerto Rico can’t pay the bonds without cutting essential services.

Island officials spent the weekend trying to negotiate a settlement that would have avoided the default but apparently came up short. The development comes as Congress has so far been unable to pass a debt restructuring bill for Puerto Rico.

“Let me be very clear, this was a painful decision,” Garcia said in a speech. “We would have preferred to have had a legal framework to restructure our debts in an orderly manner.”

The Government Development Bank had $422 million in payments due Monday. Puerto Rico will pay $22 million interest and it reached a deal Friday to restructure about $30 million, leaving it short $370 million.

The administration also will be paying about $50 million in other debt payments due Monday owed by various other territorial agencies.

Nearly all the bonds are held by a variety of U.S. hedge funds and mutual funds.

Garcia said Puerto Rico’s government could not make the payment without sacrificing basic necessities for the island’s 3.5 million residents, including keeping schools and public hospitals open.

“We will continue working to try to reach a consensual solution with our creditors,” he said. “That is one of our commitments. But what we will never do is put the lives and safety of our people in danger.”

The governor had been warning since last year that the island’s overall public debt of more than $70 billion is unpayable.

Puerto Rico has been suffering through more than a decade of economic decline since Congress phased out tax cuts that had made the island a center for pharmaceutical and medical equipment manufacturing. Garcia’s predecessors and the island legislature borrowed heavily to cover over budget deficits, causing a debt spiral that has already prompted several smaller defaults.

Creditors have accused the government of exaggerating the crisis to avoid upcoming payments of more than $1 billion due July 1 that includes general obligation bonds, which are guaranteed by the constitution.

Economists have warned that a default of this magnitude could cause Puerto Rico to lose access to capital markets and make the situation worse as the government faces the much larger payment due July 1.

Garcia lashed out at Congress for failing to pass a bill that would create a control board to help manage the island’s $70 billion debt and to oversee some debt restructuring. He said it has been held up by “internal partisan and ideological divisions” in the House of Representatives.

“We can’t wait longer,” he said. “We need this restructuring mechanism now.”

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    • in part, US lawmakers bear a lot of responsibility for PR’s financial crisis, creating laws that greatly favored and benefited these creditors and hedge funds, much to the detriment of PR. US law opened up these loopholes, and realizing their existence, the hedge funds have mounted a powerful lobby to influence lawmakers not to close them. this is a crisis of our own making …

  • I have been posting for the last five years (and more) data that I get from the state’s financial reports that show the serious condition of the financial “state of the state”. Please take ten minutes of your time to listen to the fillowing from Hawaii Public Radio’s conversation with Sheila Weinburg from “Truth in Accounting”, a non-partison organization that monitors all the state’s financial conditions. http://hpr2.org/post/conversation-tuesday-april-26th-2016. Mahalo.

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