The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Puerto Rican economists see bleak future

- By Rebecca Spalding

Puerto Rican economists are predicting a bleak future for the storm-ravaged island.

At a panel discussion Thursday in San Juan convened by the territory’s federal oversight board, economist Jose Villamil said the population could decline to less than 3 million by 2026, a drop of more than 400,000 from the most recent count.

Another economist, Juan Lara, said the economy could contract by as much as 15 percent in the fis- cal year that ends in June, depending on how long it takes to restore power throughout the island. A third said a conservati­ve estimate of the storm damage is $115 billion — a sum equal to more than a year’s economic output.

“The board, Congress and local government authoritie­s need to address a more realistic estimate of damages,” said economist Heidie Calero, the president of a local consulting firm, who presented the damage number. “Business as usual will not, I repeat will not, come back quickly.”

The projection­s underscore the long and difficult recovery faced by Puerto Rico, whose government was already bankrupt from years of borrowing to stay afloat as the economy and population shrank.

Gov. Ricardo Rossello is asking for about $94 billion in federal aid, and the island’s oversight board is working with the government to revise fiscal recovery plans to take into account the new reality.

In the first fiscal plan approved by the board in March, Puerto Rico said it could allocate $8 billion for debt payments through 2026, far less than what’s owed. But Wednesday, the board’s law- yer told a U.S. court that it may need to skip bond payments for five years. That pushed the price of Puerto Rico’s most active bonds down to as little as 24 cents on the dollar.

One of the biggest threats to Puerto Rico’s economy — and its ability to pay creditors even a fraction of what they’re owed — is how many people choose to leave. Hundreds of thousands did so in the years before the hurricane, in pursuit of jobs on the U.S. mainland. Villamil told the panel that he expects the storm to exacerbate that trend.

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