This Puerto Rico Debt Commission Could Be The Island's Trump Card

Now the panel just needs the funding to complete its investigation.
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The La Perla shanty town is seen in the Old City of San Juan, Puerto Rico. A debt crisis has strangled the island's economy.
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Much of Puerto Rico’s debt may have been issued illegally and requires further investigation, a territory government-sponsored commission report released on Thursday finds.

The Puerto Rico Commission for the Comprehensive Audit of the Public Credit announced its initial conclusions in an interim report that functions as an application for the government funding needed to perform a full audit of the island’s unpayable $70 billion debt.

The preliminary inquiry's recommendations could affect the debate in Congress over how best to assist the island, bolstering progressive criticism of bipartisan aid legislation and the fiscal oversight board it would create.

If a complete audit of the island’s public debt concludes that portions of its arrears were unconstitutionally issued or involved other legally dubious accounting techniques, Puerto Rico could, in theory, claim it has the right to nullify those obligations. Such a development would greatly strengthen the U.S. territory’s bargaining position with its creditors.

That is precisely why the commission’s members, which include 17 Puerto Ricans from different backgrounds, are so anxious to finance a full investigation. (Although a 2015 Puerto Rican law created the commission with the goal of unearthing the financial and political origins of the island’s debt burden, it currently lacks any official funding.)

“To get a search warrant you need probable cause. We have identified probable cause,” said Roberto Pagan, president of the debt audit commission and head of the Puerto Rico chapter of the Service Employees International Union.

With in-kind labor contributions from economists, SEIU and other stakeholders, a “methodology and planning committee” established by the commission was nonetheless able to conduct a limited review of some of Puerto Rico’s recent bond issuances for the purposes of the interim report.

“To get a search warrant you need probable cause. We have identified probable cause.”

- Roberto Pagan, Service Employees International Union

The “probable cause” the interim report established is primarily its identification of various constitutional clauses that it suspects the two 2014 and 2015 debt offerings it examined have violated, based on its examination of two 2014 and 2015 debt offerings.

The Puerto Rican constitution bars the territory from taking on debts that make its high-priority general obligation bonds amount to the equivalent of 15 percent of internal revenues, according to the commission. It estimates that Puerto Rico is spending between 14 and 25 percent of its revenues on debt.

Among the commission’s main arguments for greater funding of its work is that it would like to explore whether recent debt issuances have violated the constitution as a result.

If the commission determined that some debts were illegally issued above a limit, and Puerto Rico tried to nullify them, the island could face paralyzing litigation from bondholders.

But the interim report cites Detroit’s 2013 bankruptcy as evidence that there is legal precedent in the U.S. for a dramatic write-down of debts issued above a legal limit. Judge Steven Rhodes, who presided over the Michigan city's bankruptcy, did not directly rule on the nullification of a certain class of debts that Detroit argued were issued illegally, but he said its claims had “substantial merit.” Rhodes ultimately greenlit a settlement between the city and its creditors that severely limited that particular tranche of debt that creditors could recover.

“It is the experience in Detroit, combined with the observations that were observed in the finances of Puerto Rico that lead the Methodology and Planning Committee to recommend further investigation of this matter to the commission,” the interim report states.

Other questions the interim report raises include whether the island and the financial professionals that enabled it to borrow for so many years adhered to the Securities and Exchange Commission’s financial disclosure rules. The report notes that six weeks after Puerto Rico issued the 2014 General Obligation bond, the island announced that it would not be able to provide updated financial disclosures in a timely fashion. If lenders knew how financially precarious Puerto Rico was it would not have lent to it as freely, the report implies.

The pre-audit report was released Thursday in order to meet the commission’s obligation to communicate with the public frequently and transparently, according to SEIU’s Pagan.

But the commission’s members also worry that the PROMESA (Puerto Rico Oversight, Management and Economic Stability) Act making its way through Congress will supercede them, Pagan said. The draft legislation appears to make no distinction between debt issued legally or illegally, he noted, and its establishment of a seven-person fiscal oversight board could render the commission’s authority moot.

Progressive critics of PROMESA may find that the commission’s recommendations heighten their concerns about the legislation.

Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), among the most vocal opponents of the Puerto Rico act in Congress, cited the illegality of some of the island’s debt in his initial call to kill the bill in April.

“If any of Puerto Rico’s debt was incurred in violation of its Constitution it must be immediately set aside,” Sanders said in a statement.

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Before You Go

Puerto Rico's Debt Crisis
Puerto Ricans Are Americans(01 of09)
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Despite the media constantly labeling Puerto Ricans living in the states as "immigrants," everyone born on the island holds a U.S. passport and is an American citizen. Yet the 3.7 million citizens that currently remain on the island are not eligible to vote for president. (credit:SAUL LOEB/Getty Images)
Mainland Americans Hold Puerto Rico's Debt(02 of09)
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(credit:Mat McClain/The Washington Post via Getty Images)
Puerto Rico Will Matter in 2016(03 of09)
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Despite their ineligibility to vote for president on the island, how presidential candidates approach Puerto Rico's economic crisis could influence the 2016 election. The island participates in both the Democratic and Republican primaries and awards delegates that go towards each party's eventual nominee. During a visit to the island in April, former Republican presidential hopeful Jeb Bush pushed for Puerto Rican statehood. "Puerto Rican citizens, U.S. citizens, ought to have the right to determine whether they want to be a state. I think statehood is the best path, personally," Bush told the crowd at Universidad Metropolitana de Cupey in San Juan. (credit:Alvin Baez / Reuters)
Mainland America Is Facing Similar Problems(04 of09)
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Though Puerto Rico faces more serious economic issues than the rest of 50 U.S. states, some trends found in Puerto Rico can be easily be seen in the states, including contraction of the manufacturing industry, weaker job security, difficulty reversing unemployment, fewer public services and the decline of the middle class. (credit:Alvin Baez / Reuters)
Puerto Rico Cannot Declare Bankruptcy(05 of09)
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Regardless of party, Puerto Rico's political leaders largely agree that the island should enjoy the same protections extended to the rest of U.S. under Chapter 9 of the bankruptcy code. Puerto Rico's inability to seek economic relief under Chapter 9 makes renegotiating its debt much harder.

(credit:Bloomberg via Getty Images)
Hillary Clinton Supports Bankruptcy Rights For Puerto Rico(06 of09)
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"Congress should provide Puerto Rico the same authority that states already have to enable severely distressed government entities, including municipalities and public corporations, to restructure their debts," Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton wrote in a statement on her campaign's website.

"We're not talking about a bailout, we're talking about a fair shot at success," Clinton added.

(credit:Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
Puerto Rico Cannot Devalue Its Currency(07 of09)
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As a last resort, independent countries will sometimes turn to devaluing their currency in order to kickstart economic growth. Due to its status as a U.S. territory and its use of the dollar, Puerto Rico is unable to make this choice. (credit:Bloomberg via Getty Images)
Washington Will Not Bail Out Puerto Rico(08 of09)
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The Obama administration will not be saving Puerto Rico anytime soon. The White House publicly ruled out aid packages that would keep the island from defaulting. U.S. Treasury officials have offered advice to Puerto Rico on on how to help manage its debt crisis, but have not offered concrete solutions. Currently, the administration has lobbied Congress to pass existing legislation designed to extend bankruptcy protections to the island. (credit:David F. Gasser/CON via Getty Images)
Puerto Ricans Can't Vote In Congress(09 of09)
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Puerto Rico doesn't have a vote in Congress. Resident Commissioner Pedro Pierluisi, Puerto Rico's lone representative, can submit legislation to the rest of the body but cannot vote on it. (credit:Bill Clark/Getty Images)