Dinar Recaps

View Original

The Only Fix Is Taking Matters Into Your Own Hands

Notes From The Field By Simon Black

September 30, 2019   Bahia Beach, Puerto Rico

The Only Fix Is Taking Matters Into Your Own Hands

On Friday evening, the government here in Puerto Rico made an announcement to local retirees that many of them would have their pensions cut.

Poof. Just like that.

The pension cut is part of a debt restructuring plan to help Puerto Rico emerge from bankruptcy, which they declared in May 2017.

Bankruptcy is complicated, so I’ll explain a bit here.

See this content in the original post

When individuals, corporations, and even local government take on so much debt that they can no longer make payments, they go through a specific legal process called bankruptcy.

During the bankruptcy process, a judge temporarily relieves the bankrupt from making any principal or interest payments on their debt while all sides work out a solution.

The bankrupt puts all of their assets and liabilities on the table, and then works with the bondholders to figure out a plan that everyone can live with.

Sometimes they’re successful. Occasionally you’ll hear about a big company (often an airline) ‘emerging from bankruptcy’.

This means the company was able to work out a deal with its bondholders, i.e. the company agrees to sell some assets and cut costs in order to pay the bondholders, but the bondholders agree to take a loss and only recover, say, 50 cents on the dollar.

Once the deal is settled, the debt is struck off the company’s balance sheet and they begin operating normally again.

Sometimes, though, a deal cannot be reached. And the Bankruptcy Court appoints a special representative to liquidate the company’s assets and split up the proceeds among the bondholders.

But governments can’t exactly do that. Bankruptcy courts don’t have the latitude to sell off police cars, fire trucks, and elementary schools in order to repay government bondholders.

And that’s why Puerto Rico’s debt negotiations have taken so long.

Puerto Rico has more than $70 billion in debt, worth nearly 70% of GDP. And making payments on that debt was consuming nearly 30% of government tax revenue every year.

That’s totally unsustainable, and declaring bankruptcy was inevitable.


To continue reading, please go to the original article here:

https://www.sovereignman.com/international-diversification-strategies/the-only-fix-is-taking-matters-into-your-own-hands-25652/

To your freedom & prosperity, Simon Black Founder, SovereignMan.com

See this gallery in the original post

 

See this content in the original post