The New York Times reported last week on some of the details of the Obama Administration’s recovery plan for Puerto Rico, and it does not bode well for investors — or for states and municipalities that borrow money.
The island’s government is $72 billion in debt, with billions more in unfunded pension obligations. It has been in recession for a decade during which time it has never run a balanced budget, and today it is nearly bankrupt. The government has appealed to the federal government to help, and the Treasury has drawn up a plan. A major feature of that plan is that it will ignore the law by putting government employee pensions in front of general obligation bondholders in the hierarchy of credits, despite the provision of Puerto Rico’s Constitution that mandates GO bondholders will be paid before all other government obligations. The rationale for doing so is, essentially, that public sector pension holders are in greater need of the money than the investors (many of whom are retirees and pensioners themselves), so this ex post change is simply a matter of fairness.
The bondholders, naturally, do not like this. After lending money to the Puerto Rican government under the explicit assurance that they would have the highest priority in all payment scenarios, having this promise revoked seems a tad unfair, as well as blatantly illegal.
It isn’t just the Puerto Rican bondholders that should be angry. The problems with screwing over bondholders in order to protect government pensioners goes farther than its illegality: Doing so sets a precedent for dealing with other bankrupt states in the future. While the Administration avers that this in no way sets a precedent, since the fifty states have recourse to use Chapter 9 of the federal bankruptcy code to reorganize, the reality is otherwise.
The Times correctly notes that Chapter 9 makes no provision for the states extricating themselves from their own general obligation debt. No out was given for a very good reason: Foreclosing the possibility of a default up front (at least as much as possible) makes it easier and cheaper for states to borrow money.
The Obama Administration’s proposal threatens to upset this equilibrium. By upending the law and decades of precedent, the Treasury’s plan threatens to make it more difficult for the states and municipalities to borrow money as well, since their lenders see that they too, might get their promise of being first to be repaid pulled out from under them.
This administration has a long history of picking winners and losers in bankruptcy. In the Chrysler and GM bankruptcies, the secured bondholders took a major hit being reduced to unsecured status while workers and pensioners were elevated to protected status, and the Detroit bankruptcy did the same thing.
While it may seem “fair” to help little old ladies rather than mean old hedge funds, the investors who lost money in these maneuvers weren’t Wall Street plutocrats — they were regular people who invested their money into assets they thought were safe, because the law explicitly said they were. Many of them are retirees and pensioners themselves, and thousands of them will see a reduction in the value of their retirement funds. CNN recently reported that 45% of Puerto Rico’s debt is held by “middle class Puerto Ricans” and “average Joe Americans.” Abrogating bankruptcy law isn’t akin to Robin Hood — it’s transferring money from one group of retirees to another.
A Puerto Rico bailout that punishes secured bondholders would represent a short-term political win for the Treasury but at a long-run cost to the rest of the country in the form of higher borrowing rates. It would be a terrible precedent. It is hard to conceive of a reason for a Republican Congress to acquiesce to such a thing, or to allow a control board to do such a thing down the road.
By Ike Brannon
The Administration’s Puerto Rico Jujitsu Threatens the States’ Ability to Borrow
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