Puerto Rico Destroyed-New Boss in Town
Last week President Trump Tweeted, “...The fact is that
Puerto Rico has been destroyed by two hurricanes. Big decisions will have to be
made as to the cost of its rebuilding!”
The “big
decisions” to which Trump referred was the subject of my commentary two weeks
ago, in an article entitled, “The Dollars and Sense of Disaster Relief.” In
that piece, we looked at the actual dollars in circulation that are available
to repair the damage from the two major hurricanes, Harvey and Irma. We noted that even the US Government does
not have those kinds of dollars ready and available for repairs, normally
carrying only $50 to $60 billion in the cash accounts of the US Treasury at any
particular time. And those dollars are
spoken for.
And so we
concluded that the only way enough dollars might ever come available to pay the
hundreds of billions of dollars of damages would be for new dollars to be
created for that purpose and spent into circulation-thus enlarging the money
supply by the amount needed. And who is
in charge of money creation in our country?
Not the government. No, the
private banks of the Federal Reserve System, mainly those on Wall Street,
create the money Supply. And those banks
don’t just spend dollars into circulation.
The loan them, at interest. Obviously,
Wall Street banks will profit from the suffering related to this major storm
damage.
But it’s not
like Wall Street banks have some big pile of dollars stashed somewhere, which
they earned, and which they will generously place at risk to help the storm
victims. No, to repair the damage, the
money these banks will loan to insurance companies and the US Government, will
be created on computer screens. No one
will have earned those dollars and subsequently loan them at risk. Wall Street banks really have no downside,
only an upside, when they loan money they never had or earned in the first
place.
And that
brings us to the latest round of hurricane destruction, specifically the island
of Puerto Rico, which from all accounts has been virtually destroyed. Coincidentally, four months ago, Puerto Rico,
a territory of the US, filed for the largest single municipal bankruptcy in
history. For several years the Puerto
Rican Government has been presiding over a dwindling economy and a declining
population resulting in ever-diminishing tax revenues to pay for itself and
essential services. Accounts of
corruption, as we have come to expect, abound.
But other
island economies, such as the Bahamas and Bermuda, are doing comparatively
well. What is the difference?
The
difference is that the Bahaman and Bermudan economies create their own currency,
pegged to the US dollar. What one
creates, one can never run out of.
Puerto Rico, on the other hand, uses US dollars, and thus has no means
to create more of them. For Puerto Rico
to remain solvent, more dollars must be attracted to the island economy, than
leave it. A net negative cash flow for an
island economy, having no means to create its own medium of exchange, means
ultimate insolvency. That is where
Puerto Rico was four months ago, insolvent due to negative cash flow.
Furthering
their problems, now many areas of the island are virtually destroyed, leaving a
bankrupt economy, completely dependent upon the infusion of hundreds of
billions of US dollars to initiate repairs, and no way to pay for them.
Well…there
is one way.
The island
of Puerto Rico is about to be privatized.
Its government will have no choice.
The island has sustained catastrophic damage and is solely dependent on
US dollars to make repairs. Puerto Rico has no way to bargain short of selling potentially
income-producing portions of the island, its infrastructure and port
authorities, to private investors, international financing agencies and
corporate opportunists, along with its present-day creditors. And the infusion capital necessary to restore
the island will all come from, you guessed it, Wall Street banks. Those banks will simply print new dollars out
of thin air and loan them to the various private parties who will effectively take
over the island. The Fed has been
looking for a way to inflate the US dollar…well there you go. Funny how that worked.
The economic
remedy I just described has precedent.
Faced with negative cash flow for several years, the bankrupt government
of Greece was forced to take the same deal.
In exchange for a bailout, a committee of three, some call the “Troika,”
comprised of the International Monetary Fund, the European Central Bank and the
European Commission, took ownership and control of Grecian infrastructure and
port authorities. That is how Puerto Rico will be repaired.
Ironically, taking
the only real option available, the island of “Puerto Rico” will soon live up
to its name again, making its new “port” owners exceedingly “rich.” At that point I can’t help wondering whether
the new island bosses might find it appropriate to rebrand their Caribbean
island investment property.
How does
“Banco Rico” sound?
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