DANICA COTO
Associated Press
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — Puerto Rico’s government needs to move quickly to adopt measures to help pull the island out of a nearly decade-long economic slump, the president of New York’s Federal Reserve Bank said Tuesday.
William Dudley said during a visit to Puerto Rico that the New York Fed is working on a report that will analyze the U.S. territory’s fiscal health. He said Puerto Rico should aim to lower its debt, reform its tax system and strengthen labor market incentives, among other things.
“The next three to six months are very important,” he said. “…This is absolutely doable, but you still have to do it.”
The recommendations come as the island of 3.7 million people struggles with more than $70 billion in public debt and a 13.8 percent unemployment rate. Its jobless rate is higher than in any U.S. state.
“Low labor participation rates and high unemployment rates remain perhaps the biggest challenges to Puerto Rico’s economy,” Dudley said.
Investors are closely watching the island’s fiscal problems, with the government having sold a record $3.5 billion in general obligation bonds in March despite Puerto Rico having its credit rating downgraded to junk status. Legislators are poised to approve the government’s first balanced budget in more than a decade.
Puerto Rico Treasury Secretary Melba Acosta, who attended the conference, declined to comment.
Dudley said Puerto Rico should consider strengthening its public corporations, noting that the state-owned power company, the highway and transportation authority and the water and sewer company account for almost 40 percent of the island’s debt and are to blame for much of its build up.
Comptroller Yesmin Valdivieso said in an interview that public agencies can no longer rely on the general fund like they used to.
“They think the government has a little money-making machine, that the general fund can cover their costs. But not anymore. It’s not possible,” she said.
Dudley said the government also should get energy costs down to help boost the economy. Puerto Rico depends on oil to generate nearly 70 percent of its electricity, and power bills are on average more than twice those on the U.S. mainland.
“Reform on the energy front is absolutely critical,” Dudley said.
Gov. Alejandro Garcia Padilla signed a law in May that aims to revamp the power company and increase the use of natural gas and renewable energy sources.
Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.