Four and half years after hurricanes Maria and Irma battered Puerto Rico, followed by the COVID-19 pandemic, federal reconstruction aid is still ramping up and analysts say that money could be structured to do more for the territory's economy as it emerges from bankruptcy.
The federal government has allocated $71.5 billion of hurricane reconstruction funds for Puerto Rico, obligated $62.3 billion of that, and disbursed $19.7 billion.
Puerto Rico needs a healthy economy to support its access in the short-term to the municipal market
While federal money is beneficial, some observers have concerns that the aid may obscure the underlying problems Puerto Rico faces in the longer term. The Puerto Rico Oversight Board, which is charged with putting the
“The impact of these funds has been significant and, it is no exaggeration to say that even the very modest growth in the economy would not have happened without them,” said José Villamil, chairman of Puerto Rico-based economic consulting firm Estudios Técnicos.
The aid from the Federal Emergency Management Agency Public Assistance, Hazard Mitigation, Mission Assignments disbursements will grow from $1.03 billion in fiscal 2021 to $2.11 billion in the current fiscal year and $3.31 billion in fiscal 2023, according to the Puerto Rico Oversight Board’s fiscal plan approved in January. Along with hurricane aid these figures also include money designated for relief from the earthquakes that hit southwest Puerto Rico in late 2019 and early 2020.
“The aid has enabled Puerto Rico’s economy to perform much better post-Maria period than it did in the 12 years leading up to the storm," said CreditSights Senior Municipals Analyst John Ceffalio. "For example, job growth in Puerto Rico outperformed the nation for three straight years: 2019, 2020, and 2021. Before that, Puerto Rico had not outperformed the U.S. since 2004.”
Economists say federal hurricane, earthquake, and COVID-19 aid have aided Puerto Rico’s economy for the last few years, allowing the island’s real gross national product to grow by 1.8% in 2019 after years of decline.
Federal Community Development Block Grant-Disaster Relief funding is also projected to go from $125 million in fiscal 2021 to $737 million this fiscal year and $1.33 billion in fiscal 2023.
There have been a variety of types of assistance since the hurricanes hit. Total disaster relief for the island is expected to go from $2.84 billion in fiscal 2021 to $3.95 billion in fiscal 2022 and to $5.32 billion the following fiscal year. Private insurance is not expected to make any payouts this year or in the future. FEMA and CDBG-DR funding is expected to continue for more than a dozen years.
Academic research on the aftermaths of natural disasters suggests Puerto Rico is just at the earliest stages of a long recovery, said Deepak Lamba-Nieves, research director at Puerto Rico’s Center for a New Economy. “But things are not going peaches and cream.”
The Trump administration complicated matters by
The Oversight Board in its fiscal plan said a key way the federal funding can help the economy is by improving the island’s infrastructure. The board said the percentages of federal funding going to infrastructure varies among the different types of federal aid it receives.
“If the island successfully uses the funds to meaningfully improve transportation, water/sewer, and power infrastructure, then the federal aid will improve the lives of Puerto Ricans and make it a better place to invest for decades to come,” Ceffalio said.
Villamil does not see federal aid as purely a positive influence on Puerto Rico. Even before COVID-19 hit, federal funding for the island was growing, he said.
Employment income as a share of all personal income went from 60% in fiscal 2000 to 39% in fiscal 2020, Villamil said.
Federal funds accounted for 34% of all personal income on the island in fiscal 2020, before most
The federal government has also introduced the earned income tax credit to the island and dramatically expanded eligibility for the federal child tax credit for island parents.
“As far as I am concerned, anything that increases dependence on federal assistance is not good for the island’s future,” Villamil said. “No society can aspire to being developed with such high levels of dependence on such funds.”
Opinions differ.
Advantage Business Consulting President Vicente Feliciano said these two new credits, the approval of the central government Plan of Adjustment, and the approval of Hurricane Maria reconstruction projects, should support the economy in 2022.
“The medium term looks more uncertain,” Feliciano said. “For example, Puerto Rico is very dependent on imported energy and foodstuffs now experiencing sharp increases.”
Feliciano said the key for the long term is if the right lessons from the bankruptcy were learned.
“On the one hand, it is a concern that the government has committed to salary increases to public sector workers to be financed by non-recurring federal COVID transfers," he said. "On the other hand, the government has soldiered on with some significant structural transformations, such as the concession of transmission and distribution of electricity from PREPA to LUMA, in spite of political opposition.”
Indeed, PREPA and LUMA energy are
Howard Cure, director of municipal bond research at Evercore Wealth Management, also said he was concerned about Puerto Rico’s use of federal COVID funds for recurring funding needs. The government’s record of balancing its budget is not great, he said, but board monitoring of the territory's government should help.
In recent years, the federal government has reduced the number of reconstruction projects needing to use the Trump-era federal funding procedures, increasing the pace of disbursements, Lamba-Nieves said. He added that President Biden's administration has streamlined the federal response.
An additional problem slowing down disbursements is that years of austerity before the hurricanes had shrunk the Puerto Rico Housing Department, he said. When the hurricanes hit there were too few government professionals to respond to the disaster and Puerto Rico’s government had to contract outside firms for assistance, he said.
Since these firms were and are outside the government, the knowledge these professionals are gaining will not remain with the government and the government will not be able to easily draw on it when the next disaster strikes, Lamba-Nieves said.
The federal Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act, which guides federal response to natural disasters, says that local firms should be given preference for federal reconstruction contracts. However, the federal government has awarded the biggest reconstruction contracts overwhelmingly to firms from the lower 48 states, Lamba-Nieves said.
Federal regulations require the contracting firms to spend money on the reconstruction projects and then get federal reimbursement. Few local contractors have the liquidity to be able to do this, Lamba-Nieves said.
Villamil said his firm estimates that for every dollar FEMA spends it has only a roughly 13 cent impact on the economy.
“FEMA uses mostly mainland firms and close to half of FEMA funding is for administration and operations,” he said.
Restructuring the debt was only the tip of the iceberg, noted Oversight Board Executive Director Natalie Jaresko after the Plan of Adjustment became effective on March 15.
"Puerto Rico needs to improve financial management, ensuring financial transparency and accountability, to produce long-term growth and stability,” Jaresko said then. “Puerto Rico should never fall back to the financial mismanagement practices of the past. The government will need to redouble its efforts to manage its resources carefully for the benefit of the people of Puerto Rico.”