The debt crisis in Puerto Rico could potentially cost financial institutions in the United States tens of billions of dollars in losses.
This week, Puerto Rico Governor Alejandro Garcia Padilla publicly announced that Puerto Rico’s 73 billion dollar debt is “not payable,” and a special adviser that was recently appointed to help straighten out the island’s finances said that it is “insolvent” and will totally run out of cash very shortly.
At this point, Puerto Rico’s debt is approximately 15 times larger than the per capita median debt of the 50 U.S. states.
Yes, the Greek debt crisis is larger, as Greece currently owes about $350 billion to the rest of the planet.
But only about $14 billion of that total is owed to U.S. financial institutions.
But with Puerto Rico, things are very different.
Just about the entire 73 billion dollar debt is owed to U.S. financial institutions, and this could potentially cause massive problems for some extremely leveraged Wall Street firms.
There is a reason why Puerto Rico is called “America’s Greece”.
In Puerto Rico today, more than 40 percent of the population is living in poverty, the unemployment rate is over 12 percent, and the economy of the small island nation has continually been in recession since 2006.
Yet all this time Puerto Rico has continued to pile up even more debt.
Finally, it has gotten to the point where all of this debt is simply unpayable…
Finally, it has gotten to the point where all of this debt is simply unpayable…
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