Saturday, June 22, 2013

Governor defends petroleum tax plan

Moody’s cuts Prepa to near junk level

1 Share

Moody’s cuts Prepa to near junk level

Moody’s Investors Service downgraded the credit rating of the Puerto Rico Electr ...

Hike in federal ‘surge’ in PR on horizon

A “surge” in federal agents being deployed to stem drug trafficking and related ...

At 4.9 million, Puerto Ricans remain second-largest Latino group in states

Puerto Ricans remain the second-largest Latino population group in the United St ...

This post has been generated by Page2RSS
Read the whole story
 
· · ·

PR unemployment, jobs both in decline

1 Share

PR unemployment, jobs both in decline

Puerto Rico’s unemployment rate fell to 13.4 percent in May, posting a fourth st ...

PR aims to boost aerospace industry

Puerto Rico officials are attending the Paris Air Show this week as the island g ...

PR researchers deploy oysters to clean Condado Lagoon in novel experiment

Researchers in Puerto Rico are seeding the Condado Lagoon with native oysters in ...

This post has been generated by Page2RSS
Read the whole story
 
· · ·

Governor defends petroleum tax plan

1 Share

Governor defends petroleum tax plan

Gov. Alejandro García Padilla is defending a proposed hike in petroleum taxes, s ...

PRTC launches summer travel deals

Puerto Rico is celebrating the beginning of summer by offering deep discounts on ...

This post has been generated by Page2RSS
Read the whole story
 
· ·

Drug cartels in Oregon: History of Mexican cartels - OregonLive.com 

1 Share

Drug cartels in Oregon: History of Mexican cartels
OregonLive.com
1980s: The U.S. cuts off Caribbean cocaine routes and works with Colombia to take apart its cartels. Mexican cartels ... The U.S. refers to them generally as cartels but also as transnational crime organizations (TCOs) or drug trafficking organizations ...

and more »

Article Print Layout - Latin America Monitor

Friday, June 21, 2013

Economy / Puerto RicoJune 2013 | Macroeconomic Forecasts

Article Print Layout - Latin America Monitor

1 Share
Economy / Puerto RicoJune 2013 | Macroeconomic Forecasts
BMI View: Consumer price inflation in Puerto Rico declined sharply from 1.7% year-on-year (y-o-y) in March to 0.5% y-o-y in April. We expect demand-side inflationary pressures to increase modestly through 2013, as the Puerto Rican economy continues to recover from a five-year recession that ended in 2012. As such, we forecast inflation to reach 2.5% y-o-y by end-2013. However, the recent drop in inflation reaffirms our view for an uneven recovery, marked by sluggish private consumption.
20112012Latest Period2013f2014f
Population, mn 33.7e3.7e--3.73.7
Nominal GDP, US$bn 1,461.659.3--61.667.1
Real GDP growth, % change y-o-y 2,4-1.60.5--1.31.4
Consumer price index, % y-o-y, eop 53.31.20.5Apr2.53.0
Exchange rate USD/US$, eop 61.001.00--1.001.00
Goods exports, US$bn 457.658.810.0Jan-Feb61.765.4
Goods imports, US$bn 444.346.17.2Jan-Feb47.148.1
Balance of trade in goods, US$bn 413.312.72.7Jan-Feb14.617.4
Current account balance, US$bn 43.4-0.7e---0.30.2
Current account balance, % of GDP 75.5-1.2e---0.40.3

The Star: PR Food Stamp Benefi ts Threatened by U.S. House Amendments

The Star: PR Food Stamp Benefi ts Threatened by U.S. House Amendments

By EVA LLORENS VELEZ

Puerto Rico Federal Affairs (PRFAA)
Administrator Juan Eugenio Hernández Mayoral blasted Resident
Commissioner Pedro Pierluisi on Wednesday for failing to stop U.S. House Republicans from amending the Farm Bill
to cut food stamp benefi ts to thousands
of Puerto Ricans.
The House planned to begin voting
Wednesday on 103 amendments to the
bill, including a Democratic proposal to
eliminate $2 billion in cuts in the $80 billion-a-year food stamp or Supplemental
Nutritional Assistance Program (SNAP).
In Puerto Rico the program is known as
PAN by its Spanish acronym.
The bill also would make it more
diffi cult for some to qualify for food
stamps, and would expand some agriculture subsidies and set policy for rural
development programs.
House Republicans included in the
Farm Bill an amendment that would strip
Puerto Ricans under SNAP from 25 percent of the money they get in cash. Another Republican lawmaker included an
amendment to the Farm Bill that would
lower the $2 billion in SNAP benefi ts received by Puerto Rico overall.
“The resident commissioner, who
has the power to eliminate those amendments and right in his own territory, failed to prevent this,” Hernández Mayoral
said.
Unlike the Puerto Rico Legislature,
which allows lawmakers to amend bills
on the fl oor, Congress imposes deadlines
upon lawmakers to submit amendments
to legislation. The deadline to submit
amendments to the Farm Bill was Monday at 2 p.m, Hernández Mayoral said.
That means no amendments can be submitted during debates on the bill.
“If you check the congressional
record, Pierluisi did not propose any
amendments to the bill. He proposed
amendments to stop plagues on coffee
plants and other things, but not to stop
the cuts to SNAP,” the PRFAA administrator said. “Puerto Ricans must know
that Pierluisi stood by and did nothing.”
Many conservatives have said the
food stamp cuts do not go far enough,
while liberals have argued against any
reductions, contending the House plan
could take as many as 2 million recipients off the rolls. The cuts are about 3
percent of the program.
An amendment by Rep. Jim McGovern (D-Mass.) and other Democrats
would eliminate The SNAP cuts and take
the money from farm subsidies instead.
An estimated 47 million Americans,
or one in seven, use food stamps.
A different version of the bill was
approved by the Senate recently that
does not include the amendments that
affect SNAP benefi ciaries in Puerto Rico.
If the House passes its bill, it will go to a
conference committee that will work on
a single version of the bill.
Hernández Mayoral said he is already working with senators to ensure
the fi nal version of the bill does not contain the House amendments.
“We are working with senators
and one of the senators wrote a letter to
make sure everyone keeps an eye on the
House amendments,” Hernández Mayoral said.
The amendments come days after
several U.S. newspapers complained
that a huge number of Puerto Ricans are
receiving SNAP benefi ts at the expense
of U.S. taxpayers.
Pierluisi reportedly said the amendments were put in the bill that will go
for a vote and that the Republicans have
the votes to defeat any amendments that
seek to reverse it. So the best strategy is
to continue the efforts in the Senate, the
resident commissioner said.