false. They can refuse it with disastrous consequence.
I have to wonder how the next statehood vote will go...? I would not be surprised if t his mess is the tipping point, and we may have to re-design the flag. Particularly with Cuban rapprochement--because Cuba will do what PR can do for a third of the price, faster, and closer. And that is a huge fear in PR. Already, the Cuban expat community in PR is making plans. I wonder how long the Bacardis will stay?
Up to this point, there has been a little dance going on, and there are probably as many people who like the idea of statehood as there are those who fear they will lose their no-work government job if statehood comes. It's a very bizarre tension. It's not made any easier by the absolutely in-your-face graft and corruption that occurs on a daily basis there. The cops? Corrupt. Blatantly, bribably, corrupt. The government? Corrupt. To the point of utter absurdity. Crime? Out of hand. If you have an appointment at the dentist, or are having a small surgery, you have to BYOP--bring your own painkillers--why? Because armed gangs used to bust into doctors/dentists offices and rob them for the drugs. So now you get a prescription, you fill it yourself, and you bring the drugs to the doctor for his use during the procedure.
The departures from the island continue at a stupendous pace. And, it should be salient to note, Puerto Ricans are not emigrating, they are American citizens, with American passports. They are just moving elsewhere in America (where they can register to vote, and vote in elections). Many have moved to Orlando and other parts of Florida, up-ending the Cuban dominance of the Hispanic population there, and some were murdered in the Pulse nightclub.
I have relations there, and there are parts of the island that are like a ghost town. You can't eat that "solidarity" shit and most of the young people would rather live on the mainland. They see it as more exciting in terms of lifestyle and the opportunity to interact with peers of diverse origins, never mind the economic opportunity aspect. Years ago, Florida and Arizona used to be regarded as "God's waiting room" with huge elderly populations, and now both those states are experiencing an economic resurgence and a vibrancy in terms of younger people moving to those states to find opportunity. PR for a while is turning into a place where older people, who have left the island in search of opportunity and excitement, return in their dotage with a government check to see them through from month to month. Of course, if the economy keeps getting crappier, that might not be an economical situation for these pensioners.
PR is suffering. They need a FIX. There are no easy answers at this point in time.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/posteverything/wp/2016/05/10/puerto-rico-and-the-us-taxpayer-dont-pay-now-or-pay-later/
Fix Puerto Ricos debt now, or taxpayers will bail Puerto Rico out later
Will we really let our fellow Americans live in a failed state?
By Jared Bernstein May 10
Jared Bernstein, a former chief economist to Vice President Biden, is a senior fellow at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities and author of the new book 'The Reconnection Agenda: Reuniting Growth and Prosperity.'
...Bottom line, I dont think its a stretch to recognize that purchasing Puerto Rican debt was a risky move. Although defaults are rare in the muni market only 0.14 percent of munis default within 10 years the Puerto Rican economy cannot generate anything like the growth needed to service its debt. Creditors bets went bad, and the senseless quirk in the law that has no Chapter 9 mechanism for the commonwealth is the only reason were even arguing about them.
Why is a bailout the only alternative? Because I dont think the nation will let fellow Americans suffer the consequences of living in a failed state as the human costs become increasingly severe. Yes, we are in a moment of considerable political upheaval, but this conclusion is bipartisan: The Obama administration strongly supports the restructuring bill, and Ryan has been doing his best to advance the legislation. Even Donald Trump recognizes the insolvency.
With the muni market at least so far brushing off the Puerto Rican default, and the broader economic costs of muddling through not obvious to most of us on the mainland, the crisis could easily drag on. Thats not a problem for many in the investor class. Remember, hedge funds invested in defaulted Argentinian debt fought 15 years before achieving a payout greater than 10 times their investment.
But its a huge problem for our fellow citizens in Puerto Rico, and its soon going to be a big problem for taxpayers. That last part can easily be avoided if Congress gets its act together.