miércoles, 11 de octubre de 2017

Exodus from Puerto Rico feared |MercatorNet| October 11, 2017 |MercatorNet|

Exodus from Puerto Rico feared

|MercatorNet| October 11, 2017 |MercatorNet|







Exodus from Puerto Rico feared

Hurricane Maria may be a demographic disaster.
Marcus Roberts | Oct 11 2017 | comment 



Poor Puerto Rico. About two dozen people died on the island during Hurricane Maria, the devastation is immense and worse than first feared. The island will be without electricity for months. Potable water is scarce. It is scarcely any surprise then that many Puerto Ricans will seriously consider moving to the mainland USA. And further depleting the island’s population.
Currently at about 3.4 million people, the population of the island peaked at about the turn of the millennium at about 3.8 million. There are another 1.5 million Puerto Ricans born on the island who live in the mainland USA, chiefly in New York and Florida. These two states are expecting to see new arrivals in the coming weeks and months as some decide that facing a rebuild with no power and clean water is too much to bear. CNBC reports:
“The Miami-Dade school district, for instance, has said it is prepared to take in students from Puerto Rico and expects to see an influx once flights return to normal from the island.
‘We have already over 2,000 Puerto Rican-born children, who are students in our school system. The family connections between Miami Dade and the island are very strong,’ said Alberto Carvalho, Superintendent of Schools for Miami Dade. ‘We are obviously expecting to receive a significant number, in the hundreds, to at least a couple thousand.’"
Since Puerto Ricans are US citizens, they can freely leave the island and enter the mainland. However, although this might be the best thing for individuals facing an uncertain future, an exodus from the island is likely to further exacerbate its financial woes. In short, the island is bankrupt with a total debt of about USD 74 billion and most of its obligations are in default. Projections for future revenue streams to cover these debts are now looking less certain. According to Curtis Erickson, head of capital markets at Preston Hollow Capital: 
 “‘[The Puerto Rican oversight board is] going to make a decision that they have to allow for more variability in the budget and ultimately be more conservative, and more conservative might lead to shrinking the top line and ultimately asking bond holders for more reduction in debt,’ he said.
‘As difficult as it was three months or four months ago to predict what future revenues were across the Commonwealth, it's even more difficult now,’ said Dennis Pidherny, managing director, U.S. Public Finance at Fitch Ratings. ‘We saw it after Katrina. There was a permanent decrease in population throughout the New Orleans area. We expect you very well could see that same type of fundamental shift in population, and it's quite honestly anyone's guess what the new normal will be from an economic stand point for Puerto Rico.’”
Fewer people on the island means fewer taxpayers to pay off the debt. Furthermore, those who move are more likely to have transferrable employment skills who can find jobs elsewhere, as opposed to those at or nearing retirement age. The current fiscal plan forecasts a population decline of 0.2 per cent per year. By 2025, the island is expected to have a population of 3.16 million residents.
“Pidherny said the factors that were considered cornerstones in a debt restructuring before the storm were the territory's ability to stem or reverse migration; its ability to build and restore sustainable economic growth, and its corporations building more resilient and efficient infrastructure. But those assumptions are all thrown into doubt.”
Poor Puerto Rico.


MercatorNet

October 11, 2017

13 Reasons Why, the young adult novel and TV series, created a firestorm of controversy. Some schools believed that its portrayal of suicide and self-harm had sparked teen suicides.

The Society of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology was horrified by the indifference of the Netflix series to teenagers’ mental health. The National Association of School Psychologists says that “Its powerful storytelling may lead impressionable viewers to romanticize the choices made by the characters and/or develop revenge fantasies.”

In the lead article below, Rafael Hurtado and Rafael Garcia Yeomans dissect some of the flaws in the TV series. They argue that it depicts teenagers whose sexually-confused lives are empty and superficial. The adults are clueless and distant. It’s a good conversation starter with your kids. 




Michael Cook
Editor
MERCATORNET
What we can learn from the series ‘13 Reasons Why’
By Rafael Garcia Yeomansand Rafael Hurtado
False solutions to the real problems of adolescent children.
Read the full article
 
Why Richard Thaler won the 2017 economics Nobel Prize
By Sergey V. Popov
Financial markets have limited rationality
Read the full article
 
Exodus from Puerto Rico feared
By Marcus Roberts
Hurricane Maria may be a demographic disaster.
Read the full article
 
Have Aboriginal people been consulted about same-sex marriage?
By Xavier Symons
Minority voices are being ignored by Australia's Establishment
Read the full article
 
A town where sexual abuse is a cancer
By Michael Cook
An outback town in Western Australia has a 'staggering' rate of abuse. Why?
Read the full article
 
Blade Runner 2049 – and why eyes are so important in this vision of the future
By Kevin Hunt
In the original, that's where answers were to be found.
Read the full article
 
Porn consumers may have relational anorexia
By Reynaldo Rivera
Young people are more likely to use pornography when family relationships are poor.
Read the full article




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