REMARKS BY THE GOVERNOR OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF PUERTO RICO HONORABLE RAFAEL HERNANDEZ COLON ON PUERTO RICO'S ROLE IN THE CARIBBEAN AT YALE UNIVERSITY

Similar documents
REMARKS BY THE GOVERNOR OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF PUERTO RICO HON. RAFAEL HERNANDEZ COLON TO THE MEMBERS OF THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF SECRETARIES OF

REMARKS BY THE GOVERNOR OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF PUERTO RICO HONORABLE RAFAEL HERNANDEZ COLON AT THE PHARMACEUTICAL MANUFACTURERS

AN ACT (S. B. 1437) (No ) (Approved December 1, 2010)

Concrete Visions for a Multi-Level Governance, 7-8 December Paper for the Workshop Local Governance in a Global Era In Search of

Executive Summary. January 18, 1982

FREE TRADE AND BUSINESS GROWTH OPPORTUNITIES FOR PUERTO RICO FIRMS

Alianza del Pacífico. October, Germán Ríos May 2012

REAUTHORISATION OF THE ALLIANCE BETWEEN AIR NEW ZEALAND AND CATHAY PACIFIC


World Tourism Organization Leading organization in the field of tourism today. Global forum for tourism policy issues and a practical source of

OCBC BANK TO ACQUIRE WING HANG BANK BY WAY OF VOLUNTARY GENERAL OFFER

THE INTERNATIONAL GROWTH OF SPANISH HOLIDAY HOTEL CHAINS FROM A GLOBAL PERSPECTIVE: A CASE STUDY

Synergy and Interconnection

Open Letter to Director Rodriguez and Chief Colucci

Extra-Regional Relations. (Complementary Note)

SALVADOR DECLARATION. Adopted in the city of Salvador de Bahia on 16 November 2009 by the XVIII ACI LAC Annual General Regional Assembly

Stimulating Airports is Stimulating the Economy

Liberation of tourism and travel-related (T&T) services in Thailand and Its impact

AN ACT. (S. B. 1113) (Conference) (No ) (Approved July 29, 2014)

INTERNATIONAL CIVIL AVIATION ORGANIZATION NORTH AMERICAN, CENTRAL AMERICAN AND THE CARIBBEAN REGIONAL AND SOUTH AMERICAN REGIONAL OFFICES

(No ) (Approved December 16, 2011) AN ACT

(Geneva, Switzerland, 2-3 October 2018) The sustainability of international civil aviation is a key priority for ICAO and its Member States today.

Cartagena, Colombia August 2013 Dav Ernan Kowlessar

NBAA Testimony. Before TSA s Large Aircraft Security Program Public Hearing. January 8, Atlanta, Georgia

Nicaragua versus Costa Rica?

Issue Brief AN ANALYSIS OF TRADE FLOWS BETWEEN PUERTO RICO AND CARICOM 1. THE REGIONAL AND HISTORICAL FRAMEWORK

STATEMENT. H.E. Ambassador Rodney Charles Permanent Representative of the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago. On behalf of. Caribbean Community (CARICOM)

2018 Round-Table Conference of Silk Road International Chambers of Commerce (Xi an) Invitation

(No. 263) (Approved November 16, 2002) AN ACT

REGAINING OUR GROUND IN INTERNATIONAL TRADE

AUSTRALIAN AIRPORTS ASSOCIATION AUSTRALIAN AIRPORTS DRIVING TOURISM GROWTH

Deepening Collaboration between Latin America and the Caribbean for Economic

WRITTEN SUBMISSION FROM RMT 17 OCTOBER 2008

Remarks by Hugh Riley. Secretary General, Caribbean Tourism Organization. February 15, Tourism Industry Performance Review and Press Briefing

(No. 166) (Approved June 28, 2004) AN ACT

Capitalizing Business Through Foreign Direct Investment. Francisco Chévere, Esq. Executive Director Puerto Rico Trade and Export Company

STATEMENT TO BE DELIVERED BY HER HONOUR MRS. INONGE M. WINA VICE PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF ZAMBIA

ANA Reports Record Profits for FY2012

HONG KONG Your Ideal Partner Shirley LAM

(No. 223) (Approved August 29, 2000) AN ACT

HONG KONG The Ideal Gateway to Asia. Alice CHOI Deputy Representative Hong Kong Economic and Trade Office in Brussels

Employee Stock Ownership Plans - ESOPs


Opening 2019 Permanent Asia America Global Sourcing Center For Wholesale Import & Export Sales at The Miami Merchandise Mart

THE FUTURE OF MEDITERRANEAN TOURISM 6 th International Conference on Destination Management APRIL DJERBA, TUNISIA

(No. 241) (Approved August 9, 2008) AN ACT STATEMENT OF MOTIVES

United Nations Environment Programme

Paradise Performs: Opportunities of an Economic Transformation

PRESENTATION ASSET RECOVERY INTER-AGENCY NETWORK FOR THE CARIBBEAN (ARIN-CARIB)

KEYNOTE ADDRESS. Jakarta, 8-9 August 2016

The Proposed CARICOM-Canada FTA: What is in it for CARICOM states?

UNIT 3 Extra Review for Chapters 9-11

Good afternoon Chairman Cantwell, Ranking Member Ayotte, and members of the

Program for Direct Assistance to the Caribbean SMEs, in the framework of integration CARICOM-DR

Canada s Airports: Enabling Connectivity, Growth and Productivity for Canada

Business Opportunities in the Caribbean Region. Presented by: Robert Jones Commercial Counselor - Caribbean Region

The U.S. Commercial Service

INTEGRATION AND TRADE IN THE AMERICAS

International economic context and regional impact

Outline of presentation. Using Epidemiology for Data-Driven Decision-Making in Tuberculosis Programs February 24, 2016

Global Luggage Market

Air Namibia A Regional Carrier Transformation. Presented by: Theo Namases Managing Director

Distinguished guests, parliamentary colleagues, ladies and gentlemen.

CARIBBEAN WHERE. Affaires étrangères, Commerce et Développement Canada. Foreign Affairs, Trade and Development Canada

Hong Kong s Role in the Guangdong - Hong Kong - Macao Greater Bay Area

Australian Government s Select Committee Inquiry into Regional Development and Decentralisation

9 T H I S S U E, 1 S T Q U A R T E R, Promote foreign language learning and knowledge of the culture of the Greater

AN ACT (H. B. 3417) (No ) (Approved July 4, 2011)

JOINT STATEMENT BY THE BARENTS REGIONAL COUNCIL AT THE BEAC 13TH SESSION 11 October 2011, Kiruna

The Americas. Port of the Americas. Rhonda M. Castillo Gammill, Esq., P.E. Executive Director, Port of the Americas Authority

Aviation Competitiveness. James Wiltshire Head of Policy Analysis

Lessons Learned from 50 Years of Cruise Tourism in the Caribbean

FOLLOW US ON: Página 1

(No. 132) (Approved November 17, 1997) AN ACT

Closure of GM Holden Government Response. January 2014

Thank you for participating in the financial results for fiscal 2014.

State of the Industry Report. Presented by Hon. Beverly Nicholson-Doty. Chairman, Caribbean Tourism Organization. Government House.

Contribution from UNCTAD dated: 4 June 2012

Haitian/Haitian American Curriculum Third Grade Social Studies Lesson Plan The Pirates of the Caribbean

The Global Competitiveness of the U.S. Aviation Industry: Addressing Competition Issues to Maintain U.S. leadership in the Aerospace Market

Australia s Northern Territory

Hurricane Irma and Hurricane Maria Disaster Responses

Spotlight on the U.S. Market. Kentucky

History of Environmental, Economic, and Political Debts: Puerto Rico and the US Prof. Cecilia Enjuto Rangel

Japan as a Tourist Destination -New Tourism Agency Targets 20 Million Foreign Visitors to Japan-

Caribbean Youth Policy Review

Southwest Airlines (LUV) Analyst: Tom Martinez and Melvin Kasozi Spring Recommendation: BUY Target Price until 12/31/2016: $65

(No. 88) (Approved August 3, 2001) AN ACT

Honorable Leong Vai Tac, Distinguished guests, Tac, Secretary for Economy and Finance of the Macau SAR, for

TOURISM AS AN ECONOMIC ENGINE FOR GREATER PHILADELPHIA

Ken Sylvester Chief Executive Officer

Sincerely yours, Julie Zheng The Founding President. Best regards The Board of Canada China Commercial Association

Invest Puerto Rico Private Sector Leadership Arq. Ricardo Álvarez-Díaz, Board Member of Invest PR, Corp.

REASONS FOR HOTELIERS TO ACT NOW

DECISIONS ON AIR TRANSPORT LICENCES AND ROUTE LICENCES 4/99

Transforming APEC into a Transregional Institutional Architecture

Deepening Pragmatic Cooperation Between Sabah and China Jointly Build 21st-Century Maritime Silk Road 30 Jan. 2018

09:00 10:30 OPENING Opening ceremony of the Air Transport meeting on Promoting Connectivity for Sustainable Air Transport Development.

2008 INTERIM ANNOUNCEMENT

Supporting the Arts A MAJORITY LIBERAL GOVERNMENT WILL:

Transcription:

REMARKS BY THE GOVERNOR OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF PUERTO RICO HONORABLE RAFAEL HERNANDEZ COLON ON PUERTO RICO'S ROLE IN THE CARIBBEAN AT YALE UNIVERSITY MARCH 2, 1989

Now is always a good time to assess the future, because it is where we are headed sooner than we realize and most often before we are ready. That is why I so appreciate this opportunity to pause a moment here at Yale to contemplate Puerto Rico's role in the Caribbean in the next century. The Caribbean is now and will continue to be important to U.S. national security because of its strategic location. That will not change. Neither will the importance to the United States of Puerto Rico's role as a part of the Caribbean and as the U.S. presence in this vital region. So I am quite confident that Puerto Rico's role in the Caribbean in the next century will impact on your future and that of your children. During the past four years I have seen how the power of a single idea can dramatically change the way people live and think. Let me tell you about that one idea. It has begun to reshape the Caribbean, as it also has taken hold in the White House and in the Congress of the United States.

2 Like many of its Caribbean neighbors, Puerto Rico suffers form a dearth of natural resources. As an island 100 miles long and 35 miles wide, its population density is greater than Japan's. If the U.S. mainland had Puerto Rico's population density the entire population of the world, including China, would be crammed within the borders of the continental United States. Puerto Rico also suffers because of the geographic distance from its sources of raw materials and markets. Section 936 and its predecessors in the U.S. tax code made it possible for Puerto Rico to overcome these problems. The Federal Tax Law, in combination with the Commonwealth's own tax autonomy, permitted what is known as tax-sparing. If we granted from our normally prevailing tax rate to encourage U.S. corporations to invest in manufacturing facilities in Puerto Rico, the U.S. agreed to let these companies keep these savings to compensate them for the greater costs of manufacturing in our island. Through a credit mechanism in the U.S. law, the companies are effectively, made subject only to the

3 concessionary tax rate granted by Puerto Rico in exchange for specific undertakings to create employment in Puerto Rico. The program has worked brilliantly. It has reversed what had seemed to be an economic law of gravity that for generations had condemned Puerto Ricans to poverty, high infant mortality, and the absence of hope for the future that remains such a corrosive force elsewhere in the region. The program has also created an important pool of low-cost capital. In addition to the tax incentive accorded manufacturing, our Puerto Rican law and the Federal law also encourages deposits of the earnings of the Section 936 companies in Puerto Rican banks because the "passive" interest income from these deposits is also effectively made exempt from US tax and subject only to concessionary Puerto Rican taxes. Back in 1985, the President's Caribbean Initiative was in serious trouble. This program, which had been President Reagan's response to the lesson 'of Grenada, was not working. Instead of

4 greater investment in the poor islands of the regions, we all witnessed disinvestment. As originally conceived, the President's program would have afforded twelve years of duty-free access to the U.S. market for products manufactured in certain Caribbean countries, and it would have included tax incentives to encourage U.S. manufacturers to avail themselves of this opportunity. Congress gave the President the caboose -- the twelve years of duty free access to the U.S. market. But it denied him the vital engine of significant tax incentives needed to make the train go. After having paid little attention to the Caribbean for many years, Puerto Rico saw in the region's problem, the President's, and our own, an opportunity for a bold new initiative that could at the same time breathe life into the moribund Caribbean Basin Initiative, return certainty to Puerto Rico's economy, and set the stage for a new connectedness in the region. We offered to make available some of the capital pool, created in Puerto Rico as a consequence of Section 936 and our

5 own laws, to finance on concessionary terms complementary manufacturing that would create jobs in Puerto Rico and in our Caribbean neighbors. This proposal, which I made in my Inaugural Address in 1985, consciously posed a dilemma and a challenge. If the repeal threatened by the Treasury Department was carried out they would thwart the initiative ready to assist the United States achieve its national security objectives in the Caribbean. The very announcement of this idea shattered old notions that had endured for years. Suddenly, demarcation between the English-speaking Caribbean and the Spanish-speaking Caribbean that had fragmented our region of small states seemed less important than the economic progress we all might make working together. Leaders of the English-speaking Caribbean-- Prime Minister Seaga of Jamaica, Prime Minister, Blaize of Grenada, and Prime Minister Charles of Dominica --worked together. with Spanish-speaking leaders of the region-- President Duarte of Salvador, President Blanco of the Dominican Republic, and President

6 Monge of Costa Rica. They and other leaders of the region joined with Puerto Rico in lobbying the Administration. in Washington and the Congress to preserve what had worked so well for Puerto Rico and to free our hands to make even greater use of this tool to help our Caribbean neighbors as we continued to help ourselves. We in Puerto Rico began to act with our Caribbean neighbors in a new dimension. They were our allies and collaborators as well as our competitors. We advanced true economic opportunities that had largely been overlooked. We launched the Complementary or Twin Plant Program combining lower labor rates elsewhere in the Caribbean, with technologically advanced finishing operations in Puerto Rico, enabled by our tax program, and low cost capital. In this manner we were able to produce jointly what no one country could profitably produce on its own. We saved and created manufacturing jobs in Puerto Rico and the Caribbean region that were otherwise destined to the Far East.

7 Congress responded to the new wind that had begun to waft over the Caribbean. So did the President. On the heels of favorable action in the House Ways and Means Committee, the President reversed his Administration's previous position. Then Vice-President Bush announced to the Miami Conference of the Caribbean in November of 1985 that the Reagan Administration was committed to preserving this section into the future-- without limitation in time-- as a permanent instrumentality of the President's Caribbean policy, if we could demonstrate its efficacy with solid results. Congress concurred. We have achieved solid results. As of January 1989, we had promoted the investment of $165.3 million in Caribbean Basin Initiative beneficiary countries. This includes 60 projects in 11 Caribbean countries, which represent a total of 10,327 jobs. Moreover, we have approved the creation of a 860 million 936 Fund for the financing of additional projects in the Caribbean. The Government Development Bank of Puerto Rico and the

8 Overseas Private Investment Corporation will provide guarantees for projects financed through this fund. We are also presently working on another $100 million fund to spur additional investment in eligible CBI countries. Where then is Puerto Rico headed in the next century? Clearly we have our work cut out for us in further developing complementary manufacturing throughout the Caribbean. In the next century, we will also focus on the processing of information.. New state-of-the-art fiber optic systems are bringing the Caribbean together and in closer relation to the rest of the planet. These telecommunications systems are centered in Puerto Rico. The best-educated work force and most-developed economy in the region is in Puerto Rico. Our challenge now is to translate these regional strengths and advantages, in the coming century, to become the information gateway, between the United States and not only the Caribbean, but South America generally. The bilingualism of the Commonwealth, its successful melding of a vibrant and distinctive Hispanic

9 culture with widespread use of the English language, make the Commonwealth a natural bridge between the United States and other Hispanic countries. Two major events are looming on the horizon that we must take into account. I refer to two events scheduled to occur in 1992: the celebration of the 500th anniversary of Columbus' discovery of the Americas, and the economic unification of Europe. In a way, both of these events will draw our attention to Europe where our Hispanic culture originated and where more of our economic future may lie. Through the LOME Convention many Caribbean countries, but not Puerto Rico, enjoy preferential access to the European market. In 1992 that market will be even more significant than it is today. There may be ways to build upon the experience we are gaining now in complementary manufacturing. Though these projects are largely geared to entry into the U.S. market, we are confident they will teach us how to collaborate in new ways with our Caribbean neighbors. This, in turn, should enable

10 us to participate in their preferential access to the enormous European market of the 1990s. The importance of these CBI initiatives go beyond the creation of highly needed jobs in the Caribbean. They give us the opportunity to shape the future well-being of our people through a steady economic integration. For in order to compete effectively in today's global markets, the countries of the Caribbean Basin must recognize and reinforce the strongest economic element of each country, and at the same time, unite as a region. The Caribbean Basin must foster the institutional arrangements and economic ventures that will defend and advance our shared interests. Caribbean countries need to maximize opportunities such as the CBI, as well as develop an agenda for cooperation among ourselves. Puerto Rico is willing to play an important role in the advancement of the region,. as an economic block. I believe Caribbean nations have an opportunity for substantial growth. As a region we can become competitive with Asia and greatly expand exports to the United States, Europe and

11 South America. I believe that we can turn geography to our advantage as we find new markets. The shape of the world in the post-1992 era is far from clear. One hears rumblings of protectionist strife pitting the U.S. against a Fortress Europe. There are those who view the 1988 Trade Bill enacted by the United States as the first round fired in a modern global trade war. European unification in 1992 might become a return salvo in such a war. European banks that will enjoy a very liberalized Europe-wide opportunity in 1992 are now suggesting that United States banks may enjoy similar opportunities in Europe, but only if the European banks are accorded reciprocal rights in the United States, greater than any now accorded to any United States bank. No country can escape the impact of these future events. Puerto Rico and the rest of the Caribbean will be active participants in the global drama that is about to be played out. The strength we are building on the basis of constructive mutual engagement in the Caribbean will stand us in good stead in the uncertain days ahead.