May 17, 2017
Carlos M Garcia, is a member of the PROMESA Fiscal Board, appointed by Pres Obama and Speaker Paul Ryan. During 2008-2012, he led the Puerto Rico’s Government Development Bank, appointed by then Puerto Rico Gov Luis Fortuno - MJR
AFL-CIO REPORT: SANTANDER BANK EXEC LOOTED PUERTO RICO’S INFRASTRUCTURE FUND
Carlos M Garcia, is a member of the PROMESA Fiscal Board, appointed by Pres Obama and Speaker Paul Ryan. During 2008-2012, he led the Puerto Rico’s Government Development Bank, appointed by then Puerto Rico Gov Luis Fortuno - MJR
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AFL-CIO REPORT: SANTANDER BANK EXEC LOOTED PUERTO RICO’S INFRASTRUCTURE FUND
PEOPLE's WORLD
WASHINGTON,
D.C. — Amid rallies by community members in Puerto Rico and Boston outside
Santander banks, the AFL-CIO released a new report detailing how former Santander executive Carlos M.
Garcia diverted a $1 billion fund dedicated to essential water and sewer
projects into a series of financial transactions that ultimately pushed the
Government Development Bank (GDB) into insolvency.
According
to the report, while Garcia looted the infrastructure fund to support the
issuance of billions in GDB notes and sales tax-backed bonds (known by Spanish
acronym COFINA), his former employer, Santander, made millions as an
underwriter.
“Carlos
Garcia’s reliance on constitutionally dubious COFINA capital appreciation bonds
as the fiscal solution to Puerto Rico’s debt crisis when he ran the GDB put all
Puerto Ricans at risk. Garcia should not be allowed to mortgage our future to
the banks again like he did in 2009,” said Jose “Lole” Rodriguez Baez,
President of the Puerto Rico Federation of Labor, AFL-CIO. “Banks like Garcia’s
former employer Santander that helped drive a mountain of bad debt deals for
Puerto Rico should be paying us back for the all the money they took from us,
not the other way around.”
Key
findings from the report authored by the Puerto Rico Federation of Labor in
partnership with the Hedge Clippers campaign and the Committee
for Better Banks
found:
As
a private and public bank executive Garcia used a revolving door between
Santander and the GDB that created conflicts of interest. These compromise his
ability to implement a fair fiscal program that addresses the humanitarian
needs of the Puerto Rican people as a Junta member and raise questions about
the legitimacy of Puerto Rico’s debt.
In
one of his first moves at the GDB, Garcia used the $1 billion infrastructure
fund to recapitalize the GDB, pay bondholders and cover deficits. A later
transaction in 2011 left the infrastructure and pension fund with toxic COFINA
capital appreciation bonds that are unlikely to be repaid.
Santander
is one of the largest COFINA bondholders petitioning the Junta to not forgive
Puerto Rico of its toxic debts. Garcia testified on Capitol Hill in 2016 and
appeared to, like Santander, support the constitutionality and segregation of
COFINA bond obligations and the use of Puerto Rican’s sales tax to pay them
back.
Garcia’s
failed formula of prioritizing payment to Wall Street creditors, cutting public
spending, and allowing the private sector control of critical public programs
didn’t work for Puerto Rico between 2009-2011 and will not work today. Puerto
Rico needs direct stimulus, which is unlikely unless banks like Santander and
executives like Carlos Garcia are held accountable for their role in helping
drown the island in unpayable public debt.
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