Federal Judge Signs Plan to Resolve Puerto Rico's Bankruptcy in a Record-Setting MoveThe plan comes nearly five years after Puerto Rico filed for the largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history.

By克洛伊Arrojado

RICARDO ARDUENGO | Getty Images

On Tuesday, U.S. District Court judge Laura Taylor Swainsigned a plan for Puerto Rico that sets the record as the largest public-sector debt restructuring deal in U.S. history. According to Swain's ruling,the U.S. territory's debt will be reduced from $33 billion to $7.4 billion— around an 80 percent cut.

"The provisions of the plan constitute a good faith, reasonable, fair, and equitable compromise and settlement of all claims and controversies resolved pursuant to the plan," Swain said in the ruling.

Related:These 2 Franchisees in Puerto Rico Survived Hurricane Maria and Lived to Tell What They Learned

Puerto Rico has had financial problems over the years, declaring bankruptcy in 2017 after it announced it couldn't pay the more than $70 billion debt it had accumulated. The debt, while partly accumulated through mismanagement and excessive borrowing, was further exacerbated by natural disasters and the pandemic.

Under this new debt payment structure,Puerto Rico will only have to pay $666 million a year for the first 10 years, instead of $1.6 billion annually. The territoryis expected to have budget surpluses through the mid-2030s但可能会资助其养老保险制度的问题, which owes its present and future retirees an estimated $55 billion.

In a statement,Puerto Rico governor Pedro Pierluisi saidthat while this new plan isn't perfect, the debt restructure is a good move for the future of the territory.

"The agreement, while not perfect, is very good for Puerto Rico and protects our pensioners, university and municipalities that serve our people," Pierluisi said. "We still have a lot of work ahead of us."

Related:How Entrepreneurship Is Helping to Save Puerto Rico

克洛伊Arrojado

Entrepreneur Staff

Editorial Assistant

Editor's Pick

Related Topics

领导

Young Workers Don't Want to Become Managers — and This Study Uncovers the Reason Why.

The average person has no interest in becoming a manager anymore, and the missing middle is putting companies at risk.

Business News

Jeff Bezos Becomes His Own Neighbor, Purchases $78 Million Florida Mansion Next Door

The billionaire bought another house in the same Florida neighborhood in August.

Business Ideas

55 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2023

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2023.

Business Solutions

Grab Microsoft Office for Windows with Windows 11 Pro for Just $60

An inexpensive upgrade to help you work more efficiently.