Wednesday, March 16-22, 2022 - // no. 151
Puerto Rico and the Caribbean
www.theweeklyjournal.com
Medical Cannabis now a saturated market P7 Shrinkflation: beware of smaller packaging P9 LUMA prioritizes on cleaner energy P10
Puerto Rico’s woes
are not over Debt Adjustment Plan will need to be renegotiated sooner or later
A
Juan A. Hernández, The Weekly Journal
NFTs at the intersection of fashion and Technology P14
jhernandez@wjournalpr.com
s Puerto Rico’s population is decreasing and its profile is increasingly getting older, there could be a significant impact on the recently approved Debt Adjust Plan (DAP) in terms of the revenue the government has estimated to comply with the negotiated terms of service to the debt. “As Puerto Ricans continue to migrate and the population continues to grow old, the problem is not so
much that the population is diminishing, but that those leaving are working-age adults that would have been paying taxes. So, as the population continues to migrate it would become more and more difficult to comply with the responsibilities acquired, in terms of the estimated revenues,” said economist Adrian Alós, from Abexus Analytics, a business intelligence and analysis group. Alós admitted that such a demographic change must have been taken into consideration during the debt renegotiation process, but pointed out GO TO PAGE 4