当合同权利优于宪法权利:通过宪法修正案解决波多黎各的债务危机

IF 0.6 3区 社会学 Q2 LAW
Adrien Dumoulin-Smith, John Epling, James Tian
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引用次数: 0

摘要

宪法权利通常被认为是最基本、最具保护性的权利。然而,在公共债务的背景下,宪法条款和合同承诺之间存在一个关键区别:谁拥有修改的权力。当事人修改合同通常需要双方同意,但波多黎各人民可以通过公民投票修改《波多黎各宪法》,无需债权人同意。债权人明白当地法律可能会有变化。不愿承担这种风险的债权人就明确的合同保护进行谈判,并坚持由另一个司法管辖区的法律管辖债务。例如,波多黎各于2014年发行的最新债券受到合同语言中明确的优先权和救济条款的保护,并受纽约州法律(以下简称“纽约州法律债券”)管辖。在波多黎各170亿美元的一般债务(GO)债务中,纽约法律债券仅占35亿美元左右。因此,如果波多黎各修改其宪法,它可以将公共开支置于其绝大多数一般债务债券之上,即受波多黎各法律管辖的债券(“PR债券”)。波多黎各可以运用这种权力来鼓励公共债券债权人进行重组。眼下,波多黎各要求重组的请求更有可能被置若罔闻,因为债权人可以起诉,要求从税收收入中支付款项。理性的投资者可能会明白,一个健康、可持续的波多黎各将提高他们未来获得可持续支付的可能性,但可能出现的顽固分子会造成真正的担忧,即那些重组的人将在没有其他债权人承担公平份额的情况下承受危机的冲击。事实上,即使合理的债权人同意减值,债权人诉讼也可能危及可持续的复苏。一项宪法修正案可以遏制债权人的特殊优先权,为富有成效的再融资铺平道路。本文将简要探讨拒不还款对再融资过程构成的危险。然后,它将解释如何利用公共关系法债券执行机制的脆弱性来鼓励重组。最后,它将回答对该计划可能提出的批评,并解决潜在的法律挑战。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
When Contractual Rights are Better than Constitutional Rights: Addressing Puerto Rico's Debt Crisis Through Constitutional Amendment
Constitutional rights are commonly considered the most fundamental, most protective of rights. Yet, in the context of public debt, there is a critical difference between constitutional provisions and contractual promises: who wields the power to amend. It generally takes mutual consent for parties to amend a contract, but the Constitution of Puerto Rico can be amended by the people of Puerto Rico by referendum, without creditors’ consent. Creditors understand that local law is subject to change. Creditors who do not want to assume that risk negotiate for explicit contractual protections and insist that another jurisdiction’s law govern the debt. For instance, Puerto Rico’s latest bonds, issued in 2014, are protected by explicit priority and remedy provisions in the language of the contract and are governed by New York law (hereinafter “NY law bonds”). The NY law bonds account for only about $3.5 billion of Puerto Rico’s $17 billion in general obligation (“GO”) debt. Accordingly, if Puerto Rico amended its Constitution it could reprioritize public spending over the significant majority of its general obligation bonds, those governed by Puerto Rican law (“PR bonds”). Puerto Rico can wield this power to encourage PR bond creditors to restructure. Right now, Puerto Rico’s pleas to restructure are more likely to fall on deaf ears since creditors can sue for payment from tax revenues. Reasonable investors may understand that a healthy, sustainable Puerto Rico will enhance their likelihood of sustainable payments in the future, but possible holdouts create real fears that those who restructure will bear the brunt of the crisis without fellow creditors carrying their fair share. Indeed, a creditor lawsuit could jeopardize a sustainable recovery even if reasonable creditors agree to haircuts. A constitutional amendment could check the extraordinary priority of creditors to pave the way for a productive refinancing.This paper will briefly examine the danger that holdouts pose to the refinancing process. It will then explain how the vulnerabilities of the PR law bonds’ enforcement mechanisms can be used to encourage restructuring. Finally, it will answer possible critiques of the plan and address potential legal challenges.
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