Rum Battle Rages On between Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands

With the suggestive title “Rum Battle in Caribbean Leaves Tax Hangover,” The New York Times reviews the latest details in the ongoing conflict between Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Here are excerpt with a link to the full article below:

The fight began when the Virgin Islands persuaded the world’s largest distiller, which said it was leaving Puerto Rico, to move to St. Croix by offering a staggering $2.7 billion in tax incentives. The new distillery, for Captain Morgan spiced rum, will provide no more than 70 permanent jobs on the south shore of St. Croix—but it will entitle the Virgin Islands to collect billions in rum tax revenue from Washington. That bounty comes at the expense of Puerto Rico, where 90 percent of the revenue from the rum tax had been used for public projects and social services rather than corporate incentives. The Virgin Islands has promised to give nearly half its tax revenue back to the distiller, the British company Diageo, prompting a series of charges and countercharges between neighbors roughly 50 miles apart in the Caribbean.

With Puerto Rico’s economy reeling and its government budget already strained, some island officials say they cannot rule out needing to ask Washington for aid to cover basic expenses once covered by the rum tax. “We’d have to make it up one way or another,” said Puerto Rico’s resident commissioner, Pedro R. Pierluisi, the island’s nonvoting delegate to Congress. “It’s not going to be pretty.”

The billions of dollars at stake are the result of a quirk in the tax code that was intended to aid the islands while preventing their offshore distilleries from gaining an unfair advantage over competitors in the states. Because rum producers in the islands are exempt from federal excise taxes, the government imposed an “equalization tax” on Puerto Rican rum producers in 1917 and gave the money to the commonwealth. In 1954, the United States extended the arrangement to the Virgin Islands. For half a century, the program allowed the islands to replenish their depleted treasuries and pay for infrastructure, schools and social services. Puerto Rico used less than 10 percent of the $450 million it received last year to provide marketing support and production subsidies to rum companies, according to government officials, leaving the rest for the island.

In 2007, Diageo explored a possible move of its Captain Morgan production to Honduras or Guatemala, where labor costs and supplies were cheaper. At the same time, Diageo approached the governor of the Virgin Islands, John P. de Jongh Jr., about moving to St. Croix. The two signed a deal the following year. It requires Diageo to stay in the Virgin Islands for 30 years in return for incentives so rich they are double the cost of actually producing the rum.

Diageo, based in Britain, will get a new plant built at taxpayer expense, exemption from all property and gross receipt taxes for the length of the deal, a 90 percent reduction in corporate taxes, plus marketing support and production incentives totaling tens of millions a year. The generous subsidies have led to charges by some Puerto Rican officials and Virgin Islands residents that the governor was misled into using public money for corporate welfare. “We’re not against big businesses,” said Michael J. Springer Jr., a candidate for the Virgin Islands Senate, “but for the government of the Virgin Islands to give that much money to a foreign corporation when it was intended to help the residents and their communities, is outrageous. In the meantime, the government is borrowing to pay its operating expenses.”

But officials for Diageo said it had no intention of staying in Puerto Rico, and Mr. de Jongh asserts that the concessions were needed to keep the company from moving out of the United States entirely. Even after the incentives, the Virgin Islands will gain a stable source of revenue for 30 years, he said, with rum tax proceeds projected to climb to more than $230 million by 2038, from $90 million in 2008. The infusion of cash has already helped the government retain 2,000 employees, Mr. de Jongh said. “We will strengthen the government pension fund, build schools, fix and construct roads, and continue to move the U.S. Virgin Islands toward fiscal self-reliance,” he said. Jennifer Nugent-Hill, a trustee at the University of the Virgin Islands and vice president at a shipping company, said the infusion of rum tax revenue would be one of the most significant economic developments in the island’s history, empowering its residents “to control our own destiny.”

For full article, see http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/16/business/16rum.html?pagewanted=1&_r=4&sq=rum&st=cse&scp=2&adxnnlx=1287237820-JUk/l4dQUIOb12M9zQdmkw

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