Pursuant to a congressional request, GAO provided information on
economic activity in Puerto Rico, before and after the recent changes in
tax benefits for corporations operating there, focusing on recent trends
in: (1) Puerto Rico's principal economic indicators; (2) investments by
U.S. corporations in Puerto Rico that generate tax-exempt, nonbusiness
income; and (3) investment and employment promoted by Puerto Rico's
Economic Development Administration.
GAO noted that: (1) the recent trends in Puerto Rican economic
indicators show an economy that is growing in income, employment, and
investment in most years; (2) although the growth in these indicators
continued after the 1993 changes to the section 936 tax credit, GAO
cannot conclude that the changes have had no effect on the Puerto Rican
economy; (3) income as measured by Puerto Rico's gross domestic product
and gross national product both increased between 1982 and 1996, with
the increases continuing at about the same rates after the 1993 changes
in the credit; (4) although the share of domestic net income of Puerto
Rican residents declined from 69.3 to 59.8 percent between 1982 and
1996, their net income grew in absolute terms from $16.3 billion to
$23.8 billion; (5) unemployment declined in most years between 1982 and
1996 and also declined or remained unchanged in every year after the
1993 changes to the credit; (6) investment spending for the plant and
equipment that increases the economy's ability to generate income also
increased in most years during this period; (7) although investment
increased, and unemployment did not increase, after the changes to the
credit, GAO does not know if the rate of change of either of these
indicators would have been greater if the credit had not been changed;
(8) during the last 2 calendar quarters of 1996, when the tax benefits
for QPSII were ending, the total value of investments in Puerto Rico
that formerly would have generated QPSII benefits grew from about $15.6
billion to $16.4 billion and then fell to about $14.6 billion; (9) a
recent amendment to a Puerto Rican financial regulation may have
influenced the financial investment behavior of possessions corporations
during that period even more than the repeal of the exemption for QPSII;
(10) it is possible that the funds that possessions corporations
reinvest in Puerto Rico's financial system simply displace other funds
that would have been available to Puerto Rican businesses, rather than
expand the pool of available funds; (11) the amount of foreign
investment dollars committed to projects promoted by the Economic
Development Administration (EDA) were at their highest levels in the
late 1980s and early 1990s and have generally declined thereafter; and
(12) this trend continued immediately after the 1993 changes in the
section 936 tax credit, when in 1994 investment by overseas businesses *
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