Puerto Rico seeks to lure manufacturing to boost its economy as Trump's
tariff war deepens
[May 12, 2025] By
DÁNICA COTO
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — A global trade war is offering Puerto Rico
hope as the U.S. territory attempts to strengthen its fragile economy.
Government officials are jumping on planes to try and convince
international companies to relocate their manufacturing plants to the
island, where they would be exempt from tariffs.
Any relocation would be a boost to Puerto Rico’s shaky economy as the
government emerges from a historic bankruptcy and continues to struggle
with chronic power outages. The island also is bracing for potentially
big cuts in federal funding under the administration of U.S. President
Donald Trump, with federal funds currently representing more than half
of Puerto Rico’s budget.
“The tariff issue is a controversial one, but for Puerto Rico, it’s a
great opportunity,” said Gov. Jenniffer González.
Manufacturing remains the island’s biggest industry, representing nearly
half of its gross domestic product. But the government wants to
recapture Puerto Rico’s heyday, when dozens of big-name companies,
especially in the pharmaceutical sector, were based here and kept the
economy humming.
So far, officials have identified between 75 to 100 companies that might
consider relocating operations to Puerto Rico given the ongoing trade
war, said Ella Woger Nieves, CEO of Invest Puerto Rico, a public-private
partnership that promotes the island as a business and investment
destination.
The companies identified work in sectors including aerospace,
pharmaceuticals and medical devices.

Officials also have welcomed site selectors to Puerto Rico and organized
tours to show them the island’s available infrastructure and stress how
tariffs wouldn’t apply here.
“This is the moment to plant those seeds,” Woger Nieves said.
She said officials with Invest Puerto Rico and various government
agencies are expected to make almost 20 more trips this year in a bid to
attract more manufacturing to the island. The government praised an
executive order that Trump signed Monday that aims to reduce the time it
takes to approve construction of pharmaceutical manufacturing facilities
in the U.S.
From needlework to chemicals
In the mid-1900s, needlework was one of Puerto Rico’s largest
industries, employing about 7,000 workers who labored on handkerchiefs,
underwear, bedspreads and other items, according to a 1934 fair
competition code signed by President Theodore Roosevelt.
Manufacturing later shifted to chemicals, clothes and electronics. By
the late 1970s, a growing number of pharmaceutical companies began
moving their operations to Puerto Rico, lured by a federal tax incentive
created in 1976 to help boost the island’s economic growth. However, in
1996, the U.S. government began phasing out the incentive, which
exempted the subsidiaries of U.S. companies operating in Puerto Rico
from federal taxes on local profits.
From 1995 to 2005, overall manufacturing employment fell by nearly 30%,
but employment in the sectors of pharmaceuticals, medicines and
chemicals increased by at least 10%, according to the U.S. Bureau of
Labor Statistics.
Puerto Rico continues to lead U.S. exports of pharmaceutical and
medicine manufacturing, representing nearly 20% of total U.S. exports in
2020, according to the bureau.
In 2024, the island exported nearly $25 billion worth of goods,
including $11 billion worth of vaccines and certain cultures; $7 billion
worth of packaged medicaments; $1 billion worth of hormones; $984
million worth of orthopedic items; and $625 million worth of medical
instruments, according to the Observatory of Economic Complexity.

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A forklift worker transports goods at a warehouse in San Juan,
Puerto Rico, Thursday, May 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Alejandro Granadillo)
 Sergio Marxuach, policy director and
general counsel for the Center for a New Economy, a non-profit,
non-partisan think tank, said the push to attract more companies
makes sense, especially recruiting those in the pharmaceutical and
medical device sectors.
“If I were advising the government, begin there because you already
have a footprint,” he said.
Marxuach noted that outside of those areas, Puerto Rico could have
an advantage when it comes to national defense and security
contracts, including the manufacturing of drones or underwater
surveillance systems.
“They need a place to manufacture in scale,” he said, adding that
doing so in a U.S. jurisdiction is key.
Puerto Rico’s government also is meeting with university officials
to potentially change curriculums if needed to ensure students are
graduating with the skills required by companies.
The Achilles’ heel
Puerto Rico touts its U.S. jurisdiction, tax incentives and skilled
workforce as reasons international companies should relocate to the
island.
But it cannot escape its well-known energy problems.
Chronic power outages continue to plague Puerto Rico, with two
island-wide blackouts occurring on Dec. 31 and April 16.
Crews are still repairing the power grid after it was razed by
Hurricane Maria in September 2017, a powerful Category 4 storm. But
the grid was already fragile following a lack of maintenance and
investment for decades.
“Puerto Rico needs more reliable energy for the economic growth to
improve,” said Robert F. Mujica, executive director of a federal
control board that oversees the island’s finances.
Woger Nieves, the CEO of Invest Puerto Rico, said that when
officials meet with company leaders, they explain the state of the
island’s energy infrastructure and offer alternatives including
cogeneration and renewables.
“Power doesn’t have to necessarily be an impediment,” she said.

Marxuach, with the Center for a New Economy, said Puerto Rico’s
energy system is costly and inefficient, and noted that alternatives
can be expensive.
“Puerto Rico has to address some issues that actually create
additional costs for investors to come here,” he said.
One those costs is that any goods sent to the U.S. from Puerto Rico
must by law be sent aboard a U.S.-flagged vessel with a U.S. crew.
Other challenges remain.
Currently, the short-term reaction of many CEOs and companies “is
basically to wait and see” how the tariff war plays out, Marxuach
said.
Trump has said that he wants to keep some tariffs in place, but he
also has mentioned efforts to reach deals with trading partners. His
team said Trump is using “strategic uncertainty” to his advantage.
Another dilemma is that relocating operations takes years, not
months, and other countries also are vying for the attention of
international companies.
“We’re competing with Vietnam, South Korea, Malaysia, Singapore,
that have very advanced manufacturing facilities already,” Marxuach
said. “It’s not a slam dunk.”
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