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The Smartest Way to Finally Fix America’s Crumbling Infrastructure
Trump Again Calls for Rebuilding US Infrastructure in Inaugural Address · The Fiscal Times

For all the talk of how our national infrastructure is falling apart and in desperate need of renewed investment, the harsh truth is this: Bipartisan calls to update that infrastructure are unlikely to move past the rhetorical stage unless political leaders fix the U.S. municipal bond market.

Most civil infrastructure in the U.S. is built under the auspices of state and local governments, and, because such projects typically provide benefits over several decades, it makes sense to build them with borrowed money. Thus the municipal bond market is the logical place to finance these projects, especially in today’s era of ultralow interest rates.

Related: As Roads Crumble, Infrastructure Spending Hits a 30-Year Low

Yet, according to Federal Reserve data, municipal bonds outstanding peaked in 2010 at $3.77 trillion and have remained below that level in nominal terms ever since. As a share of GDP, municipal debt has fallen from 25 percent to 21 percent between 2010 and 2015, while publicly held federal debt rose from 63 percent to 76 percent of GDP over the same period. It is also worth noting that only a fraction of today’s $3.71 trillion of outstanding municipal bonds are financing public infrastructure: Governments also use these securities to shore up retirement systems (with Pension Obligation Bonds) and to smooth out annual cashflows (with Revenue Anticipation Notes).

Market watchers will recall that 2010 was the year in which analyst Meredith Whitney predicted a wave of municipal bond defaults, spooking the market. The wave never came, but widely publicized fiscal crises in Stockton and San Bernardino, California; Harrisburg, Pennsylvania; Detroit; and now Puerto Rico have fed the misleading narrative that municipal bonds are highly risky investments. In fact, annual default rates on General Obligation municipal bonds — the type most commonly used to fund infrastructure investments — have been 0.1 percent or less.

Despite their low credit risk, most local government bond issuers receive credit ratings below AAA, scaring away many uninformed investors. Academic research has established that municipal bonds are rated more conservatively than other types of bonds. A 2008 lawsuit alleged that rating agencies conspired with municipal bond insurance companies like Ambac and MBIA to depress municipal bond ratings in order to compel governments to purchase costly bond insurance policies.

Exaggerated risk perceptions translate into higher financing costs and less liquidity — stunting the municipal bond market. In a recent study for UC Berkeley, I found that some local governments incur over 8 percent of principal in issuance costs. This is like paying 8 points on a home mortgage, something that no one in their right mind would do.