Lobbying for flexibility in tax-exempt financing: GFOA and the Public Finance Network are working to introduce a bill in Congress that will ease some of the restrictions on the use of tax-exempt municipal bonds.

AuthorGaffney, Susan
PositionFederal Focus

The Center for Budget and Policy Priorities recently projected the nation's 10-year budget deficit, beginning in 2004, to be near $5.1 trillion. (1) This estimate includes a Medicare prescription drug benefit, the cost of the war in Iraq, making permanent the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts, and alternative minimum tax relief. The Congressional Budget Office, which now estimates the 10-year budget deficit at $1.4 billion, did not include such initiatives in its estimate. (2) The deficit picture is further clouded by the spending increases that will be needed for the Medicare and Social Security programs when the baby boomers begin to reach retirement age in 2012.

As noted in the August installment of the Federal Focus (and in Christopher Hoene and Michael Pagano's article in this issue), the intense pressures on the federal budget are having a negative impact on essential programs at the state and local levels. While GFOA and the other local and state government organizations that comprise the Public Finance Network continue to push for additional funding through the federal appropriations process, the group is also looking for legislative remedies to the fiscal challenges facing state and local governments.

One way the federal government could greatly assist state and local governments, universities, non-profit health care facilities, public power entities, and housing authorities to allow for greater flexibility in the use of tax-exempt bonds. Many of the laws pertaining to the issuance of tax-exempt bonds have not been updated since the Tax Reform Act of 1986 and the Technical and Miscellaneous Revenue Act of 1988. So while the fiscal needs of state and local governments have evolved through the years, the laws governing public finance are effectively stuck in place, circa 1986.

The members of the Public Finance Network have been lobbying for changes to these laws almost since their inception. Topping the list of changes the PFN would like to see included in a public finance bill to be introduced in Congress are the following:

Relax federal arbitrage rules. Two areas in particular require remedy. First, the small issuer exemption should be raised from $5 million to $25 million. Second, extending the spend-down exception from two years to three years is a simple, sensible approach to this perennial problem faced by issuers of all types of tax-exempt bonds. In addition, the National Association of Bond Lawyers has proposed a number of other helpful...

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