CancelWallStreet Sep2020
CancelWallStreet Sep2020
CancelWallStreet Sep2020
the nation adjusts to the new reality of life in a pandemic, it has become clearer
than ever before that a robust social safety net is essential to the health and vitality
of our communities. The COVID-19 pandemic has confirmed what we already knew:
that we need to dramatically expand and fully fund public services like healthcare
and education and public utilities like water, heat, electricity, and broadband internet access.
Unfortunately, the economic impact of the pandemic has wreaked havoc on public budgets,
leaving state and local governments across the country to face down staggering revenue
shortfalls at precisely the moment when the urgency of massive public investment in our
communities is most apparent.
Importantly, the pandemic did not create the need for a strong, robust social safety net. It simply
magnified it. Similarly, the need for strong investment in our communities existed long before the
pandemic and will continue to exist long after. In fact, our past failures to fully and equitably fund
public services have helped create the systemic inequities and structural conditions that have
made COVID-19 so deadly for Black, Indigenous, and Latinx communities in particular. In order to
make our communities resilient enough to withstand all the future natural and manmade disasters
that our extractive economic system will bring, we need to change the way our governments raise
and spend their money. Full recovery requires robust public investment in our public goods and
services. Instead of making more cuts to critical services in our public budgets, it’s time we look to
cutting the exorbitant profits Wall Street makes from our municipalities.
The ultra-wealthy and corporations have been starving our public budgets for decades, even
before the COVID-19 pandemic. Following the failed theory of trickle-down economics, our
federal, state, and local governments have showered corporations and the rich with lavish tax
subsidies and tax cuts in exchange for broken promises of job creation and economic growth.1
However, communities that have already experienced decades of rampant disinvestment can no
longer afford to settle for forgone tax revenue as a result of failed market-driven solutions.
We need to raise progressive revenue by taxing billionaires like Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg,
and Elon Musk, who have seen their wealth grow by leaps and bounds during the pandemic,2 and
large corporations like Visa, Microsoft, and Pfizer that have made windfall profits while most
Americans have struggled to make ends meet.3 We also need the federal government to provide
direct aid and grants to our state and local governments to help them get back on their feet. But
that is not enough. We also need to cut regressive expenses. This includes divesting from policing
and investing that money back into community-based services. It also means eliminating our
interest payments on municipal debt, which transfer more than $160 billion every year from
taxpayers to wealthy investors and banks on Wall Street. This last idea is the focus of this paper.
If the Federal Reserve made long-term, zero-cost loans to all state and local
governments in the US, taxpayers could save more than $160 billion a year in
interest payments. What could this money pay for? A lot.
• $160 billion could help 13 million families avoid eviction by covering their annual
rent.4
• $151 billion could provide all 31.5 million unemployed workers $600 a week in
Pandemic Unemployment Assistance for eight weeks.5
• $134 billion could make up the revenue shortfall that every city, town, and
village in the US is experiencing in 2020 due to the pandemic.6
• $66 billion could cover childcare expenses for all 5.1 families in the US with
children under the age of 5 that currently pay for childcare.7
• Just $11.4 billion could cover the cost of extending Supplemental Nutrition
Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits to all undocumented immigrants in the US
for one year.8
• Just $6.5 billion could provide internet for distant learning to all 9 million
students who currently lack internet access.9
Bond Underwriters
If Capital City wants to borrow $100 million, Capital City Bank might agree to
give the city $100 million, in exchange for 20,000 I.O.U. notes. Each I.O.U. note is
worth $5,000 and has to be paid back over 30 years with interest, at set periods
of time. Capital City Bank can then turn around and sell these I.O.U. notes to 15
other investors. Capital City now owes a total of $100 million, which has to be
paid back with interest over 30 years to these 15 investors.
In this case, the I.O.U. notes are bonds. Capital City Bank, which bought all the
I.O.U. notes from the city at the onset in exchange for the $100 million with the
expectation of selling them to other investors, is the bond underwriter. The 15
investors who bought the I.O.U. notes from Capital City are the bondholders, or
the investors in the bonds.
Bond underwriters hold a lot of power because, as the initial buyer of the bonds
from government borrowers, they get to set the terms of the deal, including the
interest rate on the bonds. They claim the interest rate is based on what they
believe they will be able to sell to potential bondholders, but ultimately, it us up
to their discretion. Bond underwriters also charge fees for their services, and
these fees typically get tacked onto the bond itself, which means municipal
borrowers end up paying interest on those fees.
The top ten municipal bond underwriters in the US in 2019 were Bank of America
(which underwrote $63 billion in municipal bonds), Citigroup ($44 billion), Morgan
Stanley ($42 billion), JPMorgan Chase ($36 billion), the Royal Bank of Canada
($26 billion), Goldman Sachs ($22 billion), Wells Fargo ($18 billion), Stifel ($16
billion), Barclays ($15 billion), and Raymond James($14 billion).17
In the 20 years after World War II, a period of relatively low interest
rates, local governments borrowed billions through the bond market.
And yet, black children in cities around the country continued to
attend underfunded schools. Streets went unpaved, and adequate
parks and recreational facilities in black neighborhoods were hard to
come by. This as in part the result of credit analysts seeing suburban
bonds as more appealing.
By the late 1960s the will to address these inequities clashed with
rising interest rates, outright racism, tax revolts and the power of
credit rating analysts. New York City, Detroit, Boston, Baltimore and
Cincinnati saw their bonds downgraded during the decade. Some
thought the urban uprisings in these cities triggered a downgrade.
Others stressed such long-term trends as white middle-class
suburbanization and the urban concentration of low-income
minorities.19
Today, state and local governments that serve above-average compositions of people of color are
still more likely to get hit with lower credit ratings.20 This means that cities and states with higher
concentrations of people of color are also more likely to be charged higher interest rates, since
bond underwriters tend to set higher interest rates for bonds from borrowers with lower credit
ratings. This diverts money that should be invested in high quality services in Black and Brown
communities to bondholders instead.
Often, bond underwriters tell borrowers that they can attain lower interest rates if they use a
variable-rate structure for their debt, in which the interest rates will fluctuate over time. This can
present some savings on the front end if rates in the variable-rate market are currently low, but
there is a risk that rates could spike later. To offset that risk, the bond underwriters will suggest
that municipal borrowers use credit enhancements like bond insurance, letters of credit, standby
purchase agreements, and/or liquidity facilities, and enter into side deals like interest rate swaps.
Each of these financial products comes with its own set of fees that eat into the potential
savings from using a variable-rate structure in the first place.21 Because variable-rate debt is
typically resold at regular intervals when rates reset, borrowers also have to pay remarketing
fees.22 Additionally, because it is a more complex deal, the underwriter can also charge higher
underwriting fees.23
Interest Expense in
State or Local Government Most Recent Fiscal Year
Available
STATES
State of Alabama $231 million (2019)
State of Alaska $75 million (2019)
State of Arizona $365 million (2019)
State of Arkansas $64 million (2019)
State of California $6.1 billion (2018)
State of Colorado $109 million (2019)
State of Connecticut $1.6 billion (2019)
State of Delaware $123 million (2019)
State of Florida $892 million (2019)
State of Georgia $445 million (2019)
State of Hawai’i $283 million (2019)
State of Idaho $185 million (2019)
State of Illinois $1.7 billion (2019)
State of Indiana $46 million (2019)
State of Iowa $138 million (2019)
State of Kansas $303 million (2019)
State of Kentucky $352 million (2019)
State of Louisiana $339 million (2019)
State of Maine $59 million (2019)
State of Maryland $704 million (2019)
State of Massachusetts $1.6 billion (2019)
State of Michigan $260 million (2019)
State of Minnesota $268 million (2019)
State of Mississippi $231 million (2019)
State of Missouri $228 million (2019)
State of Montana $9 million (2019)
State of Nebraska $3 million (2019)
State of Nevada $135 million (2019)
State of New Hampshire $49 million (2019)
State of New Jersey $1.0 billion (2019)
State of New Mexico $150 million (2019)
State of New York $6.5 billion (2019)
State of North Carolina $364 million (2019)
State of North Dakota $20 million (2019)
State of Ohio $102 million (2019)
State of Oklahoma $53 million (2019)
If the Federal Reserve made long-term, zero-cost loans available to all municipal borrowers, they
would be able to refinance nearly all of their existing debt into new interest-free loans, thereby
eliminating the interest they currently pay on debt. We calculated the potential savings from
long-term, zero-cost loans from the Federal Reserve as the interest payments that each borrower
made in the most recent year for which data was available in August 2020.
Sources:
We used the public entity’s most recent (years vary) Comprehensive Annual Financial Report
(CAFR) or Audited Financial Statements (AFS).
In conducting our research, we included all 50 states, the District of Columbia, the 50 largest
cities for which we were able to find data, and the 10 largest counties for which we were able to
find data. Additionally, we selected several other major local governments, school districts, higher
education systems, and transit agencies.
Including cities with a large population size and those with active campaigns against
austerity budgets reflects our intention in covering a diverse set of geographies and public
entities throughout the country.
We used the interest expense total from the Statement of Revenues, Expenditures and Changes
in Fund Balances for all Government Funds from the CAFR or AFS as our first source. Because
we were looking for what was paid in interest by the entire entity, we used the expenditures
amount in the total governmental funds.
We used the Government Wide Financial Statement - Statement of Activities to find the interest
expense amount listed, in the event that the Statement of Revenues, Expenditures and
Changes in Fund Balances for all Government Funds (listed above) did not list interest payments
or lumped them together under the more generic “Debt Service” line item.
In order to find the amount in interest paid for the entity’s proprietary funds, we used the
Statement of Revenues, Expenses and Changes in Fund Net Position for Proprietary Funds.
Because we are looking across funds, we used the total interest expense figure for all listed
proprietary funds, if that figure was listed.
In order to find the amount in interest paid for the entity’s component units, we used the
When interest was not broken out in the Statement of Revenues, Expenditures and Changes in
Fund Balances for all government funds, we calculated the sum of the interest expenses from
the (1) Government wide- Statement of Activities, (2) the Statement of Revenues, Expenses and
Changes in Fund Net Position for Proprietary Funds and (3) the Statement of Revenues,
Expenditures and Changes in Fund Balances for Component Units.
In all other circumstances, we calculated the sum of the interest expenses from (1) the Statement
of Revenues, Expenditures and Changes in Fund Balances for all Government Funds, (2) the
Statement of Revenues, the Expenses and Changes in Fund Net Position for Proprietary Funds
and (3) the Statement of Revenues, Expenditures and Changes in Fund Balances for Component
Units.
It is important to note that the Statement of Revenues, the Expenses and Changes in Fund Net
Position for Proprietary Funds and the Statement of Revenues, Expenditures and Changes in
Fund Balances for Component Units did not always list interest expenses. In those cases, we left
those figures out and our numbers are conservative as a result.