Taxable Municipal Bonds: State and Local Governments Confront the Tax-Exempt Limitation Movement

While most state and local governments have adapted to the changes fashioned by the tax limitation movement, they now must confront a less visible yet no less costly movement to limit their traditional source of debt, the tax-exempt municipal bond. With passage of the Tax Reform Act of 1986, Congres...

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Veröffentlicht in:Public administration review 1990-01, Vol.50 (1), p.42-48
Hauptverfasser: Bland, Robert L., Chen, Li-Khan
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container_title Public administration review
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creator Bland, Robert L.
Chen, Li-Khan
description While most state and local governments have adapted to the changes fashioned by the tax limitation movement, they now must confront a less visible yet no less costly movement to limit their traditional source of debt, the tax-exempt municipal bond. With passage of the Tax Reform Act of 1986, Congress placed significant limitations on the use of tax-exempt bonds for private purposes. In 1988, the tax-exempt limitation movement found judicial sanction when the U. S. Supreme Court ruled in South Carolina v. Baker that state and local bonds are not constitutionally protected from federal taxation. As with the tax limitation movement of a decade earlier, issuers of tax-exempt debt must search for alternative sources of capital, including issuing taxable bonds. After tracing the rise of taxable municipal bonds, this article examines the investment market's response to this new source of capital. It finds that if the private-purpose bonds now exempt had been subject to federal taxation, state and local budgets would have incurred 441 million in additional interest payments in 1988 and almost 6 billion in additional payments over the average life of the bonds. The analysis also finds that taxable revenue bonds incur higher interest rates than corporate bonds, indicating some discrimination by investors against this new type of security.
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With passage of the Tax Reform Act of 1986, Congress placed significant limitations on the use of tax-exempt bonds for private purposes. In 1988, the tax-exempt limitation movement found judicial sanction when the U. S. Supreme Court ruled in South Carolina v. Baker that state and local bonds are not constitutionally protected from federal taxation. As with the tax limitation movement of a decade earlier, issuers of tax-exempt debt must search for alternative sources of capital, including issuing taxable bonds. After tracing the rise of taxable municipal bonds, this article examines the investment market's response to this new source of capital. It finds that if the private-purpose bonds now exempt had been subject to federal taxation, state and local budgets would have incurred 441 million in additional interest payments in 1988 and almost 6 billion in additional payments over the average life of the bonds. The analysis also finds that taxable revenue bonds incur higher interest rates than corporate bonds, indicating some discrimination by investors against this new type of security.</abstract><cop>Chicago, Ill</cop><pub>American Society for Public Administration</pub><doi>10.2307/977293</doi><tpages>7</tpages></addata></record>
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source PAIS Index; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Periodicals Index Online; EBSCOhost Business Source Complete; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing; EBSCOhost Political Science Complete; EBSCOhost Education Source
subjects Bond issues
Corporate bonds
Exemption
Finance
Finance Reform
General obligation bonds
Impacts
Income tax
Income taxes
Interest rates
Local government
Monetary policy
Mortgage bonds
Municipal bonds
Municipal government
Regression analysis
Research on Municipal and State Government Issues
Revenue bonds
State finance
State government
Studies
Tax aspects
Tax exempt
Tax exempt bonds
Tax Reform Act 1986-US
Taxable
Taxable bonds
Taxation
United States
title Taxable Municipal Bonds: State and Local Governments Confront the Tax-Exempt Limitation Movement
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