Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Financial Crisis: Who will Bailout the State and Local Governments?

Your's truly wrote this over at New Geography:
Although building for years, the impending collapse of state and municipal finance has been hastened by the growing financial crisis. The year 2008 will go down as one of the most turbulent years in the history of financial markets. Long established companies such as Lehman Brothers, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and Citigroup have imploded. Large retailers like Circuit City have already filed for bankruptcy and, without federal help, huge companies like General Motors will join the parade.

Yet with all the turbulence in the private economy, there has been much less media attention on the coming bankruptcy of some municipalities and perhaps even some states. Many of us are taught in college finance classes that the yield on municipal bonds always has to be lower than U.S. Treasury securities, largely due to their exemption from federal income taxation. This normal pricing of municipal bonds no longer exists. Municipal bond yields, the last couple of months, are consistently higher than U.S. Treasuries. This tells us that the credit markets perceive great risk in lending to America's cities. The perceived ability to pay back principal is now the operating rule in the credit markets.
Do you want to be a creditor of California,Illinois,New York,New Jersey,or Massachusetts?