Jackson, MS (March 12, 2008) - State Treasurer Tate
Reeves joined the treasurers of Pennsylvania and California today to
testify before the U.S. House of Financial Service Committee in Washington
D.C.
The hearing gave the committee an opportunity
to receive testimony and recommendations regarding the turmoil in
the municipal marketplace. The
municipal bond market has been suffering from spillover from the meltdown
of the subprime mortgage market in recent months.
“The current stress in the bond insurance industry is not at
all caused by the consistent, highly profitable cash flow of traditional
municipal issuers, but instead by the re-investment of these profits
into higher risk ventures,” Reeves said.
Reeves stressed that the affordability
and accessibility of the municipal bond market is critical to state
and local governments. The capital
raised in the municipal marketplace builds school, hospitals, roads
and other vital infrastructure and public projects. Reeves also
noted that the tax-exempt market is vital in the aftermath of disasters
such as Hurricane Katrina.
“Many of the recovery projects in Louisiana, Alabama, and Mississippi
post Katrina have been and are being aided by the G.O. Zone Act of
2005, State Treasurer Tate Reeves said. “This congressional
act allowed for many unique bond applications that greatly benefited
the taxpayers of Mississippi.”
Reeves recommended several technical changes
to the committee that would create greater liquidity and stability
in the municipal bond market. “Congress does not need to over-react to the recent
market turmoil by creating more regulation and federal subsidies that
the taxpayers underwrite,” said Reeves.
“There are prudent market-oriented policies that will bring added stability
to the marketplace. By working together, we can continue to ensure
a viable, efficient market that ensures the lowest cost of capital
for our state and local governments, thereby maximizing the benefit
to all of our taxpayers.”