There is an issue at the WIFIA Loan Program. But not the one that Congress is focused on.
A Bond Buyer article about the latest water funding bill notes in passing that the WIFIA Loan Program “is designed to work with bonds and other funding sources.”
Since WIFIA limits its share of the project’s capital costs to 49% and requires an investment-grade rating, the borrower must find the 51% balance elsewhere and (given the rating) that’ll most likely include debt markets, including bonds.
WIFIA’s policy theory is that a selected project won’t happen soon (or at all) without a WIFIA loan. In that sense, WIFIA and bonds are designed to work together to unlock new infrastructure investment. CBO’s legislative scoring of the WIFIA Program reflects this expected outcome – it’s assumed that the 51% non-WIFIA part of project capitalization is financed with tax-exempt bonds that wouldn’t have been issued otherwise.
The reality over the past three years has been quite different. The vast majority of WIFIA borrowers are highly rated public water agencies. They’re almost universally financing projects that certainly will happen regardless of a Program loan. Without a WIFIA loan, these borrowers would simply issue 100% water revenue bonds in the usual way.
It would be more accurate to say that WIFIA “was designed to work with bonds but in fact mostly just replaces them”.
Continue reading

