Tax-exempt municipal bonds are the most important tool in the U.S. for financing investment in schools, roads, water and sewer systems, airports, bridges and other vital infrastructure.
Several legislative proposals have been offered to curtail or eliminate the federal tax exemption for municipal bond interest. One proposal would impose a tax-benefit cap of 28 percent for certain taxpayers on many itemized deductions and exclusions, including tax-exempt interest. The effect would be a partial tax on interest that would otherwise be exempt from income tax. In effect, the tax-exempt bond market would no longer be entirely tax-exempt. If the proposal to impose a 28-percent benefit cap on tax-exempt interest had been in effect during the last decade, it is estimated that this would have cost states and localities an additional $173 billion in interest expense for infrastructure projects financed over the past ten-year period