Nov 21 2009
What is debt service?
Debt service is a term often thrown around in California budgeting language. What is it, and how does it impact the budget?
Debt service is the payments made on bonds and other debt (mostly bonds) that California owes. Debt service must be paid first, from the General Fund. Sometimes the bonds are payed from special funds, but not normally. In fact, the General Fund is the security for the bonds. When a group sued the state earlier this year to stop the state from selling bonds, the argument was that the General Fund revenues are not secure enough to constitute a “secure” flow of cash that is needed for the bonds. However, the court disagreed and said the General Fund can act as security for the bonds, and bond sales resumed.
At the moment, debt service is approximately 7% of the state General Fund budget. This number is set to rise to 10% by the middle of the next decade once all the bonds that have been sold are in repayment.
When the Governor said he was going to balance the budget, instead he sold bonds to gain access to more money. This money now has to be repaid to those people who bought the bonds. The investors, those who bought the bonds, get the interest payments on the bonds tax-free. it is part of what inspires people to by bonds. All this means is that to balance the budget now, the Governor agreed to let future generations pay back the money. Part of this hinges on the hope that General Fund revenues come in higher than expected in future years, and part of this is an “I don’t care because I won’t be Governor and I can live wherever I want and don’t have to live with the mess I created” attitude. This is an attitude the Legislature shares with the Governor - just look at thier wish for an $11 billion water bond.
If the water bond was to pass, assuming that California can get a low interest rate in the bond market, the payments on the bond will be approximately $800 million a year. This will increase depending on the interest rate. The last bonds California sold had a high interest rate - 4% - on them. If this is the case, the payment increases.
Debt service has to be paid before anything else can be paid.
One of the interesting things about the bonds is that the bonds all include language that says, in a nutshell, that the Director of Finance can raise revenues necessary to pay back the bonds. What happens if a Director of Finance actually takes this option? No one knows, but it would be interesting to see.
Bonds are a bad deal. Debt service is a bad deal. Just like people with credit card debt who are trying to get out of it, the state should pay off the bonds and live within its means.


