Skip to main content

Moody’s: Burden of infrastructure spending increasingly falling on US states

Repairing or replacing aging transportation infrastructure, such as roads and bridges, will require US states to shoulder additional cost burdens since federal funding has stagnated over the last 20 years, Moody’s Investors Service says in a new report. States with large maintenance burdens and backlogs will face budgetary challenges in meeting these needs. US federal highway aid has seen little growth from fiscal 2009-15 and is projected to remain flat when adjusted for inflation through fiscal 2020. Th
January 24, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
Repairing or replacing aging transportation infrastructure, such as roads and bridges, will require US states to shoulder additional cost burdens since federal funding has stagnated over the last 20 years, Moody’s Investors Service says in a new report. States with large maintenance burdens and backlogs will face budgetary challenges in meeting these needs.

US federal highway aid has seen little growth from fiscal 2009-15 and is projected to remain flat when adjusted for inflation through fiscal 2020. The federal government funds transportation infrastructure through the national gas tax, which last changed in 1993. Transportation spending will require a larger chunk of state capital expenses under current federal policy. Depending on its implementation, the incoming administration’s plans may ease states’ burden.

From 2006 to 2016, combined state and federal transportation spending increased to $153 billion from $109 billion, with states picking up 70 per cent of the total increase, according to the report “States - US: States Increasingly Picking Up Tab for Spending on Bridges and Roads.”

“As states look to allocate their resources among growing health care and education needs, they cannot devote as much to transportation infrastructure as they might want. States will increasingly leverage motor fuel and other road taxes to issue more debt, which will lead to a faster increase in transportation-related debt than overall state net tax-supported debt,” author of the report and Moody’s AVP-Analyst Julius Vizner says.

With the 18.4 cent-per-gallon federal gas tax unchanged for 24 years, 40 states have raised their gas tax a total of 25 per cent to a 50-state average of 24 cents per gallon.

For some states, years of underinvestment can lead to a disproportionately large financial responsibility which can reduce future fiscal flexibility.

President Trump has proposed increasing infrastructure spending by US$1 trillion over the next 10 years, although funding sources and timelines have not been determined. According to Moody’s, even if Trump’s plan proceeds, states will continue to have a central role in transportation and infrastructure planning and funding.

Related Content

  • October 29, 2015
    Speed up pace of infrastructure action, say two thirds of businesses
    The majority of businesses (62 per cent) are concerned with the pace of progress on the delivery of infrastructure projects, and over half (53 per cent) believe they won’t see necessary upgrades in the next five years, according to the 2015 CBI/AECOM Infrastructure Survey. With 94 per cent of the 722 firms surveyed saying the quality of infrastructure is a key deciding factor in planning their investments, CBI/AECOM believe there is clear consensus on the need to speed up the delivery of projects crucia
  • February 2, 2012
    Governments must look beyond short-term spending of public funds
    Phil Pettitt, Chief Executive of innovITS, the UK's ITS Centre of Excellence, argues that governments need to look beyond the short-term when looking to pump-prime economic recovery with public funds. It seems, in the current economic climate, that a 'good' day is one in which no company is announcing job cuts or going into administration. Consumer demand is down and businesses are retrenching, cutting costs and fretting over the consequences of shrinking opportunities and order books. It has not been this
  • February 1, 2012
    Gearing up for IntelliDrive cooperative traffic management
    Beginning in the first quarter of 2010 it became evident that the IntelliDrivesm programme direction had been reestablished, by the USDOT's ITS Joint Program Office (JPO), after being adrift for a few years. The programme was now moving toward a deployment future and with a much broader stakeholder involvement than it had exhibited previously. By today not only is it evident that the programme was reestablished with a renewed emphasis on deployment, it is also apparent that it is moving along at a faster pa
  • December 24, 2014
    UK government announces record funding to tackle potholes
    A record US$9.3 billion will be spent on tackling potholes and improving local roads between 2015 and 2021, UK transport secretary Patrick McLoughlin has announced.