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1 How CBO Produces Fair-Value Estimes of the Cost of Federal Credit Programs: A Primer 1 (July 2018)

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                                                                                            JULY  2018







How CBO Produces Fair-Value Estimates of the

    Cost of Federal Credit Programs: A Primer


The federal government supports some private activities-
such as home ownership, postsecondary education, and
certain commercial ventures-through credit assistance
offered to individuals and businesses. Some of that
assistance is in the form of federal direct loans, and some
is through federal guarantees of loans made by private
financial institutions. Although the costs of most fed-
eral activities are recorded in the budget on a cash basis
(showing the balance of inflows and outflows when those
flows occur), the lifetime costs of federal credit programs
are recorded up front on an accrual basis. That budget-
ary treatment applies both to direct loans (for which
most of the cash outflows occur up front, when loans are
disbursed) and to loan guarantees (for which cash flows
both to and from the government occur gradually over
the life of the commitments).

The cost of providing credit assistance is an important
consideration for policymakers as they allocate spending
among  programs and choose between credit assistance and
other forms of aid such as federal grants-but assessing
cost is not a simple matter. Indeed, it is more difficult to
measure the cost of credit assistance than to assess the costs
of other forms of aid because, for credit assistance, the
measurement  of cost must account for future cash flows of
uncertain amounts that can continue for many years.

In this primer and other reports, the Congressional Budget
Office discusses two approaches that are used to estimate
the cost to the federal government of credit programs:

*  The accounting procedures currently used in the
   federal budget, as prescribed by the Federal Credit
   Reform Act of 1990 (FCRA),1  and


1. Sec. 504(d) of FCRA, 2 U.S.C. §661c(d) (2016).


*  An alternative approach in which costs are estimated
   on the basis of the market value of the federal govern-
   ment's obligations-termed a fair-value approach.2

A common   method  for estimating the fair value of a
direct loan or loan guarantee is to discount the projected
cash flows to the present using market-based discount
rates. The present value expresses the flows of current and
future income or payments in terms of a single number.
That number, in turn, depends on the discount rate, or
rate of interest, that is used to translate future cash flows
into current dollars. For FCRA estimates, the discount
rates used are the projected yields on Treasury securities
of varying maturities. The fair-value estimates employ
discounting methods that are consistent with the way the
loan or loan guarantee would be priced in a competitive
market. The difference between the FCRA and fair-value
discount rates can be interpreted as a risk premium-the
additional compensation that investors would require to
bear the risk associated with federal credit. In general, the
cost of a direct loan or a loan guarantee reported in the
federal budget under FCRA procedures would be lower
than the fair-value cost that private institutions would
assign to similar credit assistance on the basis of market
prices.

FCRA   estimates reflect the average budgetary effects
of programs that provide credit assistance. Combining
FCRA   estimates with projections of average spending
and revenues produces deficit projections that in the long
run reflect the average cash flows to and from the gov-
ernment. However, average budgetary effects sometimes

2. For CBO's most recent comparison of estimates of the
   costs of federal credit programs under both the FCRA and
   fair-value approaches, see Congressional Budget Office, Fair-
   Value Estimates of the Cost ofFederal Credit Programs in 2019
   (June 2018), www.cbo.gov/publication/54095.

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