OMB HOME • AGENCY INFORMATION • CIRCULARS
CIRCULAR NO. A-129
REVISED
November 2000
POLICIES FOR FEDERAL CREDIT PROGRAMS
AND NON-TAX RECEIVABLES
GENERAL
INFORMATION
Purpose
Authority
Coverage
Rescissions
Effective
Date
Inquiries
Definitions
APPENDIX
A
I.
RESPONSIBILITIES OF DEPARTMENTS AND AGENCIES
Office of Management and Budget
Department of the Treasury
Federal
Credit Policy Working Group
Departments and Agencies
II.
BUDGET AND LEGISLATIVE POLICY FOR CREDIT PROGRAMS
Program Review
Form of Assistance
Financial
Standards
Implementation
III.
CREDIT MANAGEMENT AND EXTENSION POLICY
A.
CREDIT EXTENSION POLICIES
Applicant Screening
Loan Documentation
Collateral Requirements
B.
MANAGEMENT OF GUARANTEED LOAN LENDERS
AND SERVICERS
Lender Eligibility
Lender Agreements
Lender and Servicer
Reviews
Corrective Actions
IV.
MANAGING THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENTS RECEIVABLES
Accounting and Financial Reporting
Loan Servicing Requirements
Asset
Resolution
V.
DELINQUENT DEBT COLLECTION
Standards for Defining Delinquent and Defaulted Debt
Administrative
Collection of Debts
Referrals to the Department of Justice
Interest,
Penalties, and Administrative Cost
Termination of Collection, Write-Off, Use
of Currently Not Collectible
(CNC), and Close-Out
Attachment
A - Write-Off Close-Out process flowchart
APPENDIX
B
Checklist for Credit Program Legislation, Testimony, and
Budget
Submissions
APPENDIX
C
Model Bill Language for Credit Programs
CIRCULAR NO. A-129
Revised
TO THE HEADS OF EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENTS AND ESTABLISHMENTS
SUBJECT: Policies for Federal Credit Programs and
Non-Tax Receivables
Federal credit programs are created to accomplish a variety of social and
economic goals. Agencies must implement budget policies and management practices
that ensure the goals of credit programs are met while properly identifying and
controlling costs. In addition, Federal receivables, whether from credit
programs or other non-tax sources, must be serviced and collected in an
efficient and effective manner to protect the value of the Federal Government's
assets.
GENERAL INFORMATION
1. Purpose. This Circular prescribes policies and procedures
for justifying, designing, and managing Federal credit programs and for
collecting non-tax receivables. It sets principles for designing credit
programs, including: the preparation and review of legislation and regulations;
budgeting for the costs of credit programs and minimizing unintended costs to
the Government; and improving the efficiency and effectiveness of Federal credit
programs. It also sets standards for extending credit, managing lenders
participating in Government guaranteed loan programs, servicing credit and
non-tax receivables, and collecting delinquent debt.
2. Authority. This Circular is issued under the authority of
the Budget and Accounting Act of 1921, as amended; the
Budget and Accounting Act of 1950, as amended; the Debt
Collection Act of 1982; as amended by the Debt Collection Improvement Act of
1996; Section 2653 of Public Law 98-369 the
Federal Credit Reform Act of 1990, as amended; the Federal Debt
Collection Procedures Act of 1990; the Chief Financial Officers
Act of 1990, as amended; Executive Order 8248;
the Cash Management Improvement Act Amendments of 1992; and
pre-existing common law authority to charge interest on debts and to offset
payments to collect debts administratively.
3. Coverage.
a. Applicability. The provisions of this Circular apply to all
credit programs of the Federal Government, including:
(1) Direct loan programs;
(2) Loan guarantee programs and loan
insurance programs in which the Federal Government bears a legal liability to
pay for all or part of the principal or interest in the event of borrower
default; and
(3) Loans or other financial assets acquired by a Federal
agency (or a receiver or conservator acting for a Federal agency) as a result of
a claim payment on a defaulted guaranteed or insured loan or in fulfillment of a
Federal deposit insurance commitment.
Sections IV and V of Appendix A
("Managing the Federal Government's Receivables" and "Delinquent Debt
Collection") also apply to receivables due to the Government from the sale of
goods and services; fines, fees, duties, leases, rents, royalties, and
penalties; overpayments to beneficiaries, grantees, contractors, and Federal
employees; and similar debts.
b. Exclusions Under the Debt Collection Acts. Certain debt collection
techniques authorized or mandated by the provisions of the Debt Collection Act
of 1982 (DCA), as amended by the Debt Collection Improvement Act of 1996 (DCIA),
do not apply to debts arising under the Internal Revenue Code, certain sections
of the Social Security Act, or the tariff laws of the United States. <31
U.S.C.§3701>
c. Other Statutory Exclusions. The policies and standards of this
Circular do not apply when they are statutorily prohibited or are inconsistent
with statutory requirements. However, agencies are required to periodically
review legislation affecting the form of assistance and/or financial standards
for credit programs to justify continuance of any non-conformance.
4. Rescission. This Circular rescinds and replaces OMB
Circular No. A-129 (revised), dated January 1993, and OMB Bulletin No. 91-05,
dated November 26, 1990.
This Circular supplements, and does not supersede, the requirements
applicable to budget submissions under OMB Circular No. A-11 and to proposed
legislation and testimony under OMB Circular No. A-19.
5. Effective Date. This Circular is effective
immediately.
6. Inquiries. Further information on the implementation of
credit management and debt collection policies may be found in the Department of
the Treasury's Financial Management Service <Managing Federal Receivables>
and in <OMB's Governmentwide 5-Year Plan> for financial management
submitted annually to Congress.
For inquiries concerning budget and legislative policy for credit programs
contact the Office of Management and Budget, Budget Review Division, Budget
Analysis Branch, Room 6025, New Executive Office Building, 725 17th Street, NW,
Washington, DC 20503; (202) 395-3945. Questions on all other sections of the
Circular should be directed to the Office of Federal Financial Management (202)
395-4534.
7. Definitions. Unless otherwise defined in this circular,
key terms used in this circular are defined in OMB Circular
Nos. A-11 and A-34.
Jacob J. Lew
Director
Appendices (3)
APPENDIX A
I. RESPONSIBILITIES OF DEPARTMENTS AND
AGENCIES
Statutory |
Federal Credit Reform Act of 1990, 2 U.S.C. § 661
Debt Collection Act of 1982/Debt Collection Improvement Act of 1996,
31 U.S.C. §§ 3701, 3711-3720E
Federal Debt Collection Procedures Act of 1990
Budget and Accounting Act of 1921
Budget and Accounting Act of 1950
Chief Financial Officers Act of 1990
Cash Management Improvement Act Amendments of 1992
|
1. Office of Management and Budget. The Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) is responsible for reviewing legislation to establish new
credit programs or to expand or modify existing credit programs; monitoring
agency conformance with the Federal Credit Reform Act; formulating and reviewing
agency credit reporting standards and requirements; reviewing and clearing
testimony pertaining to credit programs and debt collection; reviewing agency
budget submissions for credit programs and debt collection activities;
developing and maintaining the Federal credit subsidy calculator used to
calculate the cost of credit programs; formulating and reviewing credit
management and debt collection policy; approving agency credit management and
debt collection plans; and providing training to credit agencies.
2. Department of the Treasury. The Department of the
Treasury (Treasury), acting through the Office of Domestic Finance, works with
OMB to develop Federal credit policies and/or reviewing legislation to create
new credit programs or to expand or modify existing credit programs. The
Department of the Treasury, through its Financial Management Service (FMS),
promulgates government-wide debt collection regulations implementing the debt
collection provisions of the Debt Collection Improvement Act of 1996
(DCIA). FMS works with the Federal program agencies to identify debt
that is eligible for referral to Treasury for cross-servicing and offset, and to
establish target dates for referral. Performance measures are established which
set annual referral and collection goals. In accordance with the DCIA and other
Federal laws, FMS conducts offset of Federal payments, including tax refunds,
under the Treasury Offset Program. FMS also provides collection services for
delinquent non-tax Federal debts (referred to as cross-servicing), and maintains
a private collection agency contract for referral and collection of delinquent
debts. Additionally, FMS issues operational and procedural guidelines regarding
government-wide credit management and debt collection such as "Managing
Federal Receivables" and the "Guide to the Federal Credit Bureau
Program." FMS, under its program responsibility for credit and debt
management and as an active member of the Federal Credit Policy Working Group,
assists in improving credit and debt management activities government-wide.
3. Federal Credit Policy Working Group. The Federal Credit
Policy Working Group (FCPWG) is an interagency forum that provides advice and
assistance to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) and Treasury in the
formulation and implementation of credit policy. Membership consists of
representatives from the Executive Office of the President, the Council of
Economic Advisers, the OMB, and the Department of the Treasury. The major credit
and debt collection agencies represented include the Departments of Agriculture,
Commerce, Education, Health and Human Services, Housing and Urban Development,
Interior, Justice, Labor, State, Transportation, Veterans Affairs and the Agency
for International Development, the Export-Import Bank, the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation and the Small Business Administration. Other departments
and agencies may be invited to participate in the FCPWG at the request of the
Chairperson. The Director of OMB designates the Chairperson of the FCPWG.
4. Department and Agencies. Departments and agencies shall
manage credit programs and all non-tax receivables in accordance with their
statutory authorities and the provisions of this Circular to protect the
Government's assets and to minimize losses in relation to social benefits
provided.
- Agencies shall ensure that:
(1) Federal credit program legislation, regulations, and policies are
designed and administered in compliance with the principles of this Circular;
(2) The costs of credit programs covered by the <Federal Credit
Reform Act of 1990> are budgeted for and controlled in accordance with the
principles of that Act. (Some agencies and programs are expressly exempted
from the statute.);
(3) Every effort is made to prevent future
delinquencies by following appropriate screening standards and procedures for
determination of creditworthiness;
(4) Lenders participating in
guaranteed loan programs meet all applicable financial and programmatic
requirements;
(5) Informed and cost effective decisions are made
concerning portfolio management, including full consideration of contracting
out for servicing or selling the portfolio;
(6) The full range of
available techniques are used, such as those found in the <Federal Claims
Collection Standards> and <Treasury regulations>, as appropriate, to
collect delinquent debts, including demand letters, administrative offset,
salary offset, tax refund offset, private collection agencies, cross-servicing
by Treasury, administrative wage garnishment, and litigation;
(7)
Delinquent debts are written-off as soon as they are determined to be
uncollectible; and
(8) Timely and accurate financial management and
performance data are submitted to OMB and the Department of the Treasury so
that the Government's credit management and debt collection programs and
policies can be evaluated.
- In order to achieve these objectives, agencies shall:
(1) Establish, as appropriate, boards to coordinate credit management and
debt collection activities and to ensure full consideration of credit
management and debt collection issues by all interested and affected
organizations. Representation should include, but not be limited to, the
agency Chief Financial Officer (CFO) and the senior official(s) for program
offices with credit activities or non-tax receivables. The Board may seek from
the agency's Inspector General, input based on findings and conclusions from
past audits and investigations.
(2) Ensure that the statutory and
regulatory requirements and standards set forth in this Circular, <Treasury
regulations>, and supplementary guidance set forth in the Treasury/FMS
<Managing Federal Receivables> are incorporated into agency regulations
and procedures for credit programs and debt collection
activities;
(3)Propose new or revised legislation, regulations, and
forms as necessary to ensure consistency with the provisions of this Circular;
(4) Submit legislation and testimony affecting credit programs for
review under the OMB Circular No. A-19 legislative clearance process, and
budget proposals for review under the Circular No. A-11 budget justification
process;
(5) Periodically evaluate Federal credit programs to assure
their effectiveness in achieving program goals;
(6) Assign to the
agency CFO, in accordance with the <Chief Financial Officers Act of
1990>, responsibility for directing, managing, and providing policy
guidance and oversight of agency financial management personnel, activities,
and operations, including the implementation of asset management systems for
credit management and debt collection;
(7) Prepare, as part of the
agency CFO Financial Management 5-Year Plan, a Credit Management and Debt
Collection Plan for effectively managing credit extension, account servicing,
portfolio management and delinquent debt collection. The plan must ensure
agency compliance with the standards in this Circular; and
(8) Ensure
that data in loan applications and documents for individuals are managed in
accordance with the <Privacy Act of 1974>, as amended by the
<Computer Matching and Privacy Protection Act of 1988>, and the
<Right to Financial Privacy Act of 1978, as amended>. The Privacy Act of
1974 does not apply to loans and debts of commercial organizations.
II. BUDGET AND LEGISLATIVE POLICY FOR CREDIT
PROGRAMS
Federal credit assistance should be provided only when it is necessary and
the best method to achieve clearly specified Federal objectives. Use of private
credit markets should be encouraged, and any impairment of such markets or
misallocation of the nation's resources through the operation of Federal credit
programs should be minimized.
1. Program Review.
REFERENCES:
Statutory |
Federal Credit Reform Act of 1990, 2 U.S.C. §
661 |
Guidance |
OMB Circular No. A-11 |
Proposals submitted to OMB for new programs and for reauthorizing, expanding,
or significantly increasing funding for existing credit programs should be
accompanied by a written review which examines, at a minimum, the following
factors:
- The Federal objectives to be achieved, including:
(1) Whether the credit program is intended to:
(a) Correct a capital market imperfection, which should be defined;
and/or (b) Subsidize borrowers or other beneficiaries, who should be
identified, or encourage certain activities, which should be specified.
(2) Why they cannot be achieved without Federal credit
assistance, including:
(a) A description of existing and potential private sources of credit by
type of institution and the availability and cost of credit to borrowers; and
(b) An explanation as to whether and why these private sources of
financing and their terms and conditions must be supplemented and subsidized.
- The justification for use of a credit subsidy. The review should provide
an explanation of why a credit subsidy is the most efficient way of providing
assistance, including how it provides assistance in overcoming capital market
imperfections, how it would assist the identified borrowers or beneficiaries
or would encourage the identified activities, and why it would be preferable
to other forms of assistance such as grants or technical assistance.
- The estimated benefits of the program or program change. The review should
estimate or, when the program exists, measure the benefits expected from the
program or program change, including the amount by which the distribution of
credit is expected to be altered and the favored activity is expected to
increase. Information on conducting a cost-benefit analysis can be found in
<OMB Circular No. A-94>.
- The effects on private capital markets. The review should estimate the
extent to which the program substitutes directly or indirectly for private
lending, and analyze any elements of program design that encourage and
supplement private lending activity, with the objective that private lending
is displaced to the smallest degree possible by agency programs.
- The estimated subsidy level. The review should provide an explicit
estimate of the subsidy, as required by the <Federal Credit Reform Act of
1990>, and an estimate of the expected annual administrative costs
(including extension, servicing, and collection) of the credit program. If
loan assets are to be sold or are to be included in a prepayment program for
programmatic or other reasons, then the subsidy estimate should include the
effects of the loan asset sales. For guidance on loan asset sales, see the
<Debt Collection Improvement Act of 1996>, <OMB Circular No.
A-11>, and the Treasury/FMS' <Managing Federal Receivables>. Loan
asset sales/prepayment programs must be conducted in accordance with policies
in this Circular and procedures in "Managing Federal Receivables," including
the prohibitions against the financing of prepayments by tax-exempt borrowing
and sales with recourse except where specifically authorized by statute. The
cost of any guarantee placed on the asset sold requires budget authority.
- The administrative resource requirements. The review should include an
examination of the agency's current capacity to administer the new or expanded
program and an estimation of any additional resources that would be needed.
2. Form of Assistance.
REFERENCES:
Statutory |
Federal Credit Reform Act of 1990, 2 U.S.C. § 661
Internal Revenue Code (Section 149(b) |
When Federal credit assistance is necessary to meet a Federal objective, loan
guarantees should be favored over direct loans, unless attaining the Federal
objective requires a subsidy, as defined by the <Federal Credit Reform Act of
1990>, deeper than can be provided by a loan guarantee.
- Loan guarantees may provide several advantages over direct loans. These
advantages include: private sector credit servicing (which tends to be more
efficient), private sector analysis of the borrowers creditworthiness, (which
tends to allocate resources more efficiently), involvement of borrowers with
private sector lenders (which promotes their movement to private credit), and
lower portfolio management costs for agencies.
- Loan guarantees, by removing part or all of the credit risk of a
transaction, change the allocation of economic resources. Loan guarantees may
make credit available when private financial sources would not otherwise do
so, or they may allocate credit to borrowers under more favorable terms than
would otherwise be granted. This reallocation of credit may impose a cost on
the Government and/or the economy.
- Direct loans usually offer borrowers lower interest rates and longer
maturities than loans available from private financial sources, even those
with a Federal guarantee. The use of direct loans, however, may displace
private financial sources and increase the possibility that the terms and
conditions on which Federal credit assistance is offered will not reflect
changes in financial market conditions. The costs to the Government and the
economy are therefore likely to be greater.
- Direct or indirect guarantees of tax-exempt obligations are prohibited
under <Section 149(b) of the Internal Revenue Code>. Guarantees of
tax-exempt obligations are an inefficient way of allocating Federal credit.
Assistance to the borrower, through the tax exemption and the guarantee,
provides interest savings to the borrower that are smaller than the tax
revenue loss to the Government. It is generally thought that the cost to the
taxpayer is greater than the benefit to the borrower. The Internal Revenue
Code provides some exceptions to this requirement; see Section 149(b) of the
Internal Revenue Code for further details.
- To preclude the possibility that Federal agencies will guarantee
tax-exempt obligations, either directly or indirectly, agencies will:
(1) not guarantee federally tax-exempt obligations;
(2) provide
that effective subordination of a direct or guaranteed loan to tax-exempt
obligations will render the guarantee void. To avoid effective subordination,
the direct or guaranteed loan and the tax-exempt obligation should be repaid
using separate dedicated revenue streams or otherwise separate sources of
funding, and should be separately collateralized. In addition, the direct or
guaranteed loan terms, such as grace periods, repayment schedules, and
availability of deferrals, should be consistent with private sector standards
to ensure that they do not create effective subordination;
(3) prohibit
use of a Federal guarantee as collateral to secure a tax-exempt obligation;
(4) prohibit Federal guarantees of loans funded by tax-exempt
obligations; and
(5) prohibit the linkage of Federal guarantees with
tax-exempt obligations. For example, such prohibited linkage occurs if the
project is unlikely to be financed without the Federal guarantee covering a
portion of the cost. In such cases, the Federal guarantee is, in effect,
enabling the tax-exempt obligation to be issued, since without the guarantee
the project would not be viable to receive any financing. Therefore, the
tax-exempt obligation is dependent on and linked to the Federal
guarantee.
- Where a large degree of subsidy is justified, comparable to that which
would be provided by guaranteed tax-exempt obligations, agencies should
consider the use of direct loans.Financial Standards.
REFERENCES:
Statutory |
Federal Credit Reform Act of 1990, 2 U.S.C. § 661
Chief Financial Officers Act of 1990 |
Guidance |
OMB Circular No. A-11; SFFAS 2, OMB Circular No.
A-34 |
In accordance with the <Federal Credit Reform Act of 1990>, agencies
must analyze and control the risk and cost of their programs. Agencies must
develop statistical models predictive of defaults and other deviations from loan
contracts. Agencies are required to estimate subsidy costs and to obtain budget
authority to cover such costs before obligating direct loans and committing loan
guarantees. Specific instructions for budget justification and subsidy cost
estimation under the Federal Credit Reform Act of 1990 are provided in <OMB
Circular No. A-11>, and instructions for budget execution are provided in
<OMB Circular No. A-34>.
Agencies shall follow sound financial practices in the design and
administration of their credit programs. Where program objectives cannot be
achieved while following sound financial practices, the cost of these deviations
shall be justified in agency budget submissions in comparison with expected
benefits. Unless a waiver is approved, agencies should follow the financial
practices discussed below.
- Lenders and borrowers who participate in Federal credit programs should
have a substantial stake in full repayment in accordance with the loan
contract.
(1) Private lenders who extend credit that is guaranteed by the
Government should bear at least 20 percent of the loss from a default. Loan
guarantees that cover 100 percent of any losses on a loan encourage private
lenders to exercise less caution than they otherwise would in evaluating loan
requests. The level of guarantee should be no more than necessary to achieve
program purposes. Loans for borrowers who are deemed to pose less of a risk
should receive a lower guarantee.
(2) Borrowers should have an equity
interest in any asset being financed with the credit assistance, and business
borrowers should have substantial capital or equity at risk in their business
(see Section III.A.3.b for additional discussion).
(3) Programs in
which the Government bears more than 80 percent of any loss should be
periodically reviewed to determine whether the private sector has become able
to bear a greater share of the risk.
- Agencies should establish interest and fee structures for direct loans and
loan guarantees and should review these structures at least annually.
Documentation of the performance of these annual reviews for credit programs
is considered sufficient to meet the review requirement described in
<Section 902 (a) 8 of the Chief Financial Officers Act of 1990>.
(1)Interest and fees should be set at levels that minimize default and
other subsidy costs, of the direct loan or loan guarantee, while supporting
achievement of the program's policy objectives.
(2) Agencies must
request an appropriation in accordance with the Federal Credit Reform Act of
1990 for default and other subsidy costs not covered by interest and
fees.
(3) Unless inconsistent with program purposes, and where
authorized by law, riskier borrowers should be charged more than those who
pose less risk. In order to avoid an unintended additional subsidy to riskier
borrowers within the eligible class and to support the extension of credit to
those riskier borrowers, programs that, for public policy purposes, do not
adhere to this guideline, should justify the extra subsidy conveyed to the
higher-risk borrowers in their annual budget submissions to OMB.
- Contractual agreements should include all covenants and restrictions
(e.g., liability insurance) necessary to protect the Federal Government's
interest.
(1) Maturities on loans should be shorter than the estimated useful
economic life of any assets financed.
(2) The Government's claims
should not be subordinated to the claims of other creditors, as in the case of
a borrower's default on either a direct loan or a guaranteed loan.
Subordination increases the risk of loss to the Government, since other
creditors would have first claim on the borrower's assets.
- In order to minimize inadvertent changes in the amount of subsidy,
interest rates to be charged on direct loans and any interest supplements for
guaranteed loans should be specified by reference to the market rate on a
benchmark Treasury security rather than as an absolute level. A specific fixed
interest rate should not be cited in legislation or in regulation, because
such a rate could soon become outdated, unintentionally changing the extent of
the subsidy.
(1) The benchmark financial market instrument should be a marketable
Treasury security with a similar maturity to the direct loans being made or
the non-Federal loans being guaranteed. When the rate on the Government loan
is intended to be different than the benchmark rate, it should be stated as a
percentage of that rate. The benchmark Treasury security must be cited
specifically in agency budget justifications.
(2) Interest rates
applicable to new loans should be reviewed at least quarterly and adjusted to
reflect changes in the benchmark interest rate. Loan contracts may provide for
either fixed or floating interest rates.
- Maximum amounts of direct loan obligations and loan guarantee commitments
should be specifically authorized in advance in annual appropriations acts,
except for mandatory programs exempt from the appropriations requirements
under <Section 504(c) of the Federal Credit Reform Act of 1990>.
- Financing for Federal credit programs should be provided by Treasury in
accordance with the Federal Credit Reform Act of 1990. Guarantees of the
timely payment of 100 percent of the loan principal and interest against all
risk create a debt obligation that is the credit risk equivalent of a Treasury
security. Accordingly, a Federal agency other than the Department of the
Treasury may not issue, sell, or guarantee an obligation of a type that is
ordinarily financed in investment securities markets, as determined by the
Secretary of the Treasury, unless the terms of the obligation provide that it
may not be held by a person or entity other than the Federal Financing Bank
(FFB) or another Federal agency. In exceptional circumstances, the Secretary
of the Treasury may waive this requirement with respect to obligations that
the Secretary determines: (1) are not suitable for investment for the FFB
because of the risks entailed in such obligations; or (2) are, or will be,
financed in a manner that is least disruptive of private finance markets and
institutions; or (3) are, or will be, based on the Secretary's consultation
with OMB and the guaranteeing agency, financed in a manner that will best meet
the goals of the program. The benefits of using the FFB must not expand the
degree of subsidy.
- Federal loan contracts should be standardized where practicable. Private
sector documents should be used whenever possible, especially for loan
guarantees.
4. Implementation.
Statutory |
Federal Credit Reform Act of 1990, 2 U.S.C. §
661 Government Performance and Results Act of 1993 |
Guidance |
OMB Circular No. A-11; OMB Circular No. A-19
|
The provisions of this Section II will be implemented through the <OMB
Circular No. A-19> legislative review process and the <OMB Circular No.
A-11> budget justification and submission process. For accounting standards
for Federal credit programs, see <Accounting for Direct Loans and Loan
Guarantees, Statement of Federal Financial Accounting Standards Number 2>,
developed by the Federal Accounting Standards Advisory Board.
- Proposed legislation on credit programs, reviews of credit proposals made
by others, and testimony on credit activities submitted by agencies under the
OMB Circular No. A-19 legislative review process should conform to the
provisions of this Circular.
Whenever agencies propose provisions or
language not in conformity with the policies of this Circular, they will be
required to request in writing that OMB waive the requirement. The request
will be submitted on a standard waiver request form, available from OMB. Such
requests will identify the waiver(s) requested, and will state the reasons for
the request and the time period for which the exception is required.
Exceptions, when allowed, will ordinarily be granted only for a limited time
in order to allow for an evaluation by OMB. The waiver request form should be
submitted to the OMB examiner with primary responsibility for the
account.
- A checklist for reviews of legislative and budgetary proposals is included
as Appendix B to this Circular. Agencies should use the model bill language
provided in Appendix C in developing and reviewing legislation unless OMB has
approved the use of alternative language that includes the same substantive
elements.
- Every four years, or more often at the request of the OMB examiner with
primary responsibility for the account, the agency's annual budget submission
(required by <OMB Circular No. A-11, Section 15.2>) should
include:
(1) A plan for periodic, results-oriented evaluations of the
effectiveness of the program, and the use of relevant program evaluations
and/or other analyses of program effectiveness or causes of escalating program
costs. A program evaluation is a formal assessment, through objective
measurement and systematic analysis, addressing the manner and extent to which
credit programs achieve intended objectives. This information should be
contained in agencies' annual performance plans submitted to OMB. (For further
detail on program evaluation, refer to the Government Performance and Results
Act of 1993 (GPRA) and related guidance);
(2) A review of the changes
in financial markets and the status of borrowers and beneficiaries to verify
that continuation of the credit program is required to meet Federal
objectives, to update its justification, and to recommend changes in its
design and operation to improve efficiency and effectiveness; and
(3)
Proposed changes to correct those cases where existing legislation,
regulations, or program policies are not in conformity with the policies of
this Section II. When an agency does not deem a change in existing
legislation, regulations, or program policies to be desirable, it will provide
a justification for retaining the non-conformance.
III. CREDIT MANAGEMENT AND EXTENSION
POLICY
A. CREDIT EXTENSION POLICIES
REFERENCES:
Statutory |
31 U.S.C. § 3720B, 18 U.S.C. § 1001, 31 U.S.C. §
7701(d) |
Regulatory |
31 C.F.R. Part 285.13, Executive Order 13,109, 61 Federal
Register 51,763 |
Guidance |
Treasury/FMS "Managing Federal Receivables," "Treasury Report
on Receivables (TROR)," and "Guide to the Federal Credit Bureau
Program" |
1. Applicant Screening.
- Program Eligibility. Federal credit granting agencies and private
lenders in guaranteed loan programs, shall determine whether applicants comply
with statutory, regulatory, and administrative eligibility requirements for
loan assistance. If it is consistent with program objectives, borrowers should
be required to certify and document that they have been unable to obtain
credit from private sources. In addition, application forms must require the
borrower to certify the accuracy of information being provided. (False
information is subject to penalties under <18 U.S.C.§ 1001>.)
- Delinquency on Federal Debt. Agencies should determine if the
applicant is delinquent on any Federal debt, including tax debt. Agencies
should include a question on loan application forms asking applicants if they
have such delinquencies. In addition, agencies and guaranteed loan lenders,
shall use credit bureaus as a screening tool. Agencies are also encouraged to
use other appropriate databases, such as the Department of Housing and Urban
Development's Credit Alert Interactive Voice Response System <CAIVRS> to
identify delinquencies on Federal debt.
Processing of applications
shall be suspended when applicants are delinquent on Federal tax or
<non-tax debts, including judgment liens against property for a debt to the
Federal Government, and are therefore not eligible to receive Federal loans,
loan guarantees or insurance. (See <31 U.S.C. § 3720B> regarding non-tax
debts.) This provision does not apply to disaster loans. Agencies should
review and comply with <31 U.S.C. § 3720B> and <31 C.F.R. 285.13>
before extending credit. Processing should continue only when the debtor
satisfactorily resolves the debts (e.g., pays in full or negotiates a new
repayment plan).
- Creditworthiness. Where creditworthiness is a criterion for loan
approval, agencies and private lenders shall determine if applicants have the
ability to repay the loan and a satisfactory history of repaying debt. Credit
reports and supplementary data sources, such as financial statements and tax
returns, should be used to verify or determine employment, income, assets
held, and credit history.
- Delinquent Child Support. Agencies shall deny Federal financial
assistance to individuals who are subject to administrative offset to collect
delinquent child support payments. See <Executive Order 13,109, 61 Federal
Register 51,763 (1996)>. The Attorney General has issued <Minimum Due
Process Guidelines: Denial of Federal Financial Assistance Pursuant to
Executive Order 13,109>, which agencies shall include in their procedures
or regulations promulgated for the purpose of denying Federal financial
assistance in accordance with Executive Order 13,109.
- Taxpayer Identification Number. Pursuant to <31 U.S.C. §
7701(d)>, agencies must obtain the taxpayer identification number (TIN) of
all persons doing business with the agency. All agencies and lenders extending
credit shall require the applicant or borrower to supply a TIN as a
prerequisite to obtaining credit or assistance.
2. Loan Documentation. Loan origination files should contain
loan applications, credit bureau reports, credit analyses, loan contracts, and
other documents necessary to conform to private sector standards for that type
of loan. Accurate and complete documentation is critical to providing proper
servicing of the debt, pursuing collection of delinquent debt, and in the case
of guaranteed loans, processing claim payments. Additional information on
documentation requirements is available in the supplement to the Treasury
Financial Manual <Managing Federal Receivables>.
3. Collateral Requirements. For many types of loans, the
Government can reduce its risk of default and potential losses through well
managed collateral requirements.
- Appraisals of Real Property. Appraisals of real property serving
as collateral for a direct or guaranteed loan must be conducted in accordance
with the following guidelines:
(1) Agencies should require that all appraisals be consistent with the
<Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice>, promulgated by
the Appraisal Standards Board of the Appraisal Foundation. Agencies shall
prescribe additional appraisal standards as appropriate.
(2) Agencies
should ensure that a State licensed or certified appraiser prepares an
appraisal for all credit transactions over $100,000 ($250,000 for business
loans). (This does not include loans with no cash out and those transactions
where the collateral is not a major factor in the decision to extend credit).
Agencies shall determine which of these transactions, because of the size
and/or complexity, must be performed by a State licensed or certified
appraiser. Agencies may also designate direct or guaranteed loan transactions
under $100,000 ($250,000 for business loans) that require the services of a
State licensed or certified appraiser.
- Loan to Value Ratios. In some credit programs, the primary
purpose of the loan is to finance the acquisition of an asset, such as a
single family home, which then serves as collateral for the loan. Agencies
should ensure that borrowers assume an equity interest in such assets in order
to reduce defaults and Government losses. Federal agencies should explicitly
define the components of the loan to value ratio (LTV) for both direct and
guaranteed loan programs. Financing should be limited by not offering terms
(including the financing of closing costs) that result in an LTV equal to or
greater than 100 percent. Further, the loan maturity should be shorter than
the estimated useful economic life of the collateral.
- Liquidation of Real Property Collateral for Guaranteed Loans. In
general, it is not in the Federal Government's financial interest to assume
the responsibility for managing and disposing of real property serving as
collateral on defaulted guaranteed loans. Private lenders should be required
to liquidate, through litigation if necessary, any real property collateral
for a defaulted guaranteed loan before filing a default claim with the credit
granting agency.
- Asset Management Standards and Systems. Agencies should establish
policies and procedures for the acquisition, management, and disposal of real
property acquired as a result of direct or guaranteed loan defaults. Agencies
should establish inventory management systems to track all costs, including
contractual costs, of maintaining and selling property. Inventory management
systems should also generate management reports, provide controls and
monitoring capabilities, and summarize information for the Office of
Management and Budget and the Department of the Treasury. (See <Treasury
Report on Receivables>).
B. MANAGEMENT OF GUARANTEED LOAN LENDERS AND
SERVICERS
REFERENCES:
Guidance |
Treasury/FMS "Managing Federal
Receivables" |
1. Lender Eligibility.
- Participation Criteria. Federal credit granting agencies shall
establish and publish in the Federal Register specific eligibility criteria
for lender participation in Federally guaranteed loan programs. These criteria
should include:
(1) Requirements that the lender is not currently debarred/suspended from
participation in a Government contract or delinquent on a Government
debt;
(2) Qualification requirements for principal officers and staff
of the lender;
(3) Fidelity/surety bonding and/or errors and omissions
insurance with the Federal Government as a loss payee, where appropriate, for
new or non-regulated lenders or lenders with questionable performance under
Federal guarantee programs;
(4) Financial and capital requirements for
lenders not regulated by a Federal financial institution regulatory agency,
including minimum net worth requirements based on business
volume.
- Review of Eligibility. Agencies shall review and document a
lender's eligibility for continued participation in a guaranteed loan program
at least every two years. Ideally, these reviews should be conducted in
conjunction with on-site reviews of lender operations (see B.3) or other
required reviews, such as renewal of a lender agreement (see B.2). Lenders not
meeting standards for continued participation should be decertified. In
addition to the participation criteria above, guarantor agencies should
consider lender performance as a critical factor in determining continued
eligibility for participation.
- Fees. When authorized and appropriated for such purposes,
agencies should assess non-refundable fees to defray the costs of determining
and reviewing lender eligibility.
- Decertification. Guarantor agencies should establish specific
procedures to decertify lenders or take other appropriate action any time
there is:
(1) Significant and/or continuing non-conformance with agency standards;
and/or
(2) Failure to meet financial and capital requirements or other
eligibility criteria.
Agency procedures should define the process and
establish timetables by which decertified lenders can apply for reinstatement
of eligibility for Federal guaranteed loan programs.
- Loan Servicers. Lenders transferring and/or assigning the right
to service guaranteed loans to a loan servicer should use only servicers
meeting applicable standards set by the Federal guarantor agency. Where
appropriate, agencies may adopt standards for loan servicers established by a
Government Sponsored Enterprise (GSE) or a similar organization (e.g.,
Government National Mortgage Association for single family mortgages) and/or
may authorize lenders to use servicers that have been approved by a GSE or
similar organization.
2. Lender Agreements. Agencies should enter into written
agreements with lenders that have been determined to be eligible for
participation in a guaranteed loan program. These agreements should incorporate
general participation requirements, performance standards and other applicable
requirements of this Circular. Agencies are encouraged, where not prohibited by
authorizing legislation, to set a fixed duration for the agreement to ensure a
formal review of the lender eligibility for continued participation in the
program.
- General Participation Requirements.
(1) Requirements for lender eligibility, including participation
criteria, eligibility reviews, fees, and decertification (see Section
1, above);
(2) Agency and lender responsibilities for sharing the
risk of loan defaults (see Section II.3. a.(1)); and, where
feasible
(3) Maximum delinquency, default and claims rates for lenders,
taking into account individual program characteristics.
- Performance Standards. Agencies should include due diligence
requirements for originating, servicing, and collecting loans in their lender
agreements. This may be accomplished by referencing agency regulations or
guidelines. Examples of due diligence standards include collection procedures
for past due accounts, delinquent debtor counseling procedures and litigation
to enforce loan contracts.
Agencies should ensure, through the claims
review process, that lenders have met these standards prior to making a claim
payment. Agencies should reduce claim amounts or reject claims for lender
non-performance.
- Reporting Requirements. Federal credit granting agencies should
require certain data to monitor the health of their guaranteed loan
portfolios, track and evaluate lender performance and satisfy OMB, Treasury,
and other reporting requirements which include the <Treasury Report on
Receivables (TROR)>. Examples of these data which agencies must maintain
include:
(1) Activity Indicators -- number and amount of outstanding
guaranteed loans at the beginning and end of the reporting period and the
agency share of risk; number and amount of guaranteed loans made during the
reporting period; and number and amount of guaranteed loans terminated during
the period.
(2) Status Indicators -- a schedule showing the
number and amount of past due loans by "age" of the delinquency, and the
number and amount of loans in foreclosure or liquidation (when the lender is
responsible for such activities).
Agencies may have several sources for
such data, but some or all of the information may best be obtained from
lenders and servicers. Lender agreements should require lenders to report
necessary information on a quarterly basis (or other reporting period based on
the level of lending and payment activity).
- Loan Servicers. Lender agreements must specify that loan
servicers must meet applicable participation requirements and performance
standards. The agreement should also specify that servicers acquiring loans
must provide any information necessary for the lender to comply with reporting
requirements to the agency. Servicers may not resell the loans except to
qualified servicers.
3. Lender and Servicer Reviews. To evaluate and enforce
lender and servicer performance, agencies should conduct on-site reviews.
Agencies should summarize reviews findings in written reports with recommended
corrective actions and submit them to agency review boards. (See Section
I.4.b.(1).)
Reviews should be conducted biennially where possible; however, agencies
should conduct annual on-site reviews all lenders and servicers with substantial
loan volume or whose:
- Financial performance measures indicate a deterioration in their
guaranteed loan portfolio;
- Portfolio has a high level of defaults for guaranteed loans less than one
year old;
- Overall default rates rise above acceptable levels; and/or
- Poor performance results in collecting monetary penalties or an abnormally
high number of reduced or rejected claims.
Agencies are encouraged to
develop a lender/servicer classification system which assigns a risk rating
based on the above factors. This risk rating can be used to establish
priorities for on-site reviews and monitor the effectiveness of required
corrective actions.
Reviews should be conducted by guarantor agency
program compliance staff, Inspector General staff, and/or independent
auditors. Where possible, agencies with similar programs should coordinate
their reviews to minimize the burden on lenders/servicers and maximize use of
scarce resources. Agencies should also utilize the monitoring efforts of GSEs
and similar organizations for guaranteed loans that have been
<"pooled">.
4. Corrective Actions. If a review indicates that the
lender/servicer is not in conformance with all program requirements, agencies
should determine the seriousness of the problem. For minor non-compliance,
agencies and the lender or servicer should agree on corrective actions. However,
agencies should establish penalties for more serious and frequent offenses.
Penalties may include loss of guarantees, reprimands, probation, suspension, and
decertification.
IV. MANAGING THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT'S
RECEIVABLES
Agencies must service and collect debts, including defaulted guaranteed loans
they have acquired, in a manner that best protects the value of the assets.
Mechanisms must be in place to collect and record payments and provide
accounting and management information for effective stewardship. Agencies should
collect data on the status of their portfolios on a monthly basis although they
are only required to report quarterly. These servicing activities can be carried
out by the agency, or by third parties (such as private lenders or guaranty
agencies), or a contract with a private sector firm. Unless Otherwise exempt,
the <Debt Collection Improvement Act of 1996 (DCIA)>, codified at <31
U.S.C.§ 3711>, requires Federal agencies to transfer any non-tax debt which
is over 180 days delinquent to the Department of the Treasury/FMS for debt
collection action (31 C.F.R. Part 285). Under certain conditions, it may be
advantageous to sell loans or other debts to avoid the necessity of debt
servicing.
1. Accounting and Financial Reporting.
REFERENCES:
Statutory |
DCA, Chief Financial Officers Act (CFO) of 1990,
Government Performance and Results Act, Federal Credit Reform Act of 1990,
31 U.S.C. § 3719, 31 U.S.C. § 3711, 2 U.S.C. § 661 |
Regulatory |
31 C.F.R. Part 285, OMB Circular No. A-127 |
Guidance |
JFMIP Standards on Direct and Guaranteed Loans, Instructions
for the Treasury Report on Receivables Due from the Public (TROR),
Treasury/FMS "Managing Federal Receivables," Federal Accounting Standards
Advisory Board - "Accounting for Direct Loans and Loan Guarantees,"
Statement of Federal Financial Accounting Standards No. 2, as amended,"
"Amendments to Accounting Standards for Direct Loans and Loan Guarantees,"
Statement of Federal Financial Accounting Standards No. 18.
|
- Accounting and Financial Reporting Systems. Agencies shall
establish accounting and financial reporting systems to meet the standards
provided in this Circular, <OMB Circular No. A-127, "Financial Management
Systems">, <"JFMIP Standards on Direct and Guaranteed Loans">, and
other government-wide requirements. These systems shall be capable of
accounting for obligations and outlays and of meeting the <reporting
requirements of OMB> and <Treasury>, including those associated with
the <Federal Credit Reform Act of 1990> and the <Chief Financial
Officers (CFO) Act of 1990>.
- Agency Reports. Agencies should use comprehensive reports on the
status of loan portfolios and receivables to evaluate management
effectiveness. Agencies shall prepare, in accordance with the CFO Act and OMB
guidance, annual financial statements that include loan programs and other
receivables. Agencies should also collect data for program performance
measures (such as default rates, purchase rates, recovery rates, subsidy rates
[actual vs. projected], and administrative costs) consistent with the
<Government Performance and Results Act of 1993> (GPRA) and <Federal
Credit Reform Act of 1990>.
Agencies are also required to report
periodically to Treasury on the status and condition of their non-tax
delinquent portfolio on the <TROR>. Due to a timing difference between
the submissions of fiscal year-end data for the TROR, and data used for agency
financial statements (the fiscal year-end receivables report is due in
November and agency financial statements are not due until February/March of
the following year), the data in these two reports may not be identical.
Agencies should be able to explain differences and show the relationship of
information contained in the two reports, but the reports are not required to
reconcile.
2. Loan Servicing Requirements. Agency servicing
requirements, whether performed in-house or by another agency or private sector
firm, must meet the standards described below and in the Treasury/FMS
publication <Managing Federal Receivables>.
REFERENCES:
Statutory |
Privacy Act of 1974, Debt Collection Act of 1982 (DCA), Debt
Collection Improvement Act of 1996 (DCIA), 31 U.S.C. § 3711 |
Guidance |
Treasury/FMS' "Managing Federal Receivables," and the "Guide
to the Federal Credit Bureau Program" |
- Documentation. Approved loan files (or other systems of records)
shall contain adequate and up-to-date information reflecting terms and
conditions of the loan, payment history, including occurrences of
delinquencies and defaults, and any subsequent loan actions which result in
payment deferrals, refinancing, or rescheduling.
- Billing and Collections. Agencies shall ensure that there is
routine invoicing of payments, and that efficient mechanisms are in place to
collect and record payments. When making payments and where appropriate,
borrowers should be encouraged to use agency systems established by Treasury
which collect payments electronically, such as pre-authorized debits and
credit cards.
- Escrow Accounts. Agency servicing systems must process tax and
insurance deposits for housing and other long-term real estate loans through
escrow accounts. Agencies should establish escrow accounts at the time of loan
origination and payments for housing and other long-term real estate loans
through an escrow account.
- Referring Account Information to Credit Reporting Agencies.
Agency servicing systems must be able to identify and refer debts to credit
bureaus in accordance with the requirements of <31 U.S.C. § 3711>.
Agencies shall refer all non-tax, non-tariff commercial
accounts (current and delinquent) and all delinquent
non-tariff and non-tax consumer accounts. Agencies may report current
consumer debts as well and are encouraged to do so. The reporting of current
data (in addition to any delinquencies) provides a truer picture of
indebtedness while simultaneously reflecting accounts that the borrower has
maintained in good standing. There is no minimum dollar threshold, i.e.,
accounts (debts) owed for as low as $5 may be referred to credit reporting
agencies. Agencies shall require lenders participating in Federal loan
programs to provide information relating to the extension of credit to
consumer or commercial credit reporting agencies, as appropriate. For
additional information, agencies should refer to Treasury/FMS' <Guide to
the Federal Credit Bureau Program>.
3. Asset Resolution
REFERENCES:
Statutory |
DCIA, 31 U.S.C. § 3711(i) Federal Credit Reform Act of
1990, 2 U.S.C. § 661 |
Guidance |
OMB Circular No. A-11, Section 85.7, OMB Circular No.
A-34 |
- The DCIA, as codified at <31 U.S.C. § 3711(i)> authorizes agencies
to sell any non-tax debt owed to the United States that is more than 90 days
delinquent, subject to the provisions of the <Federal Credit Reform Act of
1990>. The Administration's budget policy is that agencies are required to
sell any non-tax debts that are delinquent for more than one year for which
collection action has been terminated, if the Secretary of the Treasury
determines that the sale is in the best interest of the United States
Government. Agencies are required to sell the debts for cash or a combination
of cash and profit participation, if such an arrangement is more advantageous
to the government, and make the sales without recourse. Loan sales should
result in shifting agency staff resources from servicing to mission critical
functions.
Beginning in FY 2000, for programs with $100 million in
assets (unpaid principal balance) that are delinquent for more than two years,
the agency is expected to dispose of assets expeditiously. (See <OMB
Circular No. A-11>.) Agencies may request from OMB, an exception for the
following:
(1) Loans to foreign countries and entities;
(2) Loans in
structured forbearance, when conversion to repayment status is expected within
24 months or after statutory requirements are met;
(3) Loans that are
written off as unenforceable e.g., due to death, disability, or
bankruptcy;
(4) Loans that have been submitted to Treasury for offset
and are expected to be extinguished within three (3) years;
(5) Loans
in adjudication or foreclosure; and
(6) Student loans.
Agencies
shall provide to OMB an annual list of loans that are exempted.
- Evaluate Asset Portfolio. On an annual basis, agencies
shall take steps to evaluate and analyze existing asset portfolios and
programs associated therewith, to determine if there are avenues to:
(1) Improve Credit Management and Recoveries. Improvement in
current management, performance, and recoveries of asset portfolios shall be
reviewed against current marketplace practices;
(2) Realize
Administrative Savings. Analyses of current asset portfolio practices
shall include the benefit of transferring all or some portion of the portfolio
to the private sector. Agencies shall develop a staffing utilization plan to
ensure that when asset sales result in a decreased workload, staff are shifted
to priority workload mission critical functions.
(3) Initiate
Prepayment. Agencies shall initiate prepayment programs when statutorily
mandated or, if upon analysis of an existing asset portfolio practice, it is
deemed appropriate. Prepayment programs may be initiated without the approval
of OMB. Delinquent borrowers may participate in a prepayment program only if
past due principal, interest, and charges are paid in full prior to their
request to prepay the balance owed.
- Financial Asset Services. Agencies shall engage the
services of outside contractors as deemed necessary to assist in its asset
resolution program. Contractors providing various types of asset services are
available through the <General Services Administration's Multiple Award
Schedule for Financial Asset Services> as follows:
(1) Program Financial Advisors;
(2) Transaction
Specialists
(3) Due Diligence Contractors;
(4) Loan
Service/Asset Managers; and
(5) Equity Monitors/Transaction Assistants.
- Loan Asset Sales Guidelines. OMB and Treasury jointly
will update existing guidelines and procedures to implement loan prepayment
and loan asset sales. In accordance with the agreed upon procedures, agencies
conducting such prepayment and loan asset sales programs will consult with
both OMB and Treasury throughout the prepayment and loan asset sales processes
to ensure consistency with the agreed upon policies and guidelines. Unless an
agency can document from their past experience that the sale of certain types
of loan assets is not economically viable, a financial advisor shall be
engaged by each agency to conduct a portfolio valuation and to compare pricing
options for a proposed prepayment plan or loan asset sale. Based on the
financial advisor's report, the agencies will develop a prepayment or loan
asset sales schedule and plan, including an analysis of the pricing option
selected. As part of the ongoing consultation between OMB, Treasury, and the
agencies, prior to proceeding with their prepayment or loan asset sales, the
agencies will submit their final prepayment or loan asset sales plans and
proposed pricing options to OMB and Treasury for review in order to ensure
that any undue cost to the Government or additional subsidy to the borrower is
avoided. The agency Chief Financial Officer will certify that an agency loan
prepayment and loan asset sales program is in compliance with the agreed upon
guidelines. See <Asset Sales Guidelines>.
V. DELINQUENT DEBT COLLECTION
Agencies shall have a fair but aggressive program to recover delinquent debt,
including defaulted guaranteed loans acquired by the Federal Government. Each
agency will establish a collection strategy consistent with its statutory
authority that seeks to return the debtor to a current payment status or,
failing that, maximize collection on the debt.
1. Standards for Defining Delinquent and Defaulted Debt
REFERENCES:
Statutory |
DCA/DCIA/31 U.S.C. §§ 3701, 3711-3720D |
Regulatory |
Federal Claims Collection Standards, 31 C.F.R. Section
900.2(b) |
Guidance |
Treasury/FMS' "Managing Federal
Receivables" |
The Federal Claims Collections Standards define delinquent debt in general
terms. Agency regulations may further define delinquency to meet specific types
of debt or program requirements.
- Direct Loans. Agencies shall consider a direct loan account to be
delinquent if a payment has not been made by the date specified in the
agreement or instrument (including a post-delinquency payment agreement),
unless other satisfactory payment arrangements have been made.
- Guaranteed Loans. Loans guaranteed or insured by the Federal
Government are in default when the borrower breaches the loan agreement with
the private sector lender. A default to the Federal Government occurs when the
Federal credit granting agency repurchases the loan, pays a loss claim or pays
reinsurance on the loan. Prior to establishing a receivable on the agency
financial records, each agency must consider statutory and regulatory
authority applicable to the debt in order to determine if the agency has a
legal right to subject the debt to the collection provisions of this
Circular.
- Other Debt. Overpayments to contractors, grantees, employees, and
beneficiaries; fines; fees; penalties; and other debts are delinquent when the
debtor does not pay or resolve the debt by the date specified in the agency's
initial written demand for payment (which generally should be within 30 days
from the date the agency mailed notification of the debt to the debtor).
2. Administrative Collection of Debts.
REFERENCES:
Statutory |
15 U.S.C. § 1673(a)(2), 31 U.S.C. § 3701, §§ 3711-3720E, 26
U.S.C. § 6402, 5 U.S.C. § 5514, Fair Debt Collection Practices
Act |
Regulatory |
31 C.F.R. Part 285, Federal Claims Collection Standards, 31
C.F.R. Part 901, Federal Claims Collections Standards, 5 C.F.R. 550 Part
K, 26 C.F.R. 301.6402-1 through 7, Federal Acquisitions Regulations,
Subpart 32.6 |
Guidance |
Treasury/FMS "Managing Federal Receivables" and FMS
Cross-servicing/Offset Guidance Documents, Treasury's/FMS' "Guide to the
Federal Credit Bureau Program" |
Agencies shall promptly act on the collection of delinquent debts, using all
available collection tools to maximize collections. Agencies shall transfer
debts delinquent 180 days or more to the Treasury/FMS or Treasury-designated
debt collection centers for further collection actions and resolution.
Exceptions to this requirement (e.g., the debt has been referred for litigation)
can be found in <31 U.S.C.§ 3711> and <31 C.F.R. Part
285.12(d)>.
- Collection Strategy. Agencies shall maintain an accurate and
timely reporting system to identify and monitor delinquent receivables. Each
agency shall develop a systematic process for the collection of delinquent
accounts. Collection strategies shall take full advantage of available
collection tools while recognizing program needs and statutory
authority.
- Collection Tools for Debts Less than 180 Days Delinquent.
Agencies may use the following collection tools when the debt is fewer than
180 days delinquent:
(i) Demand Letters. As soon as an account becomes delinquent,
agencies should send demand letters to the debtor. The demand letter must give
the debtor notice of each form of collection action and type of financial
penalty the agency plans to use. Additional demand letters may be sent if
necessary. See <31 U.S.C.§ 3711> <31 C.F.R. Parts 285 and
901.2>.
For consumer accounts, the first demand letter or initial
billing notice should include the 60 day notification requirement of the
agency's intent to refer to a credit bureau. Once the 60 day period has
passed, the agency should initiate reporting if the account has not been
resolved. This will also enable uninterrupted reporting to credit bureaus by
cross-servicing agencies. The 60 day notification of intent to refer to a
credit bureau is not required for commercial accounts. (See Treasury/FMS'
<Guide to the Federal Credit Bureau Program>.)
(ii) Internal
Offset. If the agency that is owed the debt also makes payments to the
debtor, the agency may use internal offset to the extent permitted by that
agency's statutes and regulations and the common law. Delinquent debts owed by
an agency's employees may be offset in accordance with statutes and
regulations administered by the Office of Personnel Management. See <OPM
regulations and statutes>.
(iii) Treasury Offset Program.
Agencies may collect delinquent debt, which is less than 180 days delinquent,
by referring those debts to Treasury/FMS in order to offset Federal payments
due to the debtor. Payments, which Treasury will offset, include certain
benefit payments, federal retirement payments, salaries, vendor payments and
tax refunds. <31 U.S.C. Section 3716>, <31 U.S.C. § 3720A>, <31
C.F.R. Part 285>,< 26 C.F.R. 301.6402>, <31 C.F.R. Chapter II,
Part 901.3>, and, <Federal Acquisition Regulations Subpart 32.6>. If
a Federal payment has not yet been initiated in the Treasury Offset Program,
agencies may request that the paying agency perform the offset.
(iv)
Administrative Wage Garnishment. Agencies have the authority to
administratively garnish the wages of delinquent debtors in order to recover
delinquent debt. The maximum garnishment for any one debt is 15% of disposable
pay. Multiple garnishments from all sources against one debtor's wages may not
exceed 25% of disposable pay of an individual. <31 U.S.C. § 3720D>,
<31 C.F.R. Part 285.11> and 15 U.S.C. § 1673(a)(2).
(v)
Contracting with Private Collection Agencies. Treasury has contracted
with private collection agencies that may be used by Federal agencies to
provide assistance in the recovery of delinquent debt owed to the Government.
<31 U.S.C. § 3711>, <31 U.S.C. § 3718>, <31 C.F.R. Parts 285,
and 901>, <Fair Debt Collection Practices Act >. Agencies may also
transfer debts to Treasury prior to 180 days for the purpose of referral to
private collection agencies.
(vi) Treasury Cross-Servicing.
Agencies may transfer debts to Treasury for full servicing at any time after
the due process requirements. (See <31 C.F.R. Part 285>.)
- Collection of Debts Which are Over 180 Days Delinquent. This
paragraph sets forth Treasury's collection procedures for debts which are over
180 days delinquent.
(i) Treasury Offset Program. The DCIA requires that all agencies
recover debt delinquent more than 180 days by referring those debts to the
Treasury for offset of tax refunds and other Federal payments. Agencies must
refer all accounts for offset in accordance with guidance provided by the
Department of the Treasury/FMS. <Federal Claims Collection Standards>,
<31 U.S.C. § 3716>, <31 U.S.C. § 3720A> and <31 C.F.R. Part
285>. The following types of offset are undertaken in the Treasury Offset
Program (TOP):
(1) Tax Refund Offset;
(2) Vendor Offset;
(3) Federal
Retirement Offset;
(4) Salary Offset;
(5) Benefit Offset (At the
time of publication, benefit payments have not been incorporated into the
program. Benefit payments, such as Social Security Administration (SSA), Black
Lung and Railroad Retirement Benefits (RRB) will be added in the future.);
and
(6) Other Federal payments as allowed by law (as such payments are
allowed into the program).
(ii) Cross-Servicing. The
DCIA requires that all debts owed to agencies which are more than 180 days
delinquent shall be transferred to Treasury/FMS or a Treasury-designated debt
collection center for servicing. The DCIA contains provisions and requirements
for exempting certain classes of debts from being transferred for servicing
<www.treas.fms.gov/debt>.(See <31 U.S.C. § 3711>, and <31
C.F.R. Part 285>.) Once debts are transferred to Treasury, agencies must
cease all collection activities other than maintaining accounts for the
Treasury Offset Program.
Once Treasury has received a debt for
servicing, the appropriate debt collection actions will be taken. These
actions may include sending demand letters; phone calls to delinquent debtors;
credit bureau reporting; referring debtors to the Treasury Offset Program;
referring debtors to private collection agencies; administrative wage
garnishment; and any other available debt collection tool.
3. Referrals to the Department of Justice.
A. Referral for Litigation
REFERENCES:
Statutory |
31 U.S.C. § 3711, 28 U.S.C. §§ 3001, 3002(1) |
Regulatory |
31 C.F.R. Part 904, Federal Claims Collection
Standards |
Guidance |
Department of the Treasury/FMS "Litigation Referral Process
Handbook," and "Managing Federal Receivables," Appendix
8 |
Agencies, including Treasury/FMS or Treasury-designated debt collection
centers, shall refer delinquent accounts to the Department of Justice, or use
other litigation authority that may be available, as soon as there is sufficient
reason to conclude that full or partial recovery of the debt can best be
achieved through litigation. Referrals to Justice should be made in accordance
with the <Federal Claims Collection Standards>. If the debtor does not
come forward with a voluntary payment after the claim has been referred for
litigation, a lawsuit shall be initiated promptly.
- In consultation with the Department of Justice, agencies shall establish a
system to account for: (a) claims referred to Justice, and (b) claims closed
by Justice and returned to the respective agencies.
- Agencies shall accelerate claim referrals to the Department of Justice in
those districts where the Department of Justice contracts with private law
firms for debt collection.
- Agencies shall stop the use of any collection activities including TOP and
refrain from further contact with the debtor once a claim has been referred to
the Department of Justice, unless the Department of Justice agrees to allow
the debtor(s) to remain in TOP for offset while they pursue other legal
remedies.
- Agencies shall promptly notify the Department of Justice of any payments
received on a debtor's account after referral of the claim for
litigation.
- The Department of Justice shall account to agencies for monies or property
collected on claims referred by the agencies.
B. Referral for Approval of Compromise Offer
REFERENCES:
Statutory |
31 U.S.C. § 3711 |
Regulatory |
31 C.F.R. Part 902, Federal Claims Collection
Standards |
Guidance |
Treasury/FMS' "Managing Federal
Receivables" |
Agencies may compromise a debt within their jurisdiction when the principal
balance of the debt is less than $100,000 (or any higher amount authorized by
the U.S. Attorney General). Unless otherwise provided by law, when the principal
balance of the debt is greater than $100,000 (or any higher amount authorized by
the U.S. Attorney General), the compromise authority rests with the Department
of Justice. <31 C.F.R. Part 902.>
C. Referral for Approval to Terminate Collection
Activity
REFERENCES:
Statutory |
31 U.S.C. § 3711 |
Regulatory |
31 C.F.R. Part 902, Federal Claims Collection
Standards |
Guidance |
Treasury/FMS' "Managing Federal
Receivables" |
Agencies may terminate collection on a debt within their jurisdiction when
the principal balance of the debt is less than $100,000 (or any higher amount
authorized by the U.S. Attorney General). Unless otherwise provided by law, when
the principal balance of the debt is greater than $100,000 (or any higher amount
authorized by the U.S. Attorney General), the authority to terminate rests with
the Department of Justice. (See <31 C.F.R. Part 902>.)
4. Interest, Penalties and Administrative Costs.
REFERENCES:
Statutory |
31 U.S.C. § 3717 |
Regulatory |
Federal Claims Collection Standards, 31 C.F.R. Part
901.9 |
Guidance |
Treasury's "Managing Federal Receivables," Chapter
4 |
Interest, penalties and administrative costs should be added to all debts
unless a specific statute, regulation, loan agreement, contract, or court order
prohibits such charges or sets criteria for their assessment. Agencies shall
assess late payment interest on delinquent debts. Further, agencies shall assess
a penalty charge of not more than six percent (6%) per year for failure to pay a
debt more than ninety (90) days past due, unless a statute, regulation required
by statute, loan agreement, or contract prohibits charging interest or assessing
charges or explicitly fixes the interest rate or charges. (See <31 U.S.C. §
3717(e) and (g)>). A debt is delinquent when the scheduled payment is not
paid in full by the payment due date contained in the initial demand letter or
by the date specified in the applicable agreement or instrument. Agencies shall
assess administrative costs to cover the cost of processing and handling
delinquent debt. Agencies must adjust the interest rate on delinquent debt to
conform with the rate established by a U.S. Court when a judgment has been
obtained.
5. Termination of Collection, Write-Off, Use of Currently Not
Collectible (CNC), and Close- Out.
REFERENCES:
Statutory |
31 U.S.C. § 3711; 26 C.F.R Part 1. 6050P-O, 26 C.F.R Part 1.
6050P-1 |
Regulatory |
31 C.F.R. Part 903 Federal Claims Collection Standards, 26
C.F.R. Part 1.6050P-1 |
Guidance |
FCPWG Final Report on Write-off Policy, Dated 12/15/98,
Treasury/FMS "Managing Federal Receivables" |
All debt must be adequately reserved for in the allowance account. All
write-offs must be made through the allowance account. Under no circumstances
are debts to be written off directly to expense.
Generally, write-off is mandatory for delinquent debt older than two years
unless documented and justified to OMB in consultation with Treasury. Once the
debt is written-off, the agency must either classify the debt as currently not
collectible (CNC) or close-out the debt. Cost effective collection efforts
should continue, specifically, if an agency determines that continued collection
efforts after mandatory write-off are likely to yield higher returns. In such
cases the written-off debt is not closed out but classified as CNC. The
collection process continues until the agency determines it is no longer cost
effective to pursue collection. At that point, the debt should be
closed-out.
Under no circumstances should internal controls be compromised by the
write-off or reclassification of debt. Very small percentages of debt older than
two years can frequently result in amounts that, while immaterial to the overall
debt and write-off balances, are large enough to pose a risk of fraud and abuse.
If collection efforts are on-going then adequate internal controls must be
maintained.
In those cases where material collections can be documented to occur after
two years, debt cannot be written off until the estimated collections become
immaterial.
During the period debts are classified as CNC, agencies should maintain the
debt for administrative offset and other collection tools, as described in the
<FCCS> until: (1) the debt is paid; (2) the debt is closed out; or (3) all
collection actions are legally precluded; or (4) the debt is sold, whichever
occurs first. When an agency closes out a debt, the agency must file a <Form
1099C> with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and notifiy the debtor in
accordance with the Internal Revenue Code <26 U.S.C. § 6050P> and IRS
regulations <26 C.F.R. Part 1.6050O-P>. The 1099C reports the
uncollectible debt as income to the debtor which may be taxable at the debtor's
current tax rate. Reporting the discharge of indebtedness to the IRS results in
a potential benefit to the Federal Government, because any payments made to the
IRS augment government receipts. Agencies should report closed-out debts on the
Treasury Report on Receivables Due from the Public (TROR). Agencies must stop
all collection activity, including the sale of debts, once debts are closed out.
Agencies must not close out debts which have been sold or are scheduled to be
sold.
Note: "Termination" and "suspension of collection" are legal
procedures, which are separate and distinct from the accounting procedure of
"write-off." Agencies shall consult the <Federal Claims Collection Standards,
Part 903> for requirements which must be met prior to terminating or
suspending collection (See the attached Write-off/Close-out Process [Flowchart]
for Receivables.)
APPENDIX B
Checklist for Credit Program Legislation, Testimony, and
Budget Submissions
The following checklist provides guidelines to be followed in reviewing
credit program legislation, testimony, and budget submissions.
The checklist is to be used by agencies and OMB in proposing legislation,
reviewing credit proposals, and preparing testimony on credit activities. If the
proposed provisions or language are not in conformity with the policies of this
Circular as listed in these checklists, agencies will be required to request in
writing that the Office of Management and Budget modify or waive the
requirement. Waiver request forms are available from OMB for this purpose. Such
requests will identify the modification(s) or waiver(s) requested, and also will
state the reasons for the request and the time period for which the exception is
required. Exceptions, when allowed, will ordinarily be granted only for a
limited time, in order to allow for continuing review by OMB.
Agencies are to use the checklist in the budget submission process for the
evaluation of existing legislation, regulations, or program policies. The OMB
program examiner with primary responsibility for the credit account will
determine the use of this checklist. Use of the list includes review of changes
in financial markets and the status of borrowers and beneficiaries to ensure
that Federal objectives require continuation of the credit program. If these
policies are found to be not in conformity with the policies of this Circular,
agencies will propose changes to correct the inconsistency in their annual
budget submission and justification to OMB and the Congress. When an agency does
not deem a change in existing legislation, regulations, or policies to be
desirable, it will provide a justification for retaining the existing
non-conforming legislation or policies in its budget submission to OMB at the
request of the budget examiner.
Checklist -- Federal credit program justification should include the
following elements:
- Program title: _______________________
- Form of Assistance (direct or guarantee): __________________
- Federal objectives of this program: (II.1.a.)
- Reasons why Federal credit assistance is the best means to achieve these
objectives: (II.1.a.)
- Any draft bill establishing a credit program should contain the following:
Authorization to extend direct loans or make loan guarantees subject
to the requirements of the <Federal Credit Reform Act of 1990>, as
amended.
Authorization and requirement for a subsidy
appropriation.
Cap on volume of obligations or commitments.
(II.3.e.)
Terms and conditions defined sufficiently and precisely
enough to estimate subsidy rate. (State estimated subsidy of this program
(rate and dollar amount).) (II.1.e.)
Authorization of administrative
expenses.
- Describe briefly the existing and potential private sources of credit (and
type of institution): (I.1.a.(2)(a)
- Explain reasons why private sources of financing and their terms and
conditions must be supplemented and subsidized, including:
- to correct a defined capital market imperfection;
- to subsidize identified borrowers or other beneficiaries; and/or
- to encourage certain specified activities. (II.1.a.(1).
- State reasons why a federal credit subsidy is the most efficient way of
providing assistance, how it provides assistance in overcoming market
imperfections, and how it assists the identified borrowers or beneficiaries or
encourages the identified activities. (II.1.b.)
- Summarize briefly the benefits expected from the program. Can the value of
these benefits (or some of these benefits) be estimated in dollar terms? If
so, state the estimate of their value. Further information on conducting
cost-benefit analysis can be found in <OMB Circular No. A-94>.
(II.1.c.)
- Describe any elements of program design which encourage and supplement
private lending activity, such that private lending is displaced to the
smallest degree possible by agency programs. (II.1.d.)
- Estimate the expected administrative (including origination, servicing,
and collection) resource requirements and costs of the credit program (dollar
amounts over next 5 fiscal years). (II.1.f.)
- Prohibitions: (II.2.c.&d.)
Agencies will not guarantee
federally tax-exempt obligations directly or indirectly.
Agencies will
not subordinate direct loans to tax-exempt obligations and will provide that
effective subordination of guaranteed loans to tax-exempt obligations will
render the guarantee void.
Risk sharing: (II.3.a.)
- Lenders and borrowers share a substantial stake in full repayment
according to the loan contract.
- Private lenders who extend Government guaranteed credit bear at least 20
percent of any potential losses.
- Borrowers deemed to pose less of a risk receive a lower guarantee as a
percentage of the total loan amount.
- Borrowers have an equity interest in any asset being financed by the
credit assistance.
Fees and interest rates: (II.3.b)
- Interest and fees are set at levels that minimize default and other
subsidy costs.
- Interest rates charged to borrowers (or interest supplements) not set at
an absolute level, but instead set by reference to the rate (yield) on
benchmark Treasury.
Protecting the Government's interest:
- Contractual agreements include all covenants and restrictions (e.g.,
liability insurance) necessary to protect the Federal Government's interest.
(II.3.c.)
- Maturities on loans shorter than the estimated useful economic life of
any assets financed. (II.3.c.(1))
- The Government's claims on assets not subordinated to the claim of other
lenders in the case of a borrower's default. (II.3.c.(2))
- Loan contracts to be standardized and private sector documents used to
the extent possible. (II.3.f.)
- Describe the methods used to evaluate the program and the results of
evaluations that have been made. (II.4.c.(1))
APPENDIX C
Model Bill Language for Credit Programs
A Bill
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States
of America in Congress assembled,
That, this Act may be cited as " ".
AUTHORIZATION
Sec.2.(a) The Administrator is authorized to make or guarantee loans to
...(Define eligible applicants).
(b) There are authorized to be appropriated $___________ for the cost of
direct loans or loan guarantees authorized in subsection (1) and $______ for
administrative expenses for for fiscal year ________ and such sums as shall be
necessary for each fiscal year thereafter. [The amounts authorized must be
consistent with the amounts proposed in the President's budget for that fiscal
year. Generally, a specific amount should be specified for the first fiscal year
and sums for subsequent fiscal years (see <OMB Circular No. A-19>.)
(c[formerly Sec.3,15]) Within the resources and authority available, gross
obligations for the principal amount of direct loans offered by the
Administrator will not exceed $__________, or the amount specified in
appropriations acts for fiscal year _______ and such sums as shall be necessary
for each fiscal year thereafter. Commitments to guarantee loans may be made by
the Administrator only to the extent that the total loan principal, any part of
which is guaranteed, will not exceed $____, or the amount specified in
appropriations acts for fiscal year _______ and such sums as shall be necessary
for each fiscal year thereafter.
TERMS AND CONDITIONS
Sec.3. Loans made or guaranteed under this Act will be on such terms and
conditions as the Administrator may prescribe, except that:
(a) The Administrator will allow credit to any prospective borrower only
when it is necessary to alleviate a credit market imperfection, or when it is
necessary to achieve specified Federal objectives by providing a credit subsidy
and a credit subsidy is the most efficient way to meet those objectives on a
borrower-by-borrower basis.
(b) The final maturity of loans made or guaranteed within a period shall not
exceed _____ years, or _____percent of the useful life of any physical asset to
be financed by the loan, whichever is less as determined by the
Administrator.
(c) No Loan guaranteed to any one borrower will exceed 80% of the loss on the
loan. Borrowers who are deemed to pose less of a risk will receive a lower
guarantee as a percentage of the loan amount.
(d) No loan made or guaranteed will be subordinated to another debt
contracted by the borrower or to any other claims against the borrowers in the
case of default.
(e) No loan will be guaranteed unless the Administrator determines that the
lender is responsible and that adequate provision is made for servicing the loan
on reasonable terms and protecting the financial interest of the United
States.
(f) No loan will be guaranteed if the income from such loan is excluded form
gross income for the purposes of <Chapter 1 of the Internal Revenue Code of
1986>, as amended, or if the guarantee provides significant collateral or
security, as determined by the Administrator, for other obligations the income
from which is so excluded.
(g) Direct loans and interest supplements on guaranteed loans will be at an
interest rate that is set by reference to a benchmark interest rate (yield) on
marketable Treasury securities with a similar maturity to the direct loans being
made or the non-Federal loans being guaranteed. The minimum interest rate of
these loans will be (at) (_____percent above) (no more than ______ percent
below) the interest rate of the benchmark financial instrument.
(h) The minimum interest rate of new loans will be adjusted every quarter
(month(s)) (weeks) (days) to take account of changes in the interest rate of the
benchmark financial instrument. (see
(i) Fees or premiums for loan guarantee or insurance coverage will be set at
levels that minimize the cost to the Government (as defined in <Section 502
of the Federal Credit Reform Act of 1990>, as amended) of such coverage,
while supporting achievement of the program's objectives. The minimum guarantee
fee or insurance premium will be (at) (no more than _____ percent below) the
level sufficient to cover the agency's costs for paying all of the estimated
costs to the Government of the expected default claims and other obligations.
Loan guarantee fees will be reviewed every ____ month(s) to ensure that the fees
assessed on new loan guarantees are at a level sufficient to cover the
referenced percentage of the agency's most recent estimates of its costs.
(j) Any guarantee will be conclusive evidence that said guarantee has been
properly obtained; that the underlying loan qualified for such guarantee; and
that, but for fraud or material misrepresentation by the holder, such guarantee
will be presumed to be valid, legal, and enforceable.
(k) The Administrator will prescribe explicit standards for use in
periodically assessing the credit risk of new and existing direct loans or
guaranteed loans. The Administrator must find that there is a reasonable
assurance of repayment before extending credit assistance.
(l) New direct loans may not be obligated and new loan guarantees may not be
committed except to the extent that appropriations of budget authority to cover
their costs are made in advance, as required in <Section 504 of the Federal
Credit Reform Act of 1990>, as amended.
Payment of Losses
Sec. 4(a). If, as a result of a default by a borrower under a guaranteed
loan, after the holder thereof has made such further collection efforts and
instituted such enforcement proceedings as the Administrator may require, the
Administrator determines that the holder has suffered a loss, the Administrator
will pay to such holder _____ percent of such loss, as specified in the
guarantee contract. Upon making any such payment, the Administrator will be
subrogated to all the rights of the recipient of the payment. The Administrator
will be entitled to recover from the borrower the amount of any payments made
pursuant to any guarantee entered into under this Act.
(b) The Attorney General will take such action as may be appropriate to
enforce any right accruing to the United States as a result of the issuance of
any guarantee under this Act.
(c) Nothing in this section will be construed to preclude any forbearance for
the benefit of the borrower which may be agreed upon by the parties to the
guaranteed loan and approved by the Administrator, provided that budget
authority for any resulting subsidy costs as defined under the <Federal
Credit Reform Act of 1990>, as amended, is available.
(d) Notwithstanding any other provision of law relating to the acquisition,
handling, or disposal of property by the United States, the Administrator will
have the right in his discretion to complete, recondition, reconstruct,
renovate, repair, maintain, operate, or sell any property acquired by him
pursuant to the provisions of this Act.
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