“…Research points to information from the government-wide financial statements and GASB 34-based financial ratios being relevant to bond ratings, interest costs, bond insurance premiums and secondary market pricing and efficiency (Plummer et al , 2007; Marlowe, 2010; Kioko et al , 2013; Benson and Marks, 2014; Reck and Wilson, 2014). Additionally, governments having general fund revenues approximately equal to general fund expenditures (Apostolou et al , 2014), maintaining favorable budget-to-actual expenditure variances (Callahan and Waymire, 2015) and holding budgetary slack (Marlowe, 2011) are shown to be associated with favorable bond outcomes (e.g. higher ratings, lower interest costs).…”