Debt-Burdened World Leaders Just Love to Hate Ratings Companies

No amount of power and prosperity can stop the irritation of getting judged for your borrowing habits, as the world’s biggest economy just experienced.

The US downgrade from AAA by Fitch Ratings this week is just the most high-profile episode in a new era of scrutiny over global public finances that deteriorated in the wake of the Covid pandemic.

Rich-world peers from Italy to France and the UK are in the spotlight as higher interest rates impact debt levels exceeding 100% of annual output. Stakes are even higher for capital-hungry developing nations, where potentially ill-timed, negative revisions can push up borrowing costs for years.

Italian newspapers in 2018 with front page stories about Moody’s rating on Italy are displayed on sale in a newsstand in Rome, Italy.

Italian newspapers in 2018 with front-page stories about Moody’s rating on Italy are displayed on sale in a newsstand in Rome, Italy.

Countries run the gauntlet of rating companies because they’re hard-wired into the global investment system. Their uneasy relationship often fuels political ire, even if such assessments just hold up an awkward mirror to governments for decisions taken to keep voters happy.

“Everybody can kind of see what political and economic events are going on in a country, and so credit-rating agencies aren’t really revealing hidden information,” said Alison Johnston of Oregon State University, co-author of a book on ratings companies. “It’s kind of a thankless business, so to speak because it’s really easy for credit-rating agencies to take the heat if they don’t get it right.”