Moody's has downgraded South Africa's credit rating to junk status, piling more anguish on an economy already in recession and battered by Africa's worst coronavirus outbreak. Two other major international rating agencies Fitch and S&P had cut the credit rating of Africa's most developed economy to subinvestment level in 2017.
Losing its last investment grade rating will see the country being excluded from the FTSE World Government Bond Index (WGBI).
The downgrade late Friday came as South Africa began a three-week nationwide lockdown to try halt the rapid spread of the novel coronavirus which has infected more than 1,100 people in the country.
ALSO READ: Coronavirus impact: Fitch cuts India growth forecast to 5.1% for FY21
"The key driver behind the rating downgrade to Ba1 is the continuing deterioration in fiscal strength and structurally very weak growth," Moody's said.
"The government's own capacity to limit the economic deterioration, in the current shock and more durably is constrained," it said, blaming "unreliable electricity supply, persistent weak business confidence and investment as well as long-standing structural labour market rigidities."
ALSO READ: Beating COVID-19 and the economic pandemic
The South African government said the decision by Moody's "could not have come at a worse time," adding that it will "further add to the prevailing financial market stress".
South Africa slipped into recession during the final quarter of 2019. In the past five years, South Africa has posted its weakest growth rates -- never exceeding 1.3 percent and in some years falling below one percent.
"To say we are not concerned and trembling in our boots about what might be in the coming weeks and months is an understatement," said Finance Minister Tito Mboweni.
ALSO READ: Is the loss of your sense of smell and taste an early sign of coronavirus?
Moody's slashes India's GDP growth rate to three-decade low of 2.5%
On Friday, Moody’s Investors Service slashed its estimate of India's GDP growth rate to almost three-decade low of 2.5 per cent during 2020 calendar year from an earlier estimate of 5.3 per cent on account of the rising economic cost of the coronavirus pandemic.
Moody's said, at the 2020 estimated growth rate, a sharp fall in incomes in India is likely, further weighing on domestic demand and the pace of recovery in 2021.
"In India, credit flow into the economy already remains severely hampered because of severe liquidity constraints in the banking and non-banking financial sectors," it said.
No comments:
Post a Comment