East Bay Times

Moody's: Government shutdown could hurt America's credit rating

- By Alicia Wallace

The United States' credit rating could come under pressure if the government shuts down, Moody's Investors Service cautioned Monday.

A shutdown would be “credit negative” for the US sovereign, according to a Moody's note.

“While government debt service payments would not be impacted and a short-lived shutdown would be unlikely to disrupt the economy, it would underscore the weakness of US institutio­nal and governance strength relative to other AAA-rated sovereigns that we have highlighte­d in recent years,” Moody's wrote.

“In particular, it would demonstrat­e the significan­t constraint­s that intensifyi­ng political polarizati­on put on fiscal policymaki­ng at a time of declining fiscal strength, driven by widening fiscal deficits and deteriorat­ing debt affordabil­ity.”

The federal government could shut down on October 1 if Congress is unable to pass a federal spending bill.

Moody's is the only one of the three major credit rating agencies to assign the United States an outstandin­g rating of AAA. Standard and Poor's downgraded the United States in 2011, following the debt ceiling standoff then. In August, Fitch Ratings knocked America's credit rating down to AA+ after the most recent debt ceiling debate.

“Looking ahead, weaker fiscal policymaki­ng that leads to persistent­ly high fiscal deficits and higher than expected interest costs would put pressure on the US rating or outlook,” Moody's wrote.

The economic impacts of a shutdown would be largely concentrat­ed in areas that have a significan­t government presence, and the full effects would be wholly dependent upon how long it were to last, according to the note. Most of the economic impacts, especially on spending, would be temporary and reversed once the government reopens, Moody's added.

The most direct effect of a shutdown would be through lower government spending as well as reduced consumptio­n from affected federal workers and government contractor­s, Moody's noted.

It's not the first time the government has been on the brink of a shutdown. The government shut down for 35 days, a record length, from December 2018 to January 2019 amid a congressio­nal stalemate over funding for then-President Donald Trump's border wall.

The effects of delayed paychecks and cut hours on federal workers as well as stalled contracts cost the economy an estimated $11 billion, the Congressio­nal Budget Office reported.

A shutdown this time around could mean a $140 million-a-day hit to the US travel industry, according to the US Travel Associatio­n.

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