Ratings agency Moody's
says Britain at risk of credit downgrade
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[June 25, 2016]
By David Milliken
LONDON (Reuters) - Ratings agency Moody's
said Britain's creditworthiness was now at greater risk after voting to
leave the European Union, as the country would face substantial
challenges to successfully negotiate its exit from the bloc.
Moody's assigned a negative outlook to its 'Aa1' rating for British
government debt after a Thursday referendum showed that a clear
majority of Britons wanted to leave the EU, prompting Prime Minister
David Cameron to announce he would resign.
"During the several years in which the UK will have to renegotiate
its trade relations with the EU, Moody's expects heightened
uncertainty, diminished confidence and lower spending and investment
to result in weaker growth," the agency said.
Britain's finance ministry and central bank had warned voters the
country would face a major economic hit if it left the EU after more
than 40 years as a member, and sterling on Friday fell to its lowest
against the dollar since 1985. [FRX/]
Rival credit ratings agency Standard & Poor's - the only major body
one to still assign Britain a top-notch triple-A grade - said before
Thursday's referendum that Britain was likely to face a downgrade if
it voted to leave, and Fitch Ratings said on Friday that the vote
would be "moderately negative".
But Moody's was the first to take concrete action after the vote,
just as it was in 2013 when it was the first to strip Britain of its
'AAA' credit rating due to slow growth and rising public
indebtedness.
The decision to leave the EU raised questions over Britain's
hitherto high-quality economic policymaking, Moody's said.
"Policy predictability and effectiveness of economic policymaking
... might be somewhat diminished," Moody's said. "The challenges for
policymakers and officials will be substantial."
Protracted trade talks, slow growth or heightened pressures on
sterling could all trigger a downgrade, Moody's said.
Supporters of Britain leaving the EU have largely dismissed warnings
about the economic consequences as scaremongering, and are confident
Britain will negotiate trade deals and immigration controls superior
to those it already has.
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A British flag flutters in front of a window in London, Britain,
June 24, 2016 after Britain voted to leave the European Union in the
EU BREXIT referendum. REUTERS/Reinhard Krause
But Moody's said leaving the EU was likely to leave Britain with less money to
spend on public services.
"The negative effect from lower economic growth will outweigh the fiscal savings
from the UK no longer having to contribute to the EU budget," it said.
"The UK government has one of the largest budget deficits among advanced
economies, and lower GDP growth will further complicate the implementation of
the government's multiyear fiscal consolidation plan," it added.
Finance minister George Osborne - who opposed leaving the EU - said before the
vote that he might have to impose extra spending cuts or tax rises if Britain
voted to leave.
But now Osborne's own political future is uncertain after his ally Cameron
promised to step down in October.
(Additional reporting by Jessica Kuruthukulangara, editing by Savio D'Souza, G
Crosse)
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