Moody’s upgrades Illinois’ credit rating
Send a link to a friend
[June 30, 2021]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Illinois received its first
credit rating upgrade in 23 years on Tuesday when Moody’s Investors
Services raised the state’s rating one notch, citing “material
improvement in the state’s finances.”
Although the upgrade still leaves Illinois bonds rated just two notches
above so-called “junk” status, Gov. JB Pritzker said it marked a turning
point for the state, and he credited the General Assembly and members of
his own administration for bringing greater fiscal discipline to the
state’s budget.
“Make no mistake, despite all the challenges of the last year, after
eight credit downgrades our state suffered under my predecessor, I say
with full certainty Illinois' fiscal condition is heading in the right
direction for the first time in the 21st century,” Pritzker said during
a Statehouse news conference.
In a statement, Moody’s said its decision was based in part on the
recently passed budget, which increases pension contributions, repays
last year’s emergency borrowing from the Federal Reserve and keeps the
state’s bill backlog in check, with only “constrained use” of federal
aid from the American Rescue Plan Act.
Moody’s also noted, however, that Illinois still faces significant
long-term financial pressures, including its unfunded pension
liabilities which the agency said “are routinely shortchanged under the
state’s funding statute.”
“These liabilities could exert growing pressure as the impact of federal
support dissipates, barring significant revenue increases or other
fiscal changes,” Moody’s said.
“That is certainly something that we need to continue to work on,”
Pritzker said. “As you know, from the beginning when I took office, we
put forward a variety of methods for us to begin to deal with that. One
of those has been a pension buyout program that has been successful. And
so we're going to continue to work on that to make sure that we expand
that and offer buyouts to everybody who is in the retirement system that
may want one.”
[to top of second column]
|
Gov. JB Pritzker speaks at a news conference in his
Springfield office Tuesday after the state received its first credit
upgrade in more than 20 years. (Capitol News Illinois photo by Jerry
Nowicki)
Pritzker said the rating upgrade would save Illinois
taxpayers “tens of millions of dollars” in interest costs paid on
its debt, some of which he said taxpayers are already seeing in the
form of rates paid on some of the state’s most recent notes.
“I think it's worth pointing out that the bond market trades
typically ahead of credit rating agencies,” he said. “So our bonds
actually were trading at a kind of higher level, as if the rating
had already changed, because people were looking at what we were
doing and, on their own, rating our bonds, the investors
themselves.”
In addition to upgrading the state’s general obligation bonds,
Moody’s also upgraded the state’s Build Illinois bonds – a program
begun in 1985 to fund state and local infrastructure, economic
development, education and environmental projects – as well as bonds
issued by the Metropolitan Pier and Exposition Authority.
Those rating upgrades affect about $33 billion worth of bonds,
according to Moody’s, including $27.7 billion in general obligation
bonds, $3 billion in Metropolitan Pier and Exposition Authority
bonds and $1.9 billion in Build Illinois bonds.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan
news service covering state government and distributed to more than
400 newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois
Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.
|