The Phnom Penh Post

Moody’s reduces China credit rating

- Laurent Thomet

MOODY’S yesterday slashed China’s credit rating for the first time in almost three decades citing concerns about the country’s rising debt and slowing growth, but Beijing rejected the downgrade as “inappropri­ate”.

The move comes as China tries to clean up a toxic brew of unregulate­d and risky lending that for years has fuelled the economy’s spectacula­r growth, though some analysts doubt Beijing’s willingnes­s to quit its debt addiction.

“The downgrade reflects Moody’s expectatio­n that China’s financial strength will erode somewhat over the coming years, with economy-wide debt continuing to rise as potential growth slows,” the agency said.

China’s total outstandin­g credit surged to 260 percent of gross domestic product by the end of 2016 and the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund has warned that a debt crisis in the country could “imperil global financial stability”.

The government has trimmed its 2017 growth target to around 6.5 percent after it expanded 6.7 percent in 2016, the slowest growth rate since 1990.

China’s 13th Five-Year-Plan released in 2016 announced an average annual growth rate of above 6.5 percent for 2016-2020.

But Moody’s said it expects China’s growth potential to decline to close to five percent over the next five years, citing diminishin­g investment, an accelerate­d fall in the working age population and a continuing dip in productivi­ty.

The finance ministry rejected the assessment, saying Moody’s had used an “inappropri­ate” method to assess the risks facing the economy.

“It over-estimated the difficulti­es that the Chinese economy is facing,” the ministry said in a statement.

It added that the government’s debt ratio in 2016 was 36.7 percent, lower than major market economies, and that the “expansion of the scale of government debt has been effectivel­y controlled”.

Moody’s cut the long-term local currency and foreign currency issuer ratings to A1 from Aa3, the first reduction since late 1989 as it assessed the impact of the Tiananmen Square crackdown on China’s trade with the world.

However, Moody’s upgraded its outlook to stable from nega- tive, where it had been since March 2016.

“The stable outlook reflects our assessment that, at the A1 rating level, risks are balanced,” it said in its ratings note.

“The erosion in China’s credit profile will be gradual and, we expect, eventually contained as reforms deepen,” Moody’s said.

Shanghai and Hong Kong stocks fell son after the downgrade was announced but rebounded in the afternoon to end slightly higher.

 ?? JOHANNES EISELE/AFP ?? This picture taken on Monday shows a migrant worker at a demolition site in the suburbs of Shanghai. Moody’s ratings agency downgraded China’s credit score for the first time since 1989 yesterday.
JOHANNES EISELE/AFP This picture taken on Monday shows a migrant worker at a demolition site in the suburbs of Shanghai. Moody’s ratings agency downgraded China’s credit score for the first time since 1989 yesterday.

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