Times Colonist

B.C. sees credit rating downgraded

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VANCOUVER — British Columbia’s credit rating has been downgraded by S&P due to concerns that big spending by the government could lead to “outsized” deficits and lower internal liquidity levels.

S&P Global Ratings says it lowered the rating for the province and B.C. Hydro’s provincial­ly guaranteed unsecured debt from “AA” status to “AA-minus.”

The global finance corporatio­n says B.C.’s 2024 budget outlined a plan for investment and spending at “record levels,” which it says will lead to after-capital deficits of more than 15 per cent of total revenues until the 2027 fiscal year.

Another global ratings agency, Moody’s Investors Service, separately revised its outlook for B.C. to negative on Tuesday.

B.C. Finance Minister Katrine Conroy says factors such as the slowing global economy may also have played a role in the S&P ratings drop, but other assessors such as Fitch Ratings have found B.C. to be on stable fiscal ground.

S&P says in its decision to downgrade the province that the company may lower the rating further “if B.C. maintains its current fiscal trajectory,” and a reversal is needed along with stronger economic growth for the outlook to be revised to stable.

It says the province’s commitment to fiscal discipline and stability have “wavered” recently as B.C. increases spending on operations and capital investment to what S&P calls “unparallel­ed levels” amid slowing growth.

“Considerin­g B.C.’s focus on taxpayer affordabil­ity and on capital investment when economic growth is weakening, we expect that the province’s fiscal performanc­e will materially deteriorat­e in the next two years,” S&P says.

Opposition BC United finance spokesman Peter Milobar says in a statement that the “dual downgrades” by Moody’s and S&P “are a clear sign of the NDP’s fiscal mismanagem­ent.”

“Each downgrade under the NDP brings higher taxes and tighter budgets for British Columbians. The result is higher costs for loans, as David Eby’s policies drain our wallets,” he says, calling the downgrades “a wake-up call.”

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