Gulf News

Japan now a notch below Malta in credit risk

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F itch has slashed Japan’s sovereign rating from A plus to A, judging the world’s fourth-largest economy a worse credit risk than Malta or Estonia. The credit rating agency said it acted because the government of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe did not offset the lost revenue from last year’s delay in raising consumptio­n tax.

The downgrade is unlikely to have much immediate effect — domestic confidence in Japan’s public debt has survived bigger shocks — but it highlights a steady deteriorat­ion in the country’s public finances at a time when the central bank has embarked on an unpreceden­ted 80 trillion yen ($670 billion; Dh2.46 trillion) a year bondbuying programme.

An A is the sixth notch on Fitch’s rating scale. That puts it one notch below Moody’s, which downgraded Japan late last year, and two notches below Standard & Poor’s.

“Japan’s main sovereign credit and rating weakness is the high and rising level of government debt,” said the agency. “Fitch projects the gross general government debt-to-GDP [gross domestic product] ratio to rise to 244 per cent of GDP by end2015, by far the highest ratio of any rated sovereign.”

Japan’s public debt has increased rapidly over the past 20 years as social security spending rose, tax revenues stagnated and successive government­s used fiscal stimulus to try and revive growth. The government has been able to draw on a large pool of domestic savings, however, financing itself at extremely low interest rates. That means it has never come close to a debt crisis despite repeated prediction­s.

Andrew Colquhoun, head of Asia-Pacific sovereigns at Fitch, said the rating reflected the extremes of Japan’s position: weak public finances and economic growth combined with a strong polity and little external debt.

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