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Would you loan money to an entity that can legally print as much money
as it desires? When you "purchase" a U.S Treasury bill, note,
or bond, you are loaning money to the federal government – which
possesses that ever-menacing printing press. Of course, the federal
government is duty-bound to repay you, the lender, as prescribed by the
debt obligation. Few people are willing to consider the possibility that
the U.S. government would default on its debt obligations. Nevertheless,
when examined objectively, one could make the case that Uncle Sam’s
sovereign credit rating should be downgraded – perhaps even to
"junk." So where are the credit rating agencies? Are
they going to miss this one just like Enron?
Today,
there is a widely-held perception that the U.S. government is the safest
credit risk on the planet – heck, mathematical economists even deem
the yield on a U.S. Treasury bill to be the "risk-free rate of
return." If the aforesaid perception met reality, then the U.S.
government would have, among many things, a sound monetary system (look
out for that printing press), a laissez-faire approach to business,
excellent control over its budget, honest financial reporting, along
with top-flight internal accounting and control systems. If this
doesn’t sound like the U.S. government you know, then it makes sense
to question the conventional wisdom that Uncle Sam is the safest credit
risk on the face of the Earth.
Both
Moody’s Investors and Standard and Poor’s have granted the U.S. the
highest sovereign credit rating possible (Aaa and AAA respectively).
Most other countries are less fortunate and have lower credit ratings
– which can affect such a country’s interest rates and access to the
credit markets. The lower the credit rating, it is believed, the higher
the chances are for a country to default on its sovereign debt
obligations. Be aware S&P downgraded Japan’s sovereign credit
rating to AA– on April 15, 2002 (more about this later). No one wants
to lend money to a party that is likely to renege on its duty to repay
with interest.
So
what comprises a sovereign credit rating system? In the Federal Reserve
Bank of New York’s October 1996 issue of its FRBNY
Economic Policy Review, Richard Cantor and Frank Packer sifted
out eight key variables that S&P and Moody’s use to
determine a country’s sovereign credit rating. In addition to studying
these eight important rating variables, Messrs. Cantor and Packer
conveyed an incredibly important aspect of such ratings:
Sovereign
ratings are important not only because some of the largest issuers in
the international capital markets are national governments, but also
because these assessments affect the ratings assigned to borrowers of
the same nationality. For example, agencies seldom, if ever, assign
a credit rating to a local municipality, provincial government, or
private company that is higher than
that of the issuer’s home country. (emphasis added)
This
presents quite a conundrum for the rating agencies. In other words, is
the United States becoming a banana-republic borrower with top-flight
companies domiciled on its soil? (I’m referring to companies whose
balance sheets haven’t been raped and pillaged by Ivy League MBAs.)
For example, if the U.S. government had its rating lowered to a
"junk" grade, such as BB+, would Berkshire Hathaway lose its
AAA rating? The ramifications for downgrading Uncle Sam would be
enormous. Thus, one must wonder if there is the courage necessary, among
the major rating agencies, to properly assess the U.S. government’s
credit worthiness.
What
follows are descriptions of the eight key sovereign rating variables
reflecting verbiage exactly as provided by Messrs. Cantor and Packer (variables
1 though 8). Directly, after each variable, I provide analysis
as to how the U.S. government measures up in light of the specific
variable at hand. Please note that my analysis includes readily
available research, commentary, and other information. I liberally use
quotes from the likes of James Grant, Bill Gross, Hans-Hermann Hoppe,
Doug Noland, Kurt Richebächer, Murray Rothbard, Hans Sennholz, and
others – which demonstrates that much credible information is
available to support a case for downgrading Uncle Sam’s sovereign
credit rating. Consequently, when tallying how poorly the federal
government measures up to each variable, one must conclude that the U.S.
government’s sovereign credit rating should be revised dramatically
downward – unquestionably to a level lower than Japan’s.
Variable
#1 – per capita income:
The greater the potential tax-base of the borrowing country, the greater
the ability of a government to repay debt. This variable can also serve
as a proxy for the level of political stability and other important
factors.
Analysis:
Dr. Kurt Richebächer
and Tony Allison make the grim points that personal incomes are not
growing and that Americans, thanks to easy credit, are living well
beyond their means. Not only does this bode ill for Uncle Sam’s tax
base, a heavily indebted populace is not one that provides a foundation
for social and political stability.
The
following commentary came from Dr. Kurt Richebächer as found in the
January 4, 2005 edition of The
Daily Reckoning:
A
"self-sustaining" U.S. economic recovery urgently needs
accelerating employment and income growth. Just the opposite is
happening. During the six months up to last November, real disposable
personal income grew just 1%, or 2% annualized. This is down from 3%
in the first half of 2004 and 4.8% in the second half of 2003. Taxes
and higher inflation rates are taking their toll. Debt-financed
spending went to new records. During the third quarter, private
households increased their spending by $139.4 billion, while their
earnings increased only $81.6 billion.
What
follows is an excerpt from Tony Allison’s December 17, 2004
"Market WrapUp" as found on Financial
Sense Online:
In
recent years, consumer incomes have not kept up with expenditures.
This is clearly shown in the personal savings rate that has plunged to
near zero. The recurring charges at the grocery store, dentist, gas
station etc. will continue to add up. As interest rates rise, these
household expenses will become painfully high if not paid off. Imagine
how balances for mortgage and income tax payments will grow over time.
This is the "magic of compounding" in reverse.
"Survival debt" grows into financial suicide when credit
limits are breeched.
On
the whole, America’s taxpayers are in poor financial shape – they
are emulating Uncle Sam’s reckless borrowing habits. For instance, the
average American household has $8,000 in credit card debt while total
consumer debt is nearly $2 trillion. Additionally, total
household mortgage debt is approaching $7.8 trillion. Thanks to the
Federal Reserve, there is a debt bubble in the United States. When
combining stagnant personal income growth with aggressive personal debt
growth, America’s tax base is built upon sand. It stands to reason
that a country’s sovereign credit rating will eventually reflect the
financial health of its citizens. This being the case, a downgrade of
the United States’ sovereign credit rating seems inevitable.
Variable
#2 – inflation: A high
rate of inflation points to structural problems in the government’s
finances. When a government appears unable or unwilling to pay for
current budgetary expenses through taxes or debt issuance, it must
resort to inflationary money finance. Public dissatisfaction with
inflation may in turn lead to political instability.
Analysis:
Alan Greenspan is pulling a mass-psychological con job. He continues to
state that inflation is "quiescent" – although he has been a
bit more hawkish of late. Apparently, the maestro doesn’t go grocery
shopping or to the gas station or house hunting. Americans are living in
a state of cognitive dissonance. We know that prices are rising, but so
many believe that Mr. Greenspan has everything under control. Not
surprisingly, Doug Noland, of The Prudent Bear, does not share the
maestro’s view of quiescent inflation. Here is what he wrote in his
December 31, 2004 Credit
Bubble Bulletin:
The
U.S. economy is in the midst of a distorted boom, with an increasingly
ingrained inflationary bias. Asset bubbles are heavily influencing
spending and investing patterns, hence the underlying structure of the
economy. The nature of the U.S. bubble economy – where gross
financial excess is required to fuel minimally acceptable employment
gains – will be an issue for 2005. Current market rates and
liquidity conditions appear poised to initially foster
stronger-than-expected demand domestically and globally, although the
unstable and unbalanced nature of the current global expansion will
continue to provide fodder for those arguing for an imminent slowdown.
I expect the Chinese and Asian inflationary booms to become
increasingly problematic. Energy and commodities will remain in tight
supply, with prices extraordinarily volatile but with a continued
upward bias. The current minority Fed view that inflation and
marketplace speculation pose increasing risks has potential to become
consensus. And I can certainly envisage a scenario of increasingly
anxious central bankers eyeing inflationary pressures and unstable
markets across the globe.
Let’s
not lose sight of the fact that inflation itself is an assault against
private property (i.e. money) and should be viewed accordingly by the
bond market and credit rating agencies.
Variable
#3 – GDP growth: A
relatively high rate of economic growth suggests that a country’s
existing debt burden will become easier to service over time.
Analysis:
As alluded to above, the U.S. government is lying about rising prices.
This also serves to distort the United States’ gross domestic product
(GDP) growth figures. Bill Gross, the highly respected bond fund manager
at PIMCO, penned the following in the October 2004 issue of Investment
Outlook titled "Haute Con Job:"
No
I cannot sit quietly on this one, nor as I’ve mentioned, have other
notables in the past few years. The CPI as calculated may not be a
conspiracy but it’s definitely a con job foisted on an unwitting
public by government officials who choose to look the other way or who
convince themselves that they are fostering some logical adjustment in
a New Age Economy dependent on the markets and not the marketplace for
its survival. If the CPI is so low and therefore real wages in the
black, tell me why U.S. consumers are resorting to hundreds of
billions in home equity takeouts to keep consumption above the line.
If real GDP growth is so high, tell me why this economy hasn’t
created any jobs over the past four years. High productivity?
Nonsense, in part – statistical, hedonically created nonsense. My
sense is that the CPI is really 1% higher than official figures and
that real GDP is 1% less. You are witnessing a "haute con
job" and one day those gorgeous statistics just like those
gorgeous models, will lose their makeup, add a few pounds and wind up
resembling a middle-aged Mom in a cotton skirt with better things to
do than to chase the latest fad or ephemeral fashion.
(emphasis added)
Here,
we have spectacular evidence of moral hazard. The very entity that owns
the printing press is "measuring" the depreciation of its
monetary unit while also measuring economic growth. The rating agencies
must come to understand that the federal government is putting out works
of fiction with respect to the CPI and to GDP growth.
Variable
#4 – fiscal balance: A
large federal deficit absorbs private domestic savings and suggests that
a government lacks the ability or will to tax its citizenry to cover
current expenses or to service its debt.
Analysis:
The U.S. government’s debt increased by $595.8 billion during its
fiscal-year 2004. Consequently, at fiscal year-end 9/30/04,
the national debt stood at $7,379,052,696,330. As of January 20,
2005, the national debt totaled to $7,613,215,612,328.
If
the sheer magnitude of America’s national debt doesn’t cause alarm,
then reading over the U.S. government’s September 30, 2004 financial
report should evoke terror. Please note the federal government does not
report its financial condition according to generally accepted
accounting principles (GAAP) – which serves to understate the
magnitude of its liabilities. Here is Uncle Sam’s balance sheet as
presented in the September
30, 2004 financial report:
|
(In
billions of dollars) 2004 |
|
Cash
and other monetary assets (Note 2)
|
|
|
Accounts
receivable, net (Note 3)
|
|
|
Loans
receivable, net (Note 4)
|
|
|
Taxes
receivable, net (Note 5)
|
|
|
Inventories
and related property, net (Note 6)
|
|
|
Property,
plant, and equipment, net (Note 7)
|
|
|
Other
assets (Note 8)
|
|
|
Total
assets
|
|
|
Liabilities:
|
|
Accounts
payable (Note 9)
|
|
|
Federal
debt securities held by the public and accrued interest (Note
10)
|
|
|
Federal
employee and veteran benefits payable (Note 11)
|
|
|
Environmental
and disposal liabilities (Note 12)
|
|
|
Benefits
due and payable (Note 13)
|
|
|
Loan
guarantee liabilities (Note 4)
|
|
|
Other
liabilities (Note 14)
|
|
|
Total
liabilities
|
|
|
Contingencies
(Note 18) and Commitments (Note 19)
|
|
Net
position
|
|
|
Total
liabilities and net position
|
|
The
preceding September 30, 2004 balance sheet illustrates that the U.S.
government has a negative net worth of over $7.7 trillion. Keep in mind
this balance sheet does not reflect intragovernmental debt holdings
(such as those held by the Social Security "trust" fund) nor
does this balance sheet include accrued liabilities such as the net
present value of pension, Social Security, and other obligations. Hence,
this balance sheet grossly understates the enormity of the U.S.
government’s deficit net worth position.
Page
4 of the U.S. government’s 9/30/04 financial report contains a section
titled Liabilities and Additional Responsibilities. This is where
the staggering scope of Uncle Sam’s liabilities is brought to light.
Here is an excerpt:
The
2004 balance sheet shows assets of $1,397 billion and liabilities of
$9,107 billion, for a negative net position of $7,710 billion. In
addition, the Government’s responsibilities to make future payments
for social insurance and certain other programs are not shown as
liabilities according to Federal accounting standards; however, they
are measured in other contexts. These programmatic commitments remain
Federal responsibilities and as currently structured will have a
significant claim on budgetary resources in the future.
…the
net present value for all of the responsibilities (for current
participants over a 75-year period) is $45,892 billion, including
Medicare and Social Security payments, pensions and benefits for
Federal employees and veterans, and other financial responsibilities.
The reader needs to understand these responsibilities to get a more
complete understanding of the Government’s finances.
Yes,
you read that correctly. The net present value of the federal
government’s "welfare" obligations is nearly $46 trillion.
Add in the liabilities shown on the balance sheet above, and Uncle
Sam’s liabilities exceed $50 trillion. With a government that took in
a little over $1.9 trillion in revenues in 2004 and has seen its
national debt increase every year since 1957, there is absolutely no way
the federal government can continue to service its debt and fund its
welfare obligations – short of resorting to inflating away these
liabilities. Other options include outright repudiation of the national
debt (i.e. a default) and canceling all welfare programs. How a country,
with this horrible of a financial condition, merits a AAA sovereign
credit rating is beyond me.
Variable
#5 – external balance.
A large current account deficit indicates that the public and private
sectors together rely heavily on funds from abroad. Current account
deficits that persist result in growth in foreign indebtedness, which
may become unsustainable over time.
Analysis:
Regarding the United
States’ current account deficit, it is rapidly approaching the point
of unsustainability. Tony Allison drives
the point home as follows:
Perhaps
the most daunting debt of all is that owed to foreign sources, our
current account deficit. This is the evil twin to our lack of domestic
saving. We must borrow savings from the rest of the world to sustain
our economy. It is estimated that the U.S. is currently sucking in 80%
of the world’s savings. Approximately 50% of Treasury debt is now in
foreign hands. The current account deficit is projected to exceed $600
billion for 2004 and continue to increase in future years. At 6% of
GNP, the U.S. current account deficit has reached a level that has
precipitated currency crises in numerous developing countries.
Is
it any wonder that the U.S. dollar has become such a weak kitten in the
currency market? The day will come when we can no longer count on the
kindness of strangers. Are rating agencies taking note of this?
Variable
#6 – external debt. A
higher debt burden should correspond to a higher risk of default. The
weight of the burden increases as a country’s foreign currency debt
rises relative to its foreign currency earnings (exports).
Analysis:
Speaking of depending
upon the kindness of strangers, Uncle Sam’s overall debt to foreigners
(i.e. governments, etc.) has grown to distressing proportions. As Doug
Noland conveyed in his December 31, 2004 Credit Bubble Bulletin:
"Fed Foreign ‘Custody’ Holdings of Treasury, Agency debt
gained $5.7 billion to $1.336 trillion for the week ended December 29. Year-to-date,
Custody Holdings are up $269.0 billion, or 25.2% annualized."
(emphasis in original)
In
the context of a gold standard, James
Grant made the following observation, about external debt, in a
recent Forbes article:
The
hallmark of the classical gold standard was the prompt adjustment of
international payments imbalances. The hallmark of the pure paper
standard is the indefinite postponement of international payments
imbalances. Under the gold standard, a deficit country, if it
persisted in its deficit, would eventually run out of gold. Under the
pure paper standard, a deficit country, if it's the U.S., can keep
right on printing money.
That
is, it can keep on printing until its creditors cry:
"Uncle!" The New York Fed estimates that, at year-end 2003,
foreign central banks held $2.1 trillion in dollar-denominated
securities, "equivalent to more than half of marketable Treasury
debt outstanding."
Is
this massive external-debt burden high enough to warrant the interest of
rating agencies? If not, then perhaps they should read a topical Forbes
article titled A
Word from a Dollar Bear: Warren Buffett’s vote of no confidence in
U.S. fiscal policies is up to $20 billion. When Warren Buffett
speaks, perhaps the rating agencies should listen.
Variable
#7 – economic development.
Although level of development is already measured by our per capita
income variable, the rating agencies appear to factor a threshold effect
into the relationship between economic development and risk. That is,
once countries reach a certain income or level of development, they may
be less likely to default. We proxy for this minimum income or
development level with a simple indicator variable noting whether or not
a country is classified as industrialized by the International Monetary
Fund.
Analysis:
One must not confuse a
country’s past glory with its future prospects. The United States has
devolved from a republic to a social democracy. I would argue that the
U.S. is experiencing economic "undevelopment" directly related
to the decivilization process occurring in America today. In
Hans-Hermann Hoppe’s fabulous book Democracy: The God That Failed, Dr.
Hoppe describes what happens to a populace living under nanny-statism.
He describes how the decivilizing nature of social democracy
…has
led to permanently rising taxes, debts, and public employment. It has
led to the destruction of the gold standard, unparalleled paper-money
inflation, and increased protectionism and migration controls. Even
the most fundamental private law provisions have been perverted by an
unabating flood of legislation and regulation. Simultaneously, as
regards civil society, the institutions of marriage and family have
been increasingly weakened, the number of children has declined, and
the rates of divorce, illegitimacy, single parenthood, singledom, and
abortion have increased…In comparison to the nineteenth century, the
cognitive prowess of the political and intellectual elites and the
quality of public education have declined. And the rates of crime,
structural unemployment, welfare dependency, parasitism, negligence,
recklessness, incivility, pyschopathy, and hedonism have increased.
Initially,
one may think that Dr. Hoppe’s words are much too harsh. Using, as
proxies, the staggering amount of debt and welfare obligations being
left for future American generations to tackle (as described in the
analysis of "variable #4" above), I would argue that he is
right on the money. In fact, I would add that this intergenerational
wealth transfer is utterly despicable and immoral. The prior generations
who supported income taxation, the founding of the Federal Reserve, the
New Deal, the Great Society, etc. were morally and intellectually
bankrupt and bear direct responsibility for the social decay we see all
around us. A country experiencing a decivilization process, like the
U.S., is not one that will move forward with economic development.
Is
it any wonder why American manufacturers are building factories
overseas? It isn’t just a matter of seeking less expensive labor. It
is a matter of seeking better educated and harder working laborers than
are available in the United States. Quite frankly, America’s public
schools are "cranking out" high self-esteem, low skilled
graduates who expect large salaries and small workloads.
Social-democratic "values" are engrained in public schools at
the expense of teaching students reading, writing, math, and basic
science. Accordingly, public schools are at the heart of the problem of
decivilization and economic undevelopment. American manufacturers know
this and are voting with their feet and their wallets.
Hans-Hermann
Hoppe does not stand alone in describing the ugliness of social
democracy and its inherent narcissism, recklessness, and hedonism. Dr.
Hans Sennholz aptly describes the
social implications of a heavily indebted social-democratic society:
Our
debt generation is a sad generation misguided by false notions and
doctrines, and preoccupied with its own needs and wants. When economic
conditions begin to deteriorate it may grow ever more egocentric and
wretched, which tends to aggravate the social tension and strife.
Clinging tenaciously to its transfer claims and rights, the unhappy
society thus may deteriorate into a militant assembly of diverse
pressure groups feuding and fighting each other.
Perhaps
Standard and Poor’s and Moody’s haven’t looked closely at the
terrible destruction social democracy has wrought on American society.
The U.S. is going through a decivilization process and, therefore,
economic undevelopment. As mentioned above, this is a factor as to why
jobs are moving overseas. This, undoubtedly, should be factored in to
Uncle Sam’s sovereign credit rating.
Variable
#8 – default history.
Other things being equal, a country that has defaulted on debt in the
recent past is widely perceived as a high credit risk. Both theoretical
considerations of the role of reputation in sovereign debt…and related
empirical evidence indicate that defaulting sovereigns suffer a severe
decline in their standing with creditors...We factor in credit
reputation by using an indicator variable that notes whether or not a
country has defaulted on its international bank debt since 1970.
Analysis:
Over the years a
mystique has emerged, regarding Uncle Sam, in which "he"
believes in the sanctity of debt repayment – which of course means
that default is never an option. Economics and finance professors
perpetuate this myth and ignore history. In reality, the U.S. government
has committed more serious transgressions than just defaulting on
international bank debt. It has committed defaults that rating agency
analysts should find appalling – this entails looking past mythology
and seeking the truth.
Thankfully,
the courageous and brilliant economist, Murray N. Rothbard, had the
intellectual fortitude to tell the truth regardless of establishment
thinking and conventional wisdom. In his most excellent book Making
Economic Sense, Dr. Rothbard points out something that the
rating agencies mysteriously ignore. Not only has Uncle Sam defaulted on
its financial obligations (after the aforementioned critical date of
1970), it defaulted on an entire monetary system – remember Bretton
Woods? Here is what Murray Rothbard had to say:
For
two decades, the system seemed to work well, as the U.S. issued more
and more dollars, and they were then used by foreign central banks as
a base for their own inflation. In short, for years the U.S. was able
to "export inflation" to foreign countries without suffering
the ravages itself. Eventually, however, the ever-more inflated dollar
became depreciated on the gold market, and the lure of high priced
gold they could obtain from the U.S. at the bargain $35 per ounce led
European central banks to cash in dollars for gold. The house of cards
collapsed when President Nixon, in an ignominious declaration of
bankruptcy, slammed shut the gold window and went off the last
remnants of the gold standard in August 1971. (emphasis added)
Indeed,
Dr. Rothbard was correct that this was a national declaration of
bankruptcy. However, since gold was involved, perhaps this was a
forgivable event. After all, many other countries were waging a war
against gold (that barbarous relic) in pursuit of establishing pure fiat
currency regimes. Nevertheless, this was a most spectacular default thus
destroying the conventional wisdom that the United States will always
honor its obligations – debt or otherwise.
But
what about defaulting on Treasury bonds in the 20th century?
Has this ever happened in the U.S.? As a matter of fact, it has –
refer to the U.S. Supreme Court case Perry
v. United States, 294 U.S.
330 (1935). Per this case, John M. Perry
"purchased" a $10,000 "Fourth Liberty Loan 4¼% Gold Bond
of 1933–1938." When Mr. Perry sought repayment, the federal
government refused to pay the loan back, in gold coin, and forced Mr.
Perry to accept $10,000 of legal tender currency instead. Briefly here
are some details from the case:
Plaintiff
brought suit as the owner of an obligation of the United States for
$10,000, known as 'Fourth Liberty Loan 4 1/4% Gold Bond of 1933–
1938.' This bond was issued pursuant to the Act of September 24, 1917,
1 et seq. (40 Stat. 288), as amended, and Treasury Department circular
No. 121 dated September 28, 1918. The bond...provided: The principal
and interest hereof are payable in United States gold coin of the
present standard of value.
When
FDR, via his 1933
Executive Order, declared it illegal to own circulating gold coins,
gold bullion, and gold certificates, the federal government forced
itself into the position of defaulting on paying the
abovementioned Liberty bondholders in the prescribed gold coin. Hence,
subsequent to FDR’s executive order, all holders of such bonds were
forced to accept legal tender currency instead of "gold coin of the
present standard of value." The act of confiscating gold itself was
a violation of private property rights and was illegal – regardless of
what government apologists say. In turn, by not paying bondholders in
gold coin, the U.S. government has technically defaulted on past
Treasury bond obligations. As expected, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled
against Mr. Perry and in favor of Uncle Sam. This does not change the
chilling truth that, in the past, the U.S. government has exercised
arbitrary power to change the rules of the bond market (i.e. the means
of repayment) by trampling private property rights. A default is a
default.
Having
gone through all eight variables, it should be obvious that both
Moody’s and Standard & Poor’s have grossly overrated America’s
sovereign debt – it doesn’t merit the top grade of AAA. In
variables such as default history, inflation, external balance, external
debt, and economic development, the U.S. should rate significantly lower
than does Japan – and should rate worse in many variables as
compared to a developing country such as Botswana. Look at the table
below and decide for yourself. (Source – The
Japan Times: Should Japan be rated below Botswana?)
|
Eight
variables considered by key to sovereign credit ratings
|
|
VARIABLE
|
JAPAN
|
BOTSWANA
|
|
Per capita
income
|
High
|
Low
|
|
GDP growth
|
Negative
|
Strongly
positive
|
|
Inflation
|
Deflation
|
Moderate
|
|
Fiscal
balance
|
Alarming
deficit
|
Surplus
|
|
External
balance
|
Surplus
|
Surplus
|
|
External
debt
|
Low
|
Low
|
|
Economic
development
|
High
|
Low
|
|
Default
history
|
Nil
|
Nil
|
|
Note:
Each agency uses a different standard. Japan was rated AA
minus by Standard & Poor's, A2 by Moody's, and AA by
Fitch.
|
One
could reasonably conclude that if Japan has been assigned a lower
sovereign credit rating than Botswana (which reveals that rating
agencies aren’t showing favoritism in Japan’s case),
then logically the U.S. should be assigned a lower rating than
Japan. So why isn’t the U.S. rated below Japan? Or is the U.S. the
only country worthy of favoritism? This calls into question the
credibility of the major rating agencies.
Where
would you rate the United States’ sovereign debt? If you refer to the embedded
table, you will see S&P’s and Moody’s various investment
grades. If you believe Uncle Sam is a non-investment grade risk, then
you have rated U.S. Treasury debt as "junk."
Should
the major rating agencies sound the alarm with respect to the U.S.
government’s precariously debt-bloated financial condition – among
other problems? I certainly hope so. As Raymond
W. McDaniel, president of Moody’s Investors Service, has stated:
"In Moody's view, the main and proper role of credit ratings is to
enhance transparency and efficiency in debt capital markets by reducing
the information asymmetry between borrowers and lenders."
Sophisticated bond fund managers, large insurance companies, and foreign
central bankers may not need to rely on Moody’s or S&P to bring
information between borrowers and lenders into symmetry. This aside,
millions of Americans lend money to Uncle Sam (via purchasing bonds)
and, on the whole, are economically illiterate – thanks largely to
public schools. A downgrade of Uncle Sam’s credit rating would surely
be a huge news story and may wake up the masses to the painful truth
that their country is hurtling toward a debt-induced economic disaster
(even Chris
P. Dialynas, a Managing Director of PIMCO, is calling for
America’s foreign creditors to forgive a portion of the U.S. Treasury
debt they hold). A ratings downgrade may compel Americans to direct
their savings to safer havens – thus preserving a healthier pool of
savings from which America’s economy can be rebuilt. (Believe me, it
will need to be rebuilt after Alan Greenspan’s/America’s debt orgy
comes to an end.) It is time for the credit rating agencies to muster
the courage to do the right thing and downgrade Uncle Sam. Or will we
hear that all too familiar question: "How could the rating agencies
have missed this one?"

© 2005 Eric Englund
Editorial Archives
Eric
Englund has
an MBA from Boise State University and lives in the state of Oregon. He
is the publisher of The
Hyperinflation Survival Guide by Dr. Gerald Swanson. You are
invited to visit his website.
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