
Last month, the credit rating agency Standard & Poor’s lowered its outlook on U.S. debt to “negative,” suggesting that the United States’ top-flight “AAA” credit rating is vulnerable to a downgrade, which could send interest rates up, make it hard for businesses to get capital, and put the brakes on economic recovery. But the U.S. isn’t alone; here’s a look at where other major world economies rank on the credit rating spectrum, plus an sampling of smaller countries whose shaky ratings put them in the category of “speculative” investments.
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4 Comments so far
leave a commentWith the Aussie dollar so strong at the moment I wonder how long until we crash and burn?
Standard & Poor’s, as a credit rating agency, is a vampire that delivers biaised information in order to help big corporations to control countries’ economies.
They are responsible for most of the financial instability that speculators love (see what is happening in Greece, Portugal, Iceland… and soon the rest of Europe and the United States…)
Doesn’t look that great for the US, does it?
So that’s why everyone loans us money.