Truthout...
Why
S.& P. Has No Business
Downgrading the US
by Robert Reich
Sunday 7 August 2011
Standard
& Poor’s downgrade of
America’s debt couldn’t come at a worse time. The result is likely to
be higher
borrowing costs for the government at all levels, and higher interest
on your
variable-rate mortgage, your auto loan, your credit card loans, and
every other
penny you borrow.
Why
did S&P do it?
Not
because America failed to pay its
creditors on time. As you may have noticed, we avoided a default.
And
not because we might fail to pay
our bills at the end of 2012 if tea-party Republicans again hold the
nation
hostage when their votes will next be needed to raise the debt ceiling.
This is
a legitimate worry and might have been grounds for a downgrade, but
it’s not
S&P’s rationale.
S&P
has downgraded the U.S.
because it doesn’t think we’re on track to reduce the nation’s debt
enough to
satisfy S&P — and we’re not doing it in a way S&P
prefers.
Here’s
what S&P said: “The
downgrade reflects our opinion that the fiscal consolidation plan that
Congress
and the administration recently agreed to falls short of what, in our
view,
would be necessary to stabilize the government’s medium-term debt
dynamics.”
S&P also blames what it considers to be weakened
“effectiveness, stability,
and predictability” of U.S. policy making and political institutions.
Pardon
me for asking, but who gave
Standard & Poor’s the authority to tell America how much debt
it has to
shed, and how?
If
we pay our bills, we’re a good
credit risk. If we don’t, or aren’t likely to, we’re a bad credit risk.
When,
how, and by how much we bring down the long term debt — or, more
accurately,
the ratio of debt to GDP — is none of S&P’s business.
S&P’s
intrusion into American
politics is also ironic because, as I pointed out recently, much of our
current
debt is directly or indirectly due to S&P’s failures (along
with the
failures of the two other major credit-rating agencies — Fitch and
Moody’s) to
do their jobs before the financial meltdown. Until the eve of the
collapse
S&P gave triple-A ratings to some of the Street’s riskiest
packages of mortgage-backed
securities and collateralized debt obligations.
Had
S&P done its job and warned
investors how much risk Wall Street was taking on, the housing and debt
bubbles
wouldn’t have become so large – and their bursts wouldn’t have brought
down
much of the economy. You and I and other taxpayers wouldn’t have had to
bail
out Wall Street; millions of Americans would now be working now instead
of
collecting unemployment insurance; the government wouldn’t have had to
inject
the economy with a massive stimulus to save millions of other jobs; and
far
more tax revenue would now be pouring into the Treasury from
individuals and
businesses doing better than they are now.
In
other words, had Standard &
Poor’s done its job over the last decade, today’s budget deficit would
be far
smaller and the nation’s future debt wouldn’t look so menacing.
We’d
all be better off had S&P
done the job it was supposed to do, then. We’ve paid a hefty price for
its
nonfeasance.
A
pity S&P is not even doing its
job now. We’ll be paying another hefty price for its malfeasance today.
Read
it at Truthout
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