
Double blow as S&P and Moody’s downgrade B.C.’s credit rating again, citing deficit
VICTORIA — Credit rating agencies S&P and Moody’s have both downgraded British Columbia’s rating on the same day, citing the province’s ballooning deficit and the apparent lack of a plan to dig the province out of its fiscal hole.
S&P Global Ratings cut the province’s long-term issuer credit rating to A+ from AA- on Wednesday, while Moody’s Ratings downgraded its key baseline assessment to aa2 from aa1.
Moody’s said in a news release that its downgrade reflected a “structural deterioration in British Columbia’s credit profile” and it predicted this year’s deficit would soar to $14.3 billion.
That’s more than 31 per cent higher than the forecast in Finance Minister Brenda Bailey’s budget last month, and 57 per cent higher than the most recent estimate of last year’s deficit.