Thursday, May 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Two blows to B.C.'s credit status, as S&P cuts rating and Moody's turns negative

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Apr, 2024 10:23 AM
  • Two blows to B.C.'s credit status, as S&P cuts rating and Moody's turns negative

British Columbia's credit status took a double blow on Tuesday, with S&P downgrading the province due to the risk of "outsize" deficits, and Moody's turning its outlook negative.

S&P Global Ratings blamed big government spending as it dropped its credit rating for the province and BC Hydro's provincially guaranteed unsecured debt from AA status to AA-minus.

It's the third rating drop since 2021, when B.C. lost AAA status. 

"The Province of British Columbia's 2024 budget outlines continued extensive investment for operations and record levels of capital spending over the next three years, which will lead to outsize after-capital deficits of more than 15 per cent of total revenues and a relatively steep increase in debt through to fiscal 2027," it said in a statement. 

It said that in the next two years there was at least a one-in-three chance the current fiscal course would result in rising debt levels and very low internal liquidity, "weaker than those of similarly rated peers." 

That would mean another ratings cut, it said.

Another global ratings agency, Moody’s Investors Service, separately revised its outlook for B.C. to negative on Tuesday. 

But Moody's maintained its long-standing AAA rating for the province, its highest rank of credit worthiness.

B.C. Finance Minister Katrine Conroy said factors such as the slowing global economy may have played a role in the S&P ratings drop, but other assessors such as Fitch Ratings had found B.C. to be on stable fiscal ground.

Conroy said that the capital investments noted by S&P were needed because the NDP government "inherited a deficit of infrastructure" from their BC Liberal predecessors, now known as BC United.

"We have had to build hospitals. We have had to build schools. We have had to build roads. We have had to make housing a priority because of what we inherited," Conroy said in the B.C. legislature on Tuesday. 

S&P said a reversal of the province's "fiscal trajectory" is needed along with stronger economic growth for the outlook to be revised to stable.

It said the province's commitment to fiscal discipline and stability have "wavered" recently as B.C. increases spending on operations and capital investment to what S&P calls "unparalleled levels" amid slowing growth.

"Considering B.C.'s focus on taxpayer affordability and on capital investment when economic growth is weakening, we expect that the province's fiscal performance will materially deteriorate in the next two years," S&P said.

Opposition BC United finance spokesman Peter Milobar said in a statement that the "dual downgrades" by Moody's and S&P "are a clear sign of the NDP’s fiscal mismanagement."

“Each downgrade under the NDP brings higher taxes and tighter budgets for British Columbians. The result is higher costs for loans, as David Eby’s policies drain our wallets," he said, calling the credit assessments "a wake-up call."

BC Conservative member Bruce Banman said in a statement that S&P's lower rating reflected the firm "losing confidence" in the NDP government's ability to manage the province's finances.

"The largest credit institutions in the world have taken a look into this premier's mismanagement of taxpayer dollars, and they think he cannot be trusted," Banman said. "British Columbia is spending an extraordinary amount of money to get less and less and less for everyday hard-working people."

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. makes it easier to salvage timber damaged by wildfires

B.C. makes it easier to salvage timber damaged by wildfires
The B.C. government says it's making it easier for forestry companies to salvage timber damaged by wildfires. Sustainable Forestry Innovation Minister Andrew Mercier says in a statement that changes to the price of fees for harvesting timber on Crown land make salvage "more economic," and will speed up forest regeneration.

B.C. makes it easier to salvage timber damaged by wildfires

B.C. moves alone on Surrey Police Service after mayor, council refuse to leave RCMP

B.C. moves alone on Surrey Police Service after mayor, council refuse to leave RCMP
British Columbia is moving ahead with the transition to an independent police service in Surrey after the mayor and council refused to part ways with the RCMP.  Solicitor General Mike Farnworth says a plan is in place for the continued transition to the independent Surrey Police Service, and he'll release more details next week on how that will work. 

B.C. moves alone on Surrey Police Service after mayor, council refuse to leave RCMP

B.C.'s government buys land for transit-oriented housing development

B.C.'s government buys land for transit-oriented housing development
British Columbia's government is spearheading a new public development project on Vancouver Island aimed at bringing more affordable homes closer to transit access Premier David Eby says the province has purchased two parcels of land for the Uptown development in Saanich, B.C., through the $394-million property acquisition fund operated by the Transportation Ministry. 

B.C.'s government buys land for transit-oriented housing development

Woman arrested for attacking 'random strangers' in Vancouver, police say

Woman arrested for attacking 'random strangers' in Vancouver, police say
A woman has been arrested over what Vancouver police say is a series of assaults against "random strangers" in the city.  Police say officers responded to multiple calls on Sunday in the city's downtown core where the 32-year-old woman is alleged to have assaulted three people. 

Woman arrested for attacking 'random strangers' in Vancouver, police say

B.C. under fire after accounting firm accused of conflict in running grant

B.C. under fire after accounting firm accused of conflict in running grant
British Columbia Premier David Eby says the government has asked the auditor general to review the province's grant programs after allegations of conflict-of-interest from a clean-technology company. The development comes after Merritt, B.C.-based electric-hybrid truck maker Edison Motors said in a TikTok video that accounting firm MNP was both administering a CleanBC grant and offering to provide services to aid businesses in applications. 

B.C. under fire after accounting firm accused of conflict in running grant

Crown blames most of Ali murder trial delays on defence and 'extraordinary events'

Crown blames most of Ali murder trial delays on defence and 'extraordinary events'
A Crown lawyer says holdups to the trial of a man found guilty of murdering a 13-year-old Burnaby, B.C., girl were mostly attributable to the defence and "discrete exceptional events," as he argued against the case being thrown out over delays.  Daniel Porte told a B.C. Supreme Court judge that if those events were subtracted, the remaining delays to Ibrahim Ali's trial would have amounted to about 25 months, falling within the allowable threshold.

Crown blames most of Ali murder trial delays on defence and 'extraordinary events'

PrevNext