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Credit ratings agencies punish Britain for leaving EU

Britain is continuously losing its credit rating following the Brexit vote. (file photo)

Two top credit ratings agencies have downgraded the UK’s rating in the wake of its decision to leave the European Union (EU).

Standard & Poor’s (S&P) announced on Monday that it has downgraded Britain’s AAA credit rating by two notches to AA, while warning of more downgrades in the coming months as the country was taking steps to leave the EU following a referendum last week.

About 52 percent of British voters partaking in the EU referendum Thursday opted to leave the union, while roughly 48 percent voted to stay.

Describing the vote’s outcome as a “seminal event,” S&P said in a statement that leaving the EU would weaken the “predictability, stability, and effectiveness” of the British government’s policymaking.

“We take the view that the deep divisions both within the ruling Conservative Party and society as a whole over the European question may not heal quickly and may hamper government stability and complicate policymaking on economic and other matters,” the statement read.

The UK’s creditworthiness received a second blow on Monday, when Fitch, another top ratings agency and a direct rival to S&P, lowered its rating of Britain from AA+ to AA.

Warning of “an abrupt slowdown in short-term GDP growth,” Fitch said that the lingering economic uncertainty ensued from the vote would result in less immigration and foreign investment.

UK Secretary of the Exchequer George Osborne said Monday that the country’s economy had enough strength to cope with the fallout.

The new downgrades came shortly after financial services company Moody’s cut Britain’s credit rating outlook to negative.

Credit ratings directly affect a government’s ability to borrow money in the international financial markets, where higher ratings mean lower interest rates.

The rating cuts reflect the market’s concerns after the vote. Since Thursday, sterling has plunged to a 31-year low against the US dollar while stock markets have slipped.


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