Downgrading US by S&P,Revenge? Really?

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There are whispers going around that Standard and Poor have  avenged US Administration by down grading US rating to AA+.

Spokesperson of the US Treasury has also questioned the Data on which the rating is based.

( A look at US Finance  will tell a different story; in fact, Down grading is over due)

The Rating of these Agencies are the Bench mark when they rate countries other than US,say Argentina 0r Venezuela.

People forget that Keynesian Economics is a Fraud and illusory.

Most of the parameters are notional and do not stand up to Factual verification.

Both the Government and the Rating Agency are whistling in the dark and pat each other when it is convenient for them.

Ordinary Joe remains the same,paying more taxes and listening to all this non sense.

THE credit rating agencies are taking advantage of the country’s financial problems to increase their own political power. They want to ensure that regulators do not reduce their autonomy and influence.

Their strategy is brilliant. They are not piling on all at once by downgrading the United States in concert. Standard & Poor’s is the bad cop for now, taking the first swipe at the United States last Friday, and seeing its influence confirmed by the stock market’s dramatic reaction. Moody’s and Fitch are playing the good cop — exercising restraint about a potential downgrade, yet still flexing their muscles by criticizing the government both publicly and behind the scenes.

The rating agencies have the federal government over a barrel. If politicians ignore rating agencies’ warnings, they risk a withering assault of additional downgrades that could undercut confidence in the government and inflict soaring interest rates. The good-cop, bad-cop routine is especially potent because a downgrade by two of the three major rating agencies could lead to negative consequences, such as requiring some bond issuers to secure additional collateral.

Since the 1970s, federal statutes and regulations have mandated that debt issuers obtain ratings as evidence of creditworthiness. An oligopoly of rating agencies used this authority to effectively control access to the financial system.  Even a threat of a downgrade from a rating agency could cause credit to dry up, and few inside or outside of Washington dared to challenge their dominance.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/10/opinion/the-revenge-of-the-rating-agencies.html?_r=1

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