Victorian Treasurer Tim Pallas.Credit:Luis Enrique Ascui
Moody’s,which downgraded Victoria’s credit score in late 2020,toldThe Age this week it was concerned that the state’s big debts and deficits leave the government with few fiscal resources to react to other health or economic shocks.
One of the global ratings agency’s senior credit officers,John Manning,said he was also concerned that Victoria’s ambitious infrastructure building program,projected to be worth more than $22 billion annually for the next four years could face further cost pressures as prices of building materials soar.
But eminent economist David Hayward says the ratings agencies take a narrow view of the budget position and argues the state government’s fiscal strategy has been successful in helping to keep the Victorian economy afloat and that the state would continue to be able to borrow cheaply regardless of the agencies’ views.
The treasurer says state government spending underpins Victoria’s “remarkable” economic recovery” from the shock of the pandemic.
Victoria was the only Australian state or territory to have a “negative outlook” from Moody’s because it believes other jurisdictions had credible plans to get on top of the big debts – worth hundreds of billions of dollars – they have run up on international bond markets in the two years of the pandemic.
At the same time,the Commonwealth has ramped up its net borrowings,which will be above $820 billion by 2025,but the rating agencies continue to keep the federal government on their highest rating,assured by the ability of the national government to raise enough revenue if needed to comfortably cover its borrowings.