The United States has officially lost its last remaining top-tier credit rating, as Moody’s has downgraded the country's long-standing AAA status to AA1.
This move follows similar decisions by Standard & Poor’s in 2011 and Fitch in 2023, marking the end of an era where America was universally considered a risk-free borrower.
Moody’s explained its downgrade by pointing to the ballooning national debt and the sharp rise in interest expenses, which now outpace those of other AA1-rated nations. The agency also shifted its outlook from “negative” to “stable,” suggesting that while no further downgrade is imminent, the risks are now priced in.
According to Moody’s, without meaningful changes to tax policy or federal spending habits, the government’s financial maneuverability will continue to erode. Projections show that by 2035, roughly 78% of U.S. federal spending could be locked into mandatory obligations such as entitlement programs and interest payments—up from 73% in 2024.
A significant contributing factor is the possible extension of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, which Moody’s estimates could add an extra $4 trillion to the primary deficit over the next ten years. As a result, the agency anticipates the annual federal deficit could expand to nearly 9% of GDP by 2035, driven largely by debt servicing costs and sustained structural imbalances. The total public debt is projected to surge from 98% of GDP today to around 134% by 2035.
This downgrade is not just symbolic; it reflects a growing consensus among rating agencies that the U.S. government’s current fiscal trajectory is unsustainable without significant reform. S&P was the first to sound the alarm in 2011, downgrading the U.S. for the first time in history amid gridlock in Congress. Fitch echoed similar concerns in 2023, blaming persistent deficits and political dysfunction.
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