WASHINGTON: A small
credit ratings agency on Thursday downgraded the United States' credit
rating for a second time, arguing the country was no closer to solving
its runaway debt problem.
In a move that could foreshadow decisions from larger agencies, Egan-Jones downgraded the US to AA from AA+.
The company cited "the lack of any tangible progress on addressing the problems and the continued rise in debt to GDP."
"For
the first time since WWII, US debt exceeds 100 per cent," analysts
said, predicting that would rise to 106 per cent by the end of the year,
calling that an "inflection point."
Egan-Jones -- which is much
smaller than its rivals -- scrapped the United States' top-level AAA
rating in July, one month before Standard & Poor's.
Part of the reason cited then and now was the continued political gridlock in Washington.
"We'd
like to see some progress towards reducing the fiscal deficit in the
next six to twelve months," said managing director Sean Egan.
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