Supported byOwner's Engineer
Clarion Energy banner

Fitch upgrades Serbia credit rating to BB+

Supported byspot_img

Fitch has upgraded Serbia’s credit rating from “BB” to “BB +” with a stable outlook for further improvement, it was reported on the Serbian Ministry of Finance website.

According to the agency, public debt reduction is supported by a large and stable tax base, and the IMF PCI provides a near-term policy anchor for further strengthening of macroeconomic fundamentals.

Fitch points out that the government has maintained fiscal discipline following the large consolidation effort that delivered general government surpluses averaging 0.9% of GDP in 2017-2018, from a deficit of 6.2% in 2014 (which included a 3.5% of GDP reduction in spending on wages and pensions).

Supported by

Fitch forecasts a further outperformance against the government deficit target of 0.5% of GDP in 2019-2021.

Fitch has greater confidence that general government debt is on a firmly downward path, which they forecast at 46.2% of GDP in 2021, down from 54.5% in 2018 (and a peak of 71.2% in 2015), close to the current ‘BB’ median of 44.6%.

Under their longer-term debt projections, which assume average GDP growth of 3.0% from 2019-2028 and a 1.1% of GDP deterioration in the primary surplus between 2021-2026, general government debt declines steadily to 37.4% of GDP in 2028.

There has been a moderate improvement in Serbia’s public debt structure. Around 75% of new debt issued in 2019 is dinar-denominated (from 65% last year) and there has been further repayment of more expensive US dollar-denominated bonds (totalling USD 1.75 billion).

Supported by

Inflation remains low and relatively stable, at 1.3% in August and averaging 2.1% in 2019, and inflation expectations are well anchored, which allowed the National Bank of Serbia to cut its main policy rate by 50bp since June to 2.5%.

Source; Serbian Monitor

Supported by

RELATED ARTICLES

Supported byClarion Energy
spot_img
Serbia Energy News
error: Content is protected !!