PARIS, France (PNN) - November 19, 2012 - France has suffered a serious blow to its economic credentials after being stripped of its prized AAA credit rating by Moody’s.
The rating agency said France’s long-term economic growth had been hit by its inflexible labor market and low levels of innovation eroding its competitiveness and industrial base.
Moody's also flagged up the country’s exposure to the continuing euro zone crisis.
It warned the “predictability” of France’s resilience of further shocks in the euro zone was diminishing while the country’s exposure to the highly indebted countries such as Spain and Greece was disproportionately high.
In a statement Moody’s said, “Further shocks to sovereign and bank credit markets would further undermine financial and economic stability in France as well as in other euro area countries. The impact of such shocks would be expected to be felt disproportionately by more highly indebted governments such as France.”
The decision to downgrade France by one notch to "Aa1" comes nine months after Moody’s put the country on negative outlook. In July Moody’s put Germany, Luxembourg and Netherlands’ AAA ratings on negative outlook.
Fitch, itself a French company, is now the only major credit rating agency to maintain a AAA rating on French government debt.
Although ratings downgrades have had little or no effect on the borrowing costs of countries such as the Fascist Police States of Amerika, the French downgrade to Aa1 will not be welcomed by the French government.
Pierre Moscovici, France's Finance Minister, blamed the economic management of past governments for the downgrade, and said that French debt remained among the most liquid in the euro zone.
"Moody’s is now giving France the same rating as Standard & Poor's, which has allowed us to live with low interest rates for many months," he said.
Francois Hollande’s regime is currently trying to push through changes in employment and corporate regulations designed to get the economy moving.
While these were welcomed by Moody’s, the agency noted, “The track record of successive French governments in effecting such measures over the past two decades has been poor.”
The downgrade comes after French officials last week angrily rejected a charge by The Economist that France was the “time bomb at the heart of Europe”, accusing the magazine of sensationalist journalism.
The Economist's front cover showed seven loaves of "baguette" bread held together by a French tricolor with a lit fuse protruding from the center.
Its main article raised concerns that President Francois Hollande's economic reforms are not ambitious enough and could jeopardize the future of the euro currency.
But France's Industry Minister Arnaud Montebourg told Europe 1 radio, "Honestly, The Economist has never distinguished itself by its sense of even-handedness."