US Credit Standing Faces Pressure From Debt, Fiscal Tensions
By Patience Ikpeme
DataPro has said the United States has lost its long-held status as a unanimous triple-A credit borrower, citing rising debt and recurring political clashes as key factors behind the shift.
In its Monthly Rating Brief for May, the Nigerian technology-driven credit rating agency said the US had for years been viewed as the world’s most dependable borrower, with confidence in its repayment strength rarely questioned.Although the country still holds a triple-A rating from at least one major global rating institution, DataPro noted that other agencies now place it just below the highest credit tier.
The agency was quick to stress that the development should not be interpreted as a sign of economic fragility or an increased risk of default. Instead, it said the revision reflects growing unease over fiscal discipline, debt accumulation and governance patterns.
According to DataPro, the main concern is the continued rise in government debt relative to the size of the economy. It said US spending has repeatedly exceeded revenue over the years, leading to persistent fiscal deficits.
The agency linked this trend to several long-term pressures, including emergency stimulus spending during periods of crisis, the rising cost of entitlement schemes such as healthcare and pensions, and higher interest bills as borrowing costs climb globally.
While it acknowledged that the US economy remains robust and highly adaptable, DataPro warned that the country’s debt trajectory raises questions about long-term fiscal sustainability.Political deadlock over spending and borrowing limits also remains a major factor, the agency said.
It noted that repeated debates over the debt ceiling have, on several occasions, pushed the government close to funding disruption, even though the US has continued to meet all its obligations.DataPro said that even the threat of delay in borrowing approvals can affect how creditworthiness is assessed, because it weakens confidence in policy stability.
Another issue highlighted by the agency is the shrinking flexibility in federal finances. A larger share of government expenditure is now tied to mandatory commitments and debt servicing, leaving less room for discretionary policy choices.This, it said, creates three long-term constraints: weaker capacity to absorb future economic shocks, higher debt servicing costs and greater difficulty in reducing deficits without broad political cooperation.
The agency also raised concerns about governance and policy predictability. While US institutions remain strong and globally respected, it said credit analysts are paying closer attention to how stable and consistent fiscal decisions are over time.
DataPro pointed to recurring last-minute budget negotiations, deepening political polarisation and uncertainty around long-term reforms as some of the issues influencing credit perceptions.Still, it emphasised that this is not a case of institutional collapse, but rather a decline in policy stability compared with historical norms.
Despite the pressures, the US remains one of the strongest sovereign borrowers globally, supported by the size and diversity of its economy, the dominance of the dollar, deep capital markets and credible monetary policy backed by an independent central bank.
DataPro concluded that the erosion of unanimous AAA status reflects concerns over fiscal management and political predictability, rather than doubts about America’s economic strength or its ability to honour debt obligations.
