Jump to navigation

Ratings plan gets serious

An AU official says a credit agency catering to the needs of the continent’s sovereign borrowers will be ready by next year

An Africa credit rating agency will start work in 2025, a senior African Union official has told reporters.

The new body – which had initially been expected to open its doors in late 2024 – will not be an institution linked to the African Union but will be independent and professional, said Development, Trade, Tourism, Industry and Minerals Commissioner Albert Muchanga. The plan for an African rating agency has been kicking around for several years and the project has the support of the African Development Bank, African Export-Import Bank and the United Nations Development Programme (AC Vol 65 No 12, Adesina urges the bank to go private).

The project is at its ‘operationalisation’ phase, said Muchanga, with officials now tasked with ‘coming up with the final work plan to ensure that we are able to roll it out,’ he said.

The main reason for trying to set up a new body is that the three dominant ratings agencies: Moody’s, Fitch, and S&P Global – do not fairly assess the risk of lending to African countries and that significant savings could be made if credit ratings were based on less subjective assessments (Dispatches 16/4/24, Africa bids to enter the ratings war).

There are still doubts about the new agency’s credibility and the low level of funding – around US$1 million – that has been allocated to it for 2025.



Related Articles

Making multilateralism work by other means

UN Secretary-General António Guterres’s Summit of the Future boosted reforms and delivered some wins for Africa

It bears the hallmarks of a grandiosity guaranteed to rile isolationists gearing up for the fight of their lives in the United States presidential election on 5 November....

READ FOR FREE

Negotiating African risk

After underestimating the challenges facing their African investments, Chinese companies are looking for new ways to protect their projects and personnel

'China wholeheartedly welcomed by Africa,’ crowed the state-owned China Daily on 5 March. Yet China’s ever-growing relations with the continent face a complex environment of political and economic...


 A web of disinformation

A nascent effort to set up a ‘Pan African Intelligence Agency’, led by the same group linked to the creation of the ‘Russosphere’ French-language disinformation campaign targeting Africa,...


Peasants against the pacts

West African small farmers' organisations oppose the European Union's Economic Partnership Agreement with the Economic Community of West African States (Ecowas). The Ouagadougou-based Réseau des organisations paysannes et...