
Scene of Davos in the Swiss Alps - notice the snow...job?
Lies and Damned Lies….oh and Truth
What? Wait! Blog
Jon Pelto
January 20, 2012
I have seen some amazing political statements in my time.
I’ve seen lies and even damned lies….
But I have to say I’ve never seen something like what Ben Barnes put
out today.
Our state is in deep trouble.
For a year now I’ve written about these problems and have watched the
reaction from people who know the truth.
Scorn….
Scorn and denial….
Today, one of the rating agencies has done nothing other than speak the
truth.
And the official response is scorn and a statement that is so absurd
that it makes one wonder who could have written it.
Do they really not understand what we face….or do they think that we
are so stupid that we will not understand and be persuaded by lies and
damn lies.
Read the statement – and then read it again.
Nothing could make the problem clearer.
Denial is the greatest threat we face.
And now we see just how far up the chain of command it goes.
OPM
SECRETARY BENJAMIN BARNES
STATEMENT ON MOODY’S RATING CHANGE
(HARTFORD, CT) – Benjamin Barnes, Governor Dannel P. Malloy’s
Secretary
of the Office of Policy and Management, today released the following
statement about the Moody’s change to the state’s bond rating:
Moody’s is wrong in its analysis of the state’s finances, and
wrong to
change Connecticut’s credit rating. Connecticut has done all the right
things to shore up our finances, and Moody’s has responded with a
downgrade intended to satisfy their internal corporate need to deflect
attention from their historic lack of credibility.
Connecticut has always paid its debt, and remains an attractive
issuer
of public debt. Investors appreciate Connecticut’s strong income
levels, conservative debt management practices, and fiscally
conservative leadership.
Moody’s lowered the rating for Connecticut below where it has
been
since April 2010 even though Connecticut’s fiscal health has
significantly improved during that period. Recall that in 2010
Connecticut faced looming multi-billion deficits into the future, had
pension funding ratios in the low 40s, had spent the entire rainy day
fund, and was in the middle of a series of budgetary gimmicks which
Governor Malloy has spent his first year in office undoing.
Today, we have a structurally balance budget, have converted to
GAAP,
have fully funded our current pension obligations and seen their
funding ratio rise, have negotiated significant pension benefit
concessions from organized labor, have negotiated significant employee
contributions to retiree health benefits, and have begun to add jobs to
the state economy.
Moody’s Investor Service decision today to lower their rating of
Connecticut’s General Obligation debt from Aa2 (negative) to Aa3
(stable) is unfortunate. It reflects their continued reaction to their
central involvement in the financial scandals that led to the deepest
recession since the Great Depression. Coming on the eve of our budget
release, without an imminent bond sale, suggests that the move is
motivated by factors other than Connecticut’s creditworthiness.
Moody’s, which receives approximately $170,000 per year in fees
from
the State for their bond rating services, is one of three agencies that
rate Connecticut debt. The others, Standard & Poor’s and Fitch,
continue to rate Connecticut debt as AA (equivalent to Aa2 from
Moody’s.)