
Moody’s also affirmed the Baa3 long-term issuer, senior unsecured and senior unsecured MTN programme ratings – which maintains Romania’s sovereign rating on the verge of the junk region.
The affirmation of Romania’s Baa3 rating reflects the country’s moderate institutions and governance strength, Moody’s explains.
Romania’s rating depends on the public finances (fiscal imbalance) seen by Moody’s as linked to “a determined policy response in relation to pension and public administration reforms” and the current account deficit regarded in connection with its “stable financing sources (FDI, equity, capital account).”
Upward pressure will result if the Romanian Government’s balance sheet strengthens faster than Moody’s currently anticipates.
Moody’s forecasts a deficit of 6.8% of GDP in 2022 (under ESA, meaning accrual basis – from 8.2% of GDP in 2021), 5.6% of GDP in 2023 and 4.5% of GDP in 2024. Although declining, the forecasted deficits will thus remain above the debt stabilizing threshold over the next three years.
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