On August 1, Fitch, one of the three major credit rating agencies, downgraded the U.S. credit rating amid yet another debt-limit standoff, removing the U.S. government from the list of risk-free borrowers. In doing so, it made good on the warning it issued during the last debt-limit fight in May 2023, when it put the U.S.’s AAA rating on negative watch. Even S&P, another of the major credit rating agencies, warned at that time: “The last-minute negotiated compromise is likely, but…the risk of a technical default has increased.” Fitch clarified the reasoning for its August 1 downgrade in a statement: “[The] repeated debt-limit political standoffs and last-minute resolutions have eroded confidence in fiscal management.” The ensuing rout in global financial markets once again shone a spotlight on the U.S.’s repeated debt-ceiling crises.
How Companies Should Prepare for Repeated Debt-Ceiling Standoffs
They’re not just political gimmicks.
August 22, 2023

Illustration by Nate Kitch
Summary.
Since a major realignment of the U.S.’s two-party political system is unlikely, we can expect partisan conflict and the subsequent debt-ceiling standoffs to continue for the foreseeable future. Corporate managers must not regard debt-ceiling crises as just political gimmicks, as they repeatedly and predictably affect firm profitability, growth prospects, and uncertainty. Managers must proactively gather information, anticipate, plan, and allocate resources in preparation of each crisis. They must be able to capitalize on opportunities that arise from each standoff and be prepared to weather each storm.