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Can an African Credit Rating Agency overcome investor scepticism?
NG🏛️ Políticahace 23 h

Can an African Credit Rating Agency overcome investor scepticism?

Africa faces challenges due to perceived biases in global credit rating agencies, which assign lower ratings to many African nations compared to developed countries. This has led to higher borrowing costs and hindered development. To address this, the African Union established the Africa Credit Rating Agency (AfCRA) in Mauritius in 2025. The agency aims to provide more equitable assessments tailored to African economies. Critics argue that current global rating standards, such as those used by S&P, Moody’s, and Fitch, may disadvantage African countries through subjective metrics like institutional strength and GDP per capita. Reports suggest that these criteria disproportionately penalize poorer nations, making it harder for them to improve their credit ratings without significant economic growth.

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Premium Times Nigeria logoPremium Times NigeriaIndependienteCentroVeracidad 85Objetividad 75hace 23 h
Can an African Credit Rating Agency overcome investor scepticism?

Africa faces challenges due to perceived biases in global credit rating agencies, which assign lower ratings to many African nations compared to developed countries. This has led to higher borrowing costs and hindered development. To address this, the African Union established the Africa Credit Rating Agency (AfCRA) in Mauritius in 2025. The agency aims to provide more equitable assessments tailored to African economies. Critics argue that current global rating standards, such as those used by S&P, Moody’s, and Fitch, may disadvantage African countries through subjective metrics like institutional strength and GDP per capita. Reports suggest that these criteria disproportionately penalize poorer nations, making it harder for them to improve their credit ratings without significant economic growth.

Lectura del sesgo (Centro): The article presents both perspectives—African concerns about bias in global credit ratings and the counterargument from the Big Three agencies—that the ratings are based on standardized criteria. It cites reports from independent organizations and does not favor one side over the other in its tone,

Por qué estas puntuaciones (Veracidad 85 · Objetividad 75): Factuality is high as the article accurately reports the establishment of AfCRA and provides context on current credit ratings of African nations. It acknowledges differing perspectives on whether the Big Three exhibit bias. Objectivity is moderate as the article presents both sides but leans slight

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