Media Coverage

Rating agencies don't treat the Global South fairly

In The Conversation Daniel Cash explains how credit rating agencies wield outsized power over the financial futures of developing nations.

The financial fate of developing countries often hangs on the assessments of a few powerful credit rating agencies. UNU-CPR senior fellow researcher Daniel Cash reveals how agencies not only influence borrowing costs but have created a "credit rating impasse" where countries avoid seeking much-needed debt relief for fear of devastating default ratings.

The article identifies two key reform approaches: building credit rating capability in the Global South and enhancing countries' capacity to engage with existing agencies. He argues that South Africa's assumption of the G20 Presidency presents a valuable opportunity to advance these reforms and champion a global credit rating capacity building initiative—shifting power dynamics in global finance from crisis response to structural empowerment.

Access the full article here

Related content

Event

Development Finance through a Positive Economic Statecraft Lens

A high-level roundtable exploring how positive economic statecraft can reshape development finance.

-

Event

A New Era of International Cooperation: Reimagining Relations between the Global South and North

A high-level roundtable exploring whether middle powers can reshape global cooperation and bridge North–South divides

-

Event

Sovereign Debt Distress and Credit Ratings: Assessing Default Risk and Recovery in Africa

A roundtable examining how credit rating agencies assess sovereign risk, default and recovery in Africa.

-

Media Coverage

Countries suffer when credit rating agencies lack data: how to fix the problem at source

In The Conversation, Daniel Cash shows how data gaps skew credit ratings, raising borrowing costs and limiting fair access to finance

09 Apr 2026