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Turkish PM Slams S&P For Downgrading His Country

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  • Turkish PM Slams S&P For Downgrading His Country

    TURKISH PM SLAMS S&P FOR DOWNGRADING HIS COUNTRY

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    May 3, 2012 - 16:53 AMT

    PanARMENIAN.Net - Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan denounced
    Standard and Poor's rating agency on Thursday, May 3, saying its
    downgrading of Turkey's outlook was clouded by an "ideological
    approach."

    Erdogan told a televised meeting in Istanbul: "This is entirely
    an ideological approach. You cannot fool anybody, you cannot fool
    Tayyip Erdogan."

    He condemned the outlook revision as "very odd" and hit back at what
    he implied was discrimination by S&P, which had improved the outlook
    of crisis-hit neighboring Greece, while lowering the perspective
    for Turkey.

    The Turkish PM also threatened not to recognize the Standard and
    Poor's as "a credible ratings agency."

    On Tuesday, Standard and Poor's revised the outlook on Turkey's
    long-term foreign and local currency sovereign credit ratings to
    stable, from positive.

    On Wednesday, the agency lifted Greece out of selective default status
    in view of a bond swap which cancelled a big slice of Greek debt.

    Explaining its view of Turkey, the agency said: "Less-buoyant external
    demand and worsening terms of trade (the price of exports compared to
    imports) have, in our view, made economic re-balancing more difficult,
    and have increased the risks to Turkey's creditworthiness given its
    high external debt and the state budget's reliance on indirect tax
    revenues."

    The agency said: "We have revised the outlook on Turkey's long-term
    sovereign credit ratings to stable from positive, reflecting our view
    that the ratings are likely to remain at the current level during
    the next 12 months."

    Finance Minister Mehmet Å~^imÅ~_ek joined the government's criticism
    and blasted the report as full of "very serious" mistakes, Hurriyet
    Daily News reported.

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