Moody’s says Chicago’s 2025 budget doesn’t change credit trajectory
3 min readThe 2025 budget Chicago’s City Council passed this month will not materially alter the city’s credit profile, Moody’s Ratings said in a Monday statement.
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Moody’s rates Chicago Baa3 with a positive outlook.
“The fiscal 2025 budget favorably continues the city’s substantially improved pension funding practices,” said Moody’s Vice President David Levett. “The city’s increase in pension funding levels has been a key driver of its improving credit profile.”
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S&P rates the city BBB-plus. KBRA rates it A. Fitch Ratings assigns Chicago an A-minus rating with a stable outlook, after
Moody’s Levett noted that while the city has broad legal flexibility to raise revenue, its de facto revenue increases in recent years “have not been sufficient to prevent the city from facing perennial budgetary challenges as reflected in an especially difficult fiscal 2025 budget process.
“The city is likely to face another difficult budget process next year given the use of some one-time budget maneuvers, growing expenses and high fixed costs,” he added. “While the city has strong legal flexibility to raise revenue… the practical ability to keep boosting resources may be dwindling. Officials are no longer willing to continue increasing the property tax levy, even to keep pace with inflation.”
With significant cuts unlikely due to the mayor’s pledge of no layoffs, the need to preserve public safety services and high fixed costs, Moody’s said the city must secure new revenue sources, most of which would require action from the state government.
But any new revenue streams passed by the legislature — such as an expansion of the sales tax to services — would meet with high demand from multiple units of local government in Chicago. The services tax has
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The Board of Education, which is controlled by Mayor Brandon Johnson’s allies and appointees, Friday fired the district’s CEO, who had resisted having the mostly junk-rated school district take on a loan to fund raises and benefits for staff.
Still, Moody’s stressed that the city’s home rule status is a key credit strength and provides substantial flexibility.
And Levett noted, “The city has a solid financial position, with a general fund balance that remains well above pre-pandemic levels, providing the city with some cushion as it seeks to resolve its ongoing budgetary challenges.”
Moody’s over time has typically taken the most critical view among the rating agencies of Chicago’s unfunded pension obligations, ultimately
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