“The ratings spook is back,” leads Belgium’s De Standaard on its front page. On May 23 the Fitch agency warned Belgium that the outlook for its credit rating (currently AA+) would drop from "stable" to "negative" if a government is not formed soon. The warning comes at a good time, writes the Brussels daily, as the mission of the new formateur, Elio Di Rupo, to form a new government, officially starts on May 24. "The political crisis continues to threaten the credibility" of the country, adds De Standaard, recalling that Standard & Poor's had already warned Belgium in late 2010, provoking "a first wave of shock." "Despite their squalid responsibility in the financial crisis, one might eventually thank the assessors," suggests a columnist. "Apparently, they are uniquely able to motivate the occupants of the Rue de la Loi [seat of government and the Belgian Parliament] to get a move on." The author hopes that "the cock will not need to crow a third time. Because if by autumn the political situation remains hopeless, the rating agencies will wake them up once and for all."
A conversation with investigative reporters Stefano Valentino and Giorgio Michalopoulos, who have dissected the dark underbelly of green finance for Voxeurop and won several awards for their work.
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