AI driving credit risk, may threaten jobs and tax revenues in developed economies: Fitch
New Delhi, July 1
Artificial intelligence and heavy digital infrastructure spending are emerging as key global credit risks, with AI expected to boost efficiency but also threaten jobs and tax revenues, particularly in developed economies, says Fitch Ratings.
According to Fitch, investors and official-sector participants across Hong Kong, Seoul, Singapore and Tokyo have centred their discussions on AI disruption, the rapid growth of private credit and sovereign risk.
Investors are keeping a close watch on execution risks, elevated capex, pricing pressure and potential contagion from equity markets to credit markets, with bespoke hyperscaler contracts and tighter funding conditions increasing risks.
Fitch said private credit, on its own, is unlikely to pose a systemic financial risk. However, investors have raised concerns over growing competition for assets and limited transparency due to increasingly complex fund financing structures, including net asset value (NAV) loans, which can obscure the true extent of leverage and creditor rankings.
The agency also noted that returns are coming under pressure as more capital flows into the asset class in search of higher yields.
According to Fitch, direct lending has recorded higher default rates than collateralised loan obligations (CLOs), although recovery rates have remained relatively strong. "Portfolio transparency and manager selection are critical for managing these risks, yet Asia-based investors face limited disclosure on US middle-market borrowers," it said.
Furthermore, the ratings agency flagged that increased participation by retail investors and retirement-account participation could raise liquidity and valuation risks, especially if slower asset exits delay cash returns and managers rely on fresh inflows for liquidity.
While AI will likely drive efficiency gains, it could also lead to job losses and weaken tax revenues, particularly in developed economies.
"We believe AI will drive efficiency gains, but flag risks from labour displacement and eroding tax bases, especially in developed markets," it said.
Fitch further added that while macro volatility, driven by Gulf tensions and supply-chain disruptions, persists, investor focus has shifted from immediate systemic shocks to secondary effects following the proposed peace deal. It added that the direct credit impact has so far been modest, but warned risks could resurface if the agreement falters and tensions escalate again.
— ANI
Reader Comments
Honestly, this feels like a double-edged sword. Yes, AI will boost efficiency and maybe even help India's digital infrastructure grow, but the tax revenue loss in developed markets could mean less global demand for our exports. Also, private credit risks—aren't we seeing similar issues with NBFCs in India? Regulators need to keep a close watch on NAV loans and transparency.
Interesting that Fitch is highlighting AI as a credit risk for developed economies. From an Indian perspective, our strength has always been our young population and adaptability. If we invest in AI education and create new jobs around AI—like data annotation, AI ethics, etc.—we might actually come out ahead. But the government must ensure social safety nets for those displaced.
I work in the financial sector in Mumbai, and we're already seeing AI tools being used for credit risk assessment. It's efficient but scary—one wrong algorithm and thousands of loan applications could be rejected unfairly. Fitch's point about limited transparency in private credit is spot on. India should ensure our AI adoption in banking follows strict ethical guidelines.
As an American living in India for work, I see both sides. AI is definitely disrupting my home country's job market, but here in India, the IT sector is already pivoting to AI-enabled services. The key is whether India can capture the value chain—if we just become the back office for AI, we'll miss out on higher-value jobs. Fitch's warning about tax bases is valid globally.
Fitch is basically saying what many of us have feared—
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