Thirteen years ago, Detroit was the poster child for municipal collapse, with underfunded pensions, a shrinking tax base, and billions in debt that the city had no clear path out of. This week, a federal judge closed the bankruptcy case for good, ending a process that took longer than the original 2014 exit headlines suggested.
The financial scoreboard now tells a very different story than it did in 2013.
What Actually Closed This Week
U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Thomas Tucker granted the city's motion for a final decree, formally ending the case after determining the administration of the bankruptcy was complete. That sign-off came after Detroit completed a final distribution of roughly $10 million tied to accrued interest on "Class 14 B notes," the recovery bonds issued to unsecured creditors during the restructuring.
Detroit filed for Chapter 9 protection in July 2013 under a state-appointed emergency manager after years of population decline, shrinking tax revenues, and rising pension liabilities pushed the city into insolvency. The city officially exited bankruptcy in late 2014 under a plan that became a national case study, but the case itself stayed open while final administrative work continued.
The restructuring wiped out roughly $7 billion in debt and reworked another $3 billion, according to the city, which freed up an estimated $150 million a year for actual services like police, fire, and infrastructure.
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The Credit Score Tells The Whole Story
A day before the case officially closed, S&P Global Ratings upgraded Detroit's general obligation bond rating to BBB+ from BBB. That's investment grade, the kind of rating that lets a city borrow on normal terms again, and S&P cited the city's "sustained strong financial performance and governance conditions."
Moody's pointed to the same thing, noting Detroit had strengthened its "financial resiliency" with strong reserves and improved fiscal management since 2014. Mayor Mary Sheffield said the milestone is proof that Detroit "has its financial house in order."
The city now has 12 consecutive balanced budgets, reserve funds topping $500 million, and is back at investment-grade status.
What To Watch
The agencies still flagged risks, with both S&P and Moody's warning that Detroit remains exposed to the auto sector, inflation, and long-term pension obligations. Those are the same forces that broke the city the first time.
The pension issue is the one to watch most closely, since the 2014 plan trimmed retiree benefits and shifted the city onto a stricter funding schedule that still has decades to run. If auto employment slips again, the income tax base that funds those payments slips with it.
Whether the city's reserves can absorb the next downturn is the real test of the comeback, and the next recession will tell us if the fix actually held.
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