National Post (National Edition)

Eurozone hits ‘speed bump’ amid global uncertaint­y

- The Associated Press

Merkel’s conservati­ve bloc, the situation in Italy is far from clear.

Two populist and stridently anti-European Union political groups — both fierce rivals — surged in Italy’s parliament­ary election Sunday at the expense of the country’s traditiona­l powers, but neither gained enough support to govern alone. That will herald a period of fraught discussion­s on forming a coalition government.

Preliminar­y results released Monday by Italy’s Interior Ministry showed the centre-right bloc winning about 37 per cent of the parliament­ary vote and the populist 5-Star Movement getting about 32 per cent. The centre-left bloc was far behind with 23 per cent support.

Both the centre-right bloc and the 5-Stars insisted Monday that they should be given the right to form a government in Italy.

Analysts said it’s too early to gauge the impact of the vote on the Italian economy, which has been improving over the past year. In 2017, it expanded by 1.5 per cent. Though that’s a full percentage point lower than the eurozone’s overall growth, it was Italy’s best performanc­e since 2010.

“The prospect of a prolonged period of domestic political uncertaint­y risks weighing on the ongoing recovery,” said Nicola Nobile, an economist at Oxford Economics. “For now, we are not making any changes to our forecast but we will revisit it once the dust has settled.”

Italy’s main stock market underperfo­rmed its peers, trading modestly lower at the close Monday. The euro currency was barely changed at $1.2335.

The longer-term worry for investors is that the Italian election may stoke renewed concern about populist forces in the eurozone, nearly a year after many of those were vanquished by the outcome of elections in the Netherland­s and France.

At this time last year, the rise of populism was considered by many economists as the gravest cloud hanging over Europe’s economic future. The great fear for those overseeing the euro currency is that a party may come into government seeking to get out of the single currency and revert to the country’s original currency.

Matteo Salvini, the head of Italy’s anti-migrant, euroskepti­c League party declared Monday that the shared European euro currency is “wrong” and is ultimately destined to end.

“It’s a wrong currency and a wrong choice” for Italy, he said.

Salvini’s party is one of the two demanding to form Italy’s next government.

Externally, the eurozone economy faces another potential headwind from Trump, who said he planned to levy penalties of 25 per cent on imported steel and 10 per cent on aluminum imports from next week. Leading EU officials have warned of retaliatio­n, which prompted Trump to warn he could go further and slap tariffs on European cars.

“This obviously raises the threat of a downwards spiral of tit-for-tat tariff barriers being imposed by the EU and the U.S., leading us to a genuine trade war, with spillover effects onto most other economies,” said Michael Every, a strategist at Rabobank Internatio­nal.

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