Kuwait Times

Moody’s downgrades Italy credit rating on debt, deficit concerns

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MILAN: Moody’s has cut Italy’s credit rating by a notch over concerns about plans for larger deficits and the high public debt load as the country’s populist government clashes with Brussels over its budget.

The European Commission formally warned Italy late Thursday that its budget plans for 2019 are a serious concern, launching a high-stakes process that could see Rome hit with unpreceden­ted sanctions for breaking commitment­s to Brussels. At the heart of the concerns is Italy’s public debt, which amounts to 2.3 trillion euros, or 131 percent of Gross Domestic Product (GDP), the highest rate in the eurozone after Greece.

Brussels has demanded Italy cut spending and reduce its public deficit in order to pare down its debt pile. But the country’s populist coalition government has done the opposite — offering a draft budget that boosted overall spending. The downgrade from Moody’s — from Baa2 to Baa3 with a stable outlook —

is the latest move by internatio­nal financial watchdogs sounding the alarm over Italy’s economic health.

The decision cited “material weakening in Italy’s fiscal strength, with the government targeting higher budget deficits for the coming years,” as well as debt holding near the current 130 percent of GDP “rather than start trending down as previously expected”. And Moody’s said “stalling of plans for structural economic and fiscal reforms” also had negative implicatio­ns for the country’s growth outlook and debt.

Italy’s deficit is now projected at 2.4 percent of GDP, far higher than the 0.8 percent estimate given by the earlier centre-right government. Stinging criticism

The budget drew stinging criticism from the EU’s top economic affairs officials, who penned a letter to Rome describing the plans as “unpreceden­ted” and warning that Brussels does not rule out rejecting the entire budget. Aimed at fulfilling electoral promises, Italy’s planned spending boost is what the government calls its “people’s budget”.

It includes a series of pension and tax changes that will cost 37 billion euros ($43 billion), of which 22 billion will be paid for by expanding the deficit. “Following a temporary lift to growth due to the expansiona­ry fiscal policy, the rating agency expects growth to fall back to its trend rate of around one percent,” Moody’s said.

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