The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Italy and EU reach budget truce as Rome backs down

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BRUSSELS: The EU and Italy called a truce in their bitter row over Rome’s disputed 2019 budget, as the populist government agreed to put off signature reforms.

In a historic first, in October the European Commission rejected Italy’s big-spending budget, which promised a universal basic income and scrapped pension reform.

In that deal, Italy agreed to back down on both of its landmark measures, and is now committed to not adding to its colossal twotrillio­n euro debt load next year.

“Intensive negotiatio­ns over the last two weeks have resulted in a solution for 2019,” EU Commission vice-president Valdis Dombrovski­s told reporters in Brussels.

“Let’s be clear: the solution is not ideal. But it avoids opening the excessive deficit procedure at this stage,” he added, referring to a process that could result in major fines for a member country.

To find a compromise, Brussels offered to show flexibilit­y in appraising the budget in light of ‘exceptiona­l circumstan­ces’, including the modernisat­ion of infrastruc­ture after a tragic bridge collapse in Genoa last August.

Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte told senators in Rome that the deal in no way reneged on his government’s promises but instead offered a solution ‘that is good for Italians and also satisfacto­ry for Europe’.

Deputy Prime Minister Luigi Di Maio, the head of the populist Five Star Movement, hailed a success ‘without ever betraying the Italian people’. The EU and Italy negotiated intensely in recent days with both sides worried that a protracted feud would alarm the markets and ignite a debt crisis in the eurozone’s third biggest economy.

The situation grew politicall­y thornier for Brussels after France last week announced a new wave of spending for 2019 that will also break EU rules on public spending.

This came in response to ‘yellow vest’ protests that forced French President Emmanuel Macron to turn away from EU-backed belttighte­ning ahead of European elections next year.

Italy and others complain that powerful France receives special treatment on its budget plans by the EU Commission. Without the compromise, Italy would have ultimately faced a fine of up to 0.2 per cent of the nation’s GDP after a long and rancorous process with its eurozone partners.

The talks centred on the socalled structural deficit, which includes all public spending minus debt payments.

Italy’s first budget was set to blow through commitment­s made by the previous government, with a deteriorat­ion to a 0.8 of GDP structural deficit, which would require Rome raising even more debt. The deal on Wednesday anticipate­s that this would now be balanced, with the overall deficit target lowered to 2.04 per cent of GDP.

In a television broadcast, Economy Minister Giovanni Tria said the revised pension and welfare measures would now start rolling out from April.

Italy’s public debt is a big problem and now sits at a huge 2.3 trillion euros (US$2.6 trillion), or 131 per cent of Italy’s GDP – way above the 60 per cent EU ceiling.

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