The Borneo Post

Italy in talks with EU over budget deficit

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MILAN: Italy is in discussion­s with the European Commission to try to prevent Brussels imposing penalties over Rome’s management of its public finances, sources close to the talks said.

Italy was one of eight eurozone countries warned in November that they could face fines and restricted access to funds from Brussels over their failure to stick to the EU’s Stability Pact rules.

The daily La Repubblica said Monday the European Commission last week asked the government to find 3.4 billion euros (US$3.6 billion), or 0.2 per cent of GDP, in order to avoid the start of an infringeme­nt procedure.

“Brussels has reminded us that Italy’s debt is too high. We all know it”, Finance Minister Pier Carlo Padoan told Rai television, without revealing details of what the Commission in demanding.

“We will see if there is a need to take additional measures to meet the objectives. But the best way to bring down debt is growth, so growth is a priority for the government.”

The government adopted a 2017 budget that foresees a budget deficit of 2.3 per cent of GDP, significan­tly higher than the 1.8 per cent level it had promised to deliver earlier last year, at a time when Italy’s public debt is the second highest in the EU at 133 per cent of GDP.

The government wants costs incurred over the migrant crisis and recent earthquake­s stripped out of the calculatio­n of how Italy is doing against the standards set by the EU.

After two years of recession, Italy’s economy grew 0.1 per cent in 2014 and 0.7 per cent in 2015. It forecasts that will rise to 0.8 per cent in 2016 and 1.0 per cent this year.

“The programme of privatisat­ions will restart this year and we are expecting higher growth than in 2016,” said Padoan.

A spokesman for the European Commission declined to comment. — AFP

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