The Borneo Post

Italian parliament passes budget in confidence vote, after EU deal

-

ROME: The Italian parliament passed the government’s 2019 budget just ahead of an end-year deadline, following last week’s deal with the European Commission which calmed financial markets and averted a risk of fines against Rome.

Italy re- drafted the budget and cut the deficit next year to 2.04 per cent of gross domestic product after Brussels rejected its original target of 2.4 per cent, saying it broke EU fiscal rules.

This year’s deficit is seen at 1.9 per cent.

The budget, presented to parliament in October, overcame its final hurdle on Saturday when the government comfortabl­y won a vote of confidence on the bill in the Chamber of Deputies by 327 to 228. The confidence motion marked the end of an acrimoniou­s debate in which opposition lawmakers complained that the last-minute deal with Brussels meant they had no time to properly assess or debate the amended package of measures.

A few hundred supporters of the centre-left Democratic Party protested outside parliament.

The budget’s flagship policies, pushed through by the coalition of the anti- establishm­ent 5- Star Movement and the right-wing League, are a new income support scheme known as the “citizens’ wage” and a reduction in the retirement age.

Other measures include tax cuts for the self- employed, higher taxes on banks, insurers and gambling companies, and a partial amnesty that allows low- earners to settle tax disputes with the authoritie­s by paying a limited sum.

Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte called the budget “the first step of a broad and ambitious plan of reform” which would “turn Italy inside out like a sock” and finally boost its chronicall­y sluggish economic growth.

As part of the deal with the EU, the government, which took office in June, lowered its GDP growth forecast for next year to one per cent from a previous projection of 1.5 per cent, which was widely considered unrealisti­c. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Italy opposition protests outside parliament against government budget. The Italian parliament passed the government’s 2019 budget just ahead of an end-year deadline, following last week’s deal with the European Commission which calmed financial markets and averted a risk of fines against Rome. — Reuters photo
Italy opposition protests outside parliament against government budget. The Italian parliament passed the government’s 2019 budget just ahead of an end-year deadline, following last week’s deal with the European Commission which calmed financial markets and averted a risk of fines against Rome. — Reuters photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia