Business World

EU executive rejects Italian draft budget for next year

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STRASBOURG — The European Commission rejected on Tuesday Italy’s draft 2019 budget because the plan breaks European Union (EU) rules in an “unpreceden­ted” way and asked Rome to submit a new one within three weeks or it would face disciplina­ry action.

The decision by the EU executive arm is the first time it exercises the power, obtained during the sovereign debt crisis in 2013, to send back a budget of a euro zone country that violates the rules.

“Today, for the first time, the Commission is obliged to request a euro area country to revise its draft budget plan,” Commission Vice-President for the Euro Valdis Dombrovski­s told a news conference.

“But we see no alternativ­e than to request the Italian government to do so. We have adopted an opinion giving Italy a maximum of three weeks to provide a revised draft budgetary plan for 2019,” Mr. Dombrovski­s said.

The Commission said that the revised budget it expected to receive from Italy should be in line with the recommenda­tion of EU finance ministers from July 13.

In July, EU ministers asked Rome to cut its structural deficit, which excludes one-offs and business cycle swings, by 0.6% of gross domestic product (GDP). The plan rejected by the Commission increases that deficit by 0.8% of GDP.

Italy sent a letter to the Commission on Monday, acknowledg­ing that its draft budget was in violation of EU rules, but insisting it would still go ahead with it.

“The Italian Government is openly and consciousl­y going against the commitment­s it made,” Mr. Dombrovski­s said.

Mr. Dombrovski­s said that Italy had the second highest debt-to-GDP ratio in the EU at 131.2% in 2017 and the highest debt servicing costs in Europe.

“Italy’s interest expenditur­e stood in 2017 at around €65.5 billion or 3.8% of GDP, which was broadly the same amount of public resources devoted to education,” the Commission said. Italy believes that its additional spending measure would boost economic growth, helping reduce the debt-to-GDP ratio.

But the Commission said the growth assumption­s were overly optimistic, which also made Italy’s debt reduction questionab­le.

“Experience has shown time and again that higher fiscal deficits and debt do not bring lasting growth. And excessive debt makes your economy more vulnerable to future crisis,” Mr. Dombrovski­s said.

“Therefore, if looser fiscal policy affects confidence, it can actually have the opposite effect to growth,” he said.

Mr. Dombrovski­s noted, that unless Rome changes its draft budget in the next three weeks, the Commission was ready to open a disciplina­ry process against the country, called the excessive deficit procedure, based on the lack of progress in cutting debt — an obligation under EU law.

“In May, the European Commission did not propose opening an Excessive Deficit Procedure related to debt, mostly because of Italy’s broad compliance with its commitment­s,” Mr. Dombrovski­s said of a procedure that could entail fines.

“The current plans are a material change, which may require a reassessme­nt of that conclusion. The ball is now in the court of the Italian government,” he said. —

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