Oman Daily Observer

EU moves to discipline Italy over budget, Rome stays defiant

ALARM IN EURO ZONE: Commission declares Italy in breach of EU rules on debt

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BRUSSELS/ROME: The European Commission took the first step on Wednesday towards disciplini­ng Italy over its expansiona­ry 2019 budget after Rome refused to change it, raising the stakes in a dispute that has alarmed the whole euro zone and could eventually lead to fines.

The Commission said the Italian draft raised the 2019 structural deficit, which excludes one-offs and business cycle swings, by 1.0 per cent of gross domestic product rather than cut it by 0.6 per cent as required by EU laws.

It also failed to trim Italy’s huge public debt in “a particular­ly serious case of non-compliance” with the rules, the Commission said, warranting the launch of an excessive deficit procedure.

Italy’s debt, at 131 per cent of GDP, is proportion­ally the second highest in the euro zone after Greece’s. Under EU rules it should be falling every year towards 60 per cent, but the Commission said it would be stable for the next two years.

“The opening of a debt-based excessive deficit procedure is thus warranted,” Commission Vice President Valdis Dombrovski­s told a news conference. “In a situation of very high debt, Italy is essentiall­y planning significan­t additional borrowing, instead of the necessary fiscal prudence.”

Italy believes its borrow-and-spend policy — which the Commission regards as profligate — would boost economic growth, helping reduce the country’s debt ratio, while reducing unemployme­nt, which was at 9.7 per cent in August.

Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte, scheduled to meet Commission President Jeanclaude Juncker on Saturday, said on Wednesday the government was convinced the budget was excellent and in the interest of Italy and Europe.

But with memories of the sovereign debt crisis that nearly destroyed the euro still fresh, the Commission noted — like all euro zone finance ministers this month — that trouble in Italy could affect all the others sharing the single currency.

The 2019 budget would not help Italy grow faster either.

“The impact of this budget on growth is likely to be negative in our view. It does not contain significan­t measures to boost potential growth, possibly the opposite,” Dombrovski­s said. “With what the Italian government has put on the table, we see a risk of the country sleepwalki­ng into

If May’s government falls, Mcdonnell, Labour Party’s finance minister-in-waiting, is hoping his party can win power without holding an election

instabilit­y.”

The excessive deficit procedure could result in fines against Italy, though these have so far never been levied against any euro zone country.

In Rome, the government of the right-wing League and the anti-establishm­ent 5-Star Movement remained defiant.

“We are convinced about the numbers in our budget. We will talk about it in a year’s time,” Deputy Prime Minister and League leader Matteo Salvini told reporters. Fines against Italy would be “disrespect­ful,” he added.

But before any financial

THE COMMISSION SAID THE ITALIAN DRAFT RAISED THE 2019 STRUCTURAL DEFICIT, WHICH EXCLUDES ONE-OFFS AND BUSINESS CYCLE SWINGS, BY 1.0 PER CENT OF GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT RATHER THAN CUT IT BY 0.6 PER CENT AS REQUIRED BY EU LAWS

sanctions, the Commission needs to get backing for its view from the EU’S deputy finance ministers in the next two weeks, and then from the finance ministers, probably at their next meeting in January.

This is highly likely, given the joint statement of all euro zone finance ministers that backed up the Commission against Italy earlier in November.

In December, the Commission will prepare recommenda­tions for Italy to cut the debt and a deadline to take action within three to six months to be endorsed by ministers in January. Only if Italy then fails to comply would financial sanctions kick in.

 ?? — Reuters File Photo ?? Interior Minister Matteo Salvini speaks to the media at the Senate in Rome.
— Reuters File Photo Interior Minister Matteo Salvini speaks to the media at the Senate in Rome.

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