European Commission Demands Changes to Italy Budget
The European
Commission has told Italy to revise its budget, an unprecedented move with
regard to an EU member state.
The
Commission is worried about the impact of higher spending on already high
levels of debt in Italy, the eurozone's third-biggest economy.
Italy's
governing populist parties have vowed to push ahead with campaign promises
including a minimum income for the unemployed.
The country
now has three weeks to submit a new, draft budget to Brussels.
The
Commission said the first draft represented a "particularly serious
non-compliance" with its recommendations.
The
Commission Vice-President for the euro, Valdis Dombrovskis, said Italy's
response to the commission's concerns was "not sufficient" to assuage
fears - and the euro's rules were the same for everybody.
"This
is the first Italian budget that the EU doesn't like," wrote Deputy Prime
Minister Luigi Di Maio on Facebook. "No surprise: This is the first Italian
budget written in Rome and not in Brussels!"
His
co-deputy PM Matteo Salvini added: "This doesn't change anything."
"They're
not attacking a government but a people. These are things that will anger
Italians even more," he said.
The new
government has vowed to "end poverty" with a minimum income for the
unemployed.
Other
measures include tax cuts and scrapping extensions to the retirement age -
fulfilling several key campaign promises from the election in March.
A defiant
Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte insisted earlier that the budget deficit would go
no higher than 2.4% of GDP, although the target is three times than that of the
previous government.
The
government argues that servicing its debt of 131% of national output - second
only to bailed-out Greece - would hurt Italians, who have still not recovered
from the decade-old financial crisis.
Italy's
economy is still smaller than it was in 2008. The governing League and Five
Star parties argue an increase in spending would kick-start growth.
Italy' has
put itself on a collision course with the EU. The dispute takes the eurozone
into uncharted waters.
The
authorities in Brussels have the right to reject a budget and demand new
proposals - and to impose fines - if its requests are ignored.
This is the
first time they've gone as far as this down that road and the EU has to weigh
the prospect of taking firm measures to discourage other eurozone states from
breaking the rules against the prospect of a drawn-out conflict with one of its
largest member states at a time when its political energies are already
absorbed by Brexit.
The Italian
government says its measures are necessary to restore growth and that it has no
intention of backing down.
Italy's
neutral Finance Minister, Giovanni Tria, and international observers had hoped
the country would keep its deficit under 2% of GDP - and perhaps as low as
1.6%.
While 2.4%
falls well short of the 3% deficit limit under eurozone rules, Italy's debt
level is alarming.
"For
the first time the Commission is obliged to request a euro area country to
revise its draft budgetary plan but we see no alternative than to request the
Italian authorities to do so," Mr Dombrovskis said.
He pointed
out that Italian taxpayers were having to spend as much servicing the national
debt as on education.
"Breaking
rules can appear tempting at the first look - it can provide the illusion of
breaking free," he said.
"It is
tempting to try and cure debt with more debt. At some point, the debt weighs
too heavy... you end up having no freedom at all."
After Italy
announced its draft budget last month, weeks of market turmoil followed.
Before the
Commission announced its rejection of the Italian budget on Tuesday, European
shares fell to their lowest levels in nearly two years.
Following
the announcement, the Italy-Germany 10-year bond yield gap, widely used as a
relative yardstick of Italy's position on the markets, widened to a new high of
314 points.
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-europe-
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