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						ECB's Draghi told Italy's Tria to stick to fiscal 
						discipline beyond EU rules: sources
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		 [November 07, 2018] 
		 By Francesco Guarascio 
 BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The president of the 
		European Central Bank told the Italian finance minister at a closed-door 
		meeting that Italy's high debt requires a degree of fiscal discipline 
		that goes beyond what is mandated by EU regulations, two EU sources 
		said.
 
 Mario Draghi spoke at a gathering of euro zone finance ministers on 
		Monday during which the Italian government's expansionary budgetary 
		plans were criticized by the other countries of the bloc for being in 
		breach of EU fiscal rules.
 
 At the meeting, Draghi - a former Italian central bank governor - warned 
		that Italy's high debt and low growth would require a level of 
		responsibility that "goes beyond EU rules," two officials told Reuters.
 
 Draghi had publicly warned Rome in October that a sell-off in Italian 
		government bonds, which followed the budget dispute with Brussels, would 
		dent the capital of Italy's banks, which own some 375 billion euros 
		($430.80 billion) of that paper.
 
		
		 
		
 An ECB spokesman declined to comment on this story.
 
 The European Commission said in the meeting that it was considering a 
		disciplinary procedure against Rome, which could lead to sanctions, if 
		Italy's draft budget for next year were not changed by a Nov. 13 
		deadline. Later, it confirmed this position publicly.
 
 Euro zone states backed the Commission and urged Italy in public and in 
		private to revise its budget and bring it in line with EU rules.
 
 Some finance ministers said they were worried that the higher borrowing 
		and spending plan in the euro zone's third largest economy might 
		threaten the single currency and slow deeper euro zone integration.
 
 TRIA LESS HARDLINE IN PRIVATE
 
 Italy's eurosceptic government triggered an unprecedented clash with the 
		EU last month when it floated a budget envisaging a rise in the 
		structural deficit by 0.8 percent of GDP next year rather than the 0.6 
		percent of GDP decrease stipulated by EU rules.
 
 Peer pressure did not appear to have changed Tria's mind. When he left 
		the meeting, he said Italy was not planning to change the budget.
 
		
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			 Italian Finance Minister 
			Giovanni Tria attends a euro zone finance ministers meeting in 
			Brussels, Belgium, November 5, 2018. REUTERS/Francois Lenoir/File 
			Photo 
            
			 
But at the closed-door meeting, he seemed more conciliatory, the sources said, 
adding that he did not oppose a joint statement of euro zone finance ministers 
which called for a revised Italian budgetary plan. 
Replying to the criticism on the budget, he told ministers: "I am an economist 
and a politician, but I am here as a politician," two EU sources told Reuters.
 "Tria has consistently said publicly that he is available for a dialogue with EU 
institutions," his spokeswoman said.
 
 Tria had initially aimed at a nominal deficit of 1.6 percent of GDP for next 
year, sources had said, but he eventually settled for a 2.4 percent target 
deficit in the face of pressure from the co-ruling parties, the 
anti-establishment 5-Star and the far-right League.
 
 An Italian source said on the sidelines of Monday's meeting that Rome was 
working for a compromise, underlining however that it was too early to say 
whether this could involve changes to the budget's numerical targets.
 
 Tria publicly insists his expansionary fiscal plan will boost growth - which was 
flat in the third quarter - and cause a reduction of Italy's huge debt, which 
stands above 130 percent of GDP, the highest ratio in the EU after bailed-out 
Greece.
 
 The Commission has instead raised doubts about the trajectory of Italian debt. 
On Thursday the EU executive will release its quarterly economic forecasts which 
are expected to show a less optimistic scenario than the 1.5 percent GDP growth 
in 2019 predicted by the Italian government. Estimates of lower growth would 
translate into a higher debt and deficit.
 
 
 ($1 = 0.8705 euros)
 
 (Additional reporting by Jan Strupczewski; Editing by Mark Heinrich)
 
				 
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