Italy stands by main pillars of budget as EU deadline
nears
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[November 09, 2018]
By Giuseppe Fonte and Anne Kauranen
ROME/HELSINKI (Reuters) - Italy stood by
the main pillars of its 2019 budget on Friday, as a deadline neared for
it to change what Brussels called overly optimistic economic assumptions
or face penalties for breaking EU fiscal rules.
Deputy Prime Minister Luigi Di Maio and Economy Minister Giovanni Tria
said they were committed to respecting a maximum budget deficit of 2.4
percent of economic output next year.
But the European Commission, which has given Rome until Tuesday to
present a new budget, has forecast a deficit of 2.9 percent and a
structural fiscal gap - excluding one-offs and business cycle swings -
rising to 3.0 percent.
Under EU requirements, Italy should cut its structural deficit next year
to 1.2 percent and continue reducing it every year until it reaches a
balanced budget.
Tria said the government was "busy drafting an answer to the European
Commission with regards to the most contentious points of the budget".
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But Rome would confirm its "main pillars", as an economic slowdown had
made fiscal expansion even more necessary, he told a parliamentary
hearing.
The government says it will introduce an income support program next
year to tackle growing poverty, and reduce the retirement age in an
effort to free up the labor market and generate more job opportunities
for the young.
It is also promising tax cuts and offering a partial amnesty for
citizens who settle tax disputes with the authorities.
The Commission rejected Italy's 2019 fiscal plan last month, saying it
flouted a previous commitment to lower the deficit and that it did not
guarantee a reduction in the country's debt, the second highest in the
euro zone as a proportion of GDP.
ITALIAN BONDS
In Helsinki, Valdis Dombrovskis, the Commission Vice President
responsible for the euro, on Friday reaffirmed the EU executive was
considering starting an excessive deficit procedure if Italy did not
change the budget.
He said Brussels believed Rome's fiscal calculations were "overly
optimistic".
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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
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"Basically the assumption is that if they ... increase public spending, it will
stimulate the economy and thus will help to reduce the budget deficit. We see
that this is actually not materializing," he said.
The standoff between Rome and Brussels has spooked financial markets and, after
Tria spoke, 10-year Italian bond yields climbed to 3.46 percent <IT10YT=RJR>,
their highest in over a week.
That pushed the closely-watched gap over safer German Bund yields back above 300
basis points <DE10IT10=RR>.
Italy's central bank warned that the rise in borrowing costs over recent months
risked impacting the economy and cancelling out the expansionary effects of the
budget.
"I hope for a solution that combines both Italy's respect for the rules it must
abide with as a member of the monetary union... and the government and
parliament pursuing their political goals," Luigi Federico Signorini, the Bank
of Italy's deputy director general, told a parliamentary committee.
Di Maio, whose anti-establishment 5-Star Movement governs in a coalition with
the far-right League, said he believed market pressure would ease when investors
realized the government was committed to holding the deficit inside its 2.4
percent target.
But he gave no indication that the government was willing to change the 2019
budget draft.
Asked if Italy would pay any fines the EU might levy, Di Maio told reporters in
Rome "pacts must be honored", but that he did not expect any charges to be
levied and was confident an agreement with Brussels would be reached.
(Reporting by Gavin Jones and Giuseppe Fonte in Rome and Anne Kauranen in
Helsinki; writing by John Stonestreet)
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