Salvini sent markets into a spin after saying
on Tuesday that Rome should be ready to break the EU's deficit
ceiling of 3% of gross domestic product and push debt to 140% of
GDP if necessary, to lower unemployment.
His right-wing League party is campaigning along with other
eurosceptic parties for European Parliament elections on May 26,
but his comments are unnerving investors in Italian debt.
"If there are European rules that are starving a continent,
these rules must be changed," Salvini told reporters when asked
about his comments on Tuesday, which sent Italy's 10-year bond
yield to a two-month high and pushed the spread between Italian
and German yields to their widest level in three months.
On Wednesday, investor fears spread to the Italian share market
and rippled through stocks across Europe.
Asked if he was worried that his remarks on breaking EU rules
were widening the spread, he said: "Absolutely not, because
Italians' right to a job, life and health comes first."
At 132 percent of GDP, Italian debt is proportionally the
second-highest in the euro zone after Greece.
(Writing by Mark Bendeich; Editing by Gareth Jones)
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