Italy Seeks To Abolish Poverty Via Bigger Deficits, Guaranteed Income
Italy's 5-Star/League coalition seeks a 2.4% budget deficit including a guaranteed income provision. Brussels bristles.
Italy Seeks to Abolish Poverty
The BBC reports Italy's Populists Agree Budget to 'Abolish Poverty'.
The ruling Five Star and League parties said late on Thursday that they had agreed to set the budget deficit at 2.4% of GDP. They will press ahead with a minimum income for the unemployed.
League leader Matteo Salvini has questioned why Italy should be shackled by European limits, hampering what he sees as vital reform projects.
Election Promises
- A guaranteed basic income for poor families of about €780 a month
- Tax reform for rates of just 15% and 20%, down from 23%-43%, which could cost up to €50 billion.
- Abolishing plans to raise retirement age over several years, and setting minimum pensions.
Free Money, Free Gas, Free Everything
Free money and lower retirement ages. What can possibly go wrong?
Well, maybe someone just may wish to look at every other time in history such a move has been tried.
Venezuela's free gasoline project comes to mind.
Italy 10-Year Bond Yield
Bond Spread to Germany
Italy’s Fiscal Defiance - Eurointelligence
The Italian cabinet has confirmed the political agreement reached a day earlier to increase the budget deficit to 2.4% - instead of the 1.9% envisaged by [economy minister] Giovanni Tria. That was already way above the trajectory set by the EU. The previous government had penciled in a fall in the deficit to about 0.8-0.9% - another good example of the absurdity of long-term fiscal projections.
The decision means that Italy is now in open defiance on EU budget rules. There will be a spat with the European Commission, but we doubt very much that this issue will turn into a life-or-death confrontation just yet. This expectation seems to be shared by the markets - which nevertheless drove up the Italian 10-year spread to 250bp at some point yesterday. We doubt that the European Commission will want to risk a confrontation that would end driving even more voters to support the Lega and Five Star at next year’s European elections.
The change of target means that Italy will almost certainly fail to reach the goal of a falling debt-to-GDP ratio, which has become Italy‘s new self-imposed fiscal rule - anything is ok for so long as debt-to-GDP is falling.
These concerns will undoubtedly resurface at one point - we believe the crunch time will come after the elections. In the meantime, we repeat our previous assertion that the policies of this government are not consistent with Italian membership of the eurozone. This is not so much meant as a forecast of a breakup - merely observing an unsustainable position.
The discourse in Italy is nowadays not about debt sustainability, but about how much deficit you can get away with under EU fiscal rules. We would add that this thinking is not confined to the populists.
French Budget
Italy’s populists only dared to make their move after Emmanual Macron increased the French fiscal deficit target for 2019 to 2.8% of GDP.
Brussels expected France to reduce the deficit.
Growing Populist Power
Italy's deficit tussle highlights growing power of populists. Five Star, League win 2.4% budget deficit in blow to old guard. Finance Minister had sought lower spending to meet EU targets. https://t.co/1w185Awg2v pic.twitter.com/q4OdsOSWjK
— Holger Zschaepitz (@Schuldensuehner) September 28, 2018
Spain Too
Italy 🇮🇹 and Spain 🇪🇸 are widening deficits and increasing spending at the peak of the cycle and into the end of ECB’s QE... Repeating the mistakes of 2009 pic.twitter.com/gNVfO8Di8t
— Daniel Lacalle (@dlacalle_IA) September 28, 2018
Science Fiction
Unlikely. Expenses through the roof and science fiction revenue estimates are the problems https://t.co/8pHRggPXaX
— Daniel Lacalle (@dlacalle_IA) September 28, 2018
Yet Another Feud
The EU is already in a tussle because of Brexit and because of actions against Poland and Hungary, and because of the ongoing feud with Turkey. Let's not forget the existing feud with Italy over immigration issues. Heck, let's list them.
EU Open Feuds
- With UK over Brexit
- With Poland over judicial system
- With Hungary over immigration
- With Italy over immigration
- With Turkey over immigration, human rights, judicial system
- With US over Iran
- With France (coming up) over budget
- With Italy (coming up in a major way) over budget
More Europe
Meanwhile, French president Emannuel Macron and German Chancellor Angela Merkel do not agree on how to move foreward with eurobonds or much of anything else.
Within Germany, there is huge infighting between CDU, CSU, and SPD. Merkel's government is again on the verge of collapse.
By all means let's have "more Europe" so we can have still more infighting.
More Europe will eventually bust the whole project wide open.
And once again, this is all the more reason for the UK to run, not walk away from this mess. Hard Brexit is the best option for the UK.
Disclosure: None.