Summary:KEY ISSUES
Unleashing Italy’s Potential
The economy is struggling to emerge from a prolonged balance-sheet recession… Tight credit
conditions, weak corporate balance sheets, and deeply-rooted structural rigidities continue to
weigh on domestic demand. The high level of public debt and membership in a currency union
highlight the importance of tackling these structural weaknesses.
…and the risks are tilted to the downside. External risks arise from geopolitical tensions, while
Italy’s high public debt, large public financing needs, and elevated NPLs leave the economy
vulnerable to financial contagion and/or low growth and inflation. Without meaningful reforms,
potential growth is projected to remain low.
Deep structural changes are urgently needed to secure a recovery and unleash Italy’s growth
potential. Moving to a single labor contract with gradually increasing protection would reduce
duality. Judicial efficiency could be improved by promoting mediation and enhancing monitoring of
court performance. Greater efforts to combat corruption would strengthen the business environment.
Implementing reforms simultaneously could be self- reinforcing and generate significant growth
synergies.
A greater push to clean up banks’ bad loans is needed to support lending in the recovery. More
provisioning and write-offs; a private distressed debt market; and enhanced insolvency regime would
accelerate the reduction of NPLs. Improved corporate governance and deeper capital markets would
support growth and financial stability.
A broad strategy to revive the SME sector would complement efforts to strengthen bank balance
sheets. This strategy should promote restructuring support for viable, but distressed firms and a
quick exit for those that are non-viable. A new fiduciary loan contract and greater sharing of
credit information could support alternative financing for new endeavors.
Fiscal policy needs to strike a delicate balance between setting the debt ratio on a downward path
while helping the economy recover. To support growth, the priority should be to lower marginal tax
rates through spending savings and lower tax expenditures. But given the low growth and high
interest rate environment, stronger fiscal balances are needed to bring down debt faster.
Conditional on the recovery taking hold, a modest structural surplus next year would be
appropriate.
Policies at the European level could also support growth by easing further monetary
conditions should inflation remain too low, and reducing financial fragmentation.
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