BCN-11 ‘Italy not a problem’ for EU, says finance minister

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BCN-11

ITALY-EU-BUDGET-GOVERNMENT

‘Italy not a problem’ for EU, says finance minister

PARIS, Oct 26, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Italian Finance Minister Giovanni Tria
said Thursday that his country was “not a problem” for the European Union,
which he claimed could benefit from Rome’s new budget strategy.

“Let me be clear, Italy is not a problem. Let us not confuse political
tactics with the facts,” Tria said, after the rejection by Brussels on
Tuesday of the proposed 2019 Italian budget.

“We are convinced that Europe can benefit from our strategy,” he told
journalists in Paris, reiterating that Italy did not pose “a threat to the
eurozone.”

“Since we want to stay in the euro, our only path is a contained,
responsible deficit next year to give the proper boost (to the economy) and
ensure our capacity to reduce our debt,” he said.

He also rejected criticism of the new populist government in Rome.

“We simply cannot accept declarations stating that Europe, or some member
states, should now be paying the Italian debt. The Italian debt is a matter
for Italians only.”

The European Commission on Tuesday rejected Italy’s draft 2019 budget, the
first time the EU executive has ever sent a member state back to the drawing
board over spending plans.

Italy’s government has said it will stick to a deficit target of 2.4
percent of annual economic output next year, which would be triple the amount
forecast by the previous government and approach the EU limit of 3.0 percent.

In turn, it would aggravate Italy’s already huge debt mountain, at some
130 percent of gross domestic product (GDP), way above the EU’s 60-percent
ceiling and second only to Greece’s in Europe.

As one of the founding members of the EU, Tria stressed that “we Italians
also built this house. If Italy grows, Europe as a whole gains stability and
can profit from it.”

Italy has entered “a phase of dialogue ” with the Commission, he said,
which has given Rome three weeks to submit a revised budget.

And European Central Bank President Mario Draghi on Thursday played down
the Italian budget clash with Brussels.

“I’m still confident an agreement will be found,” he told journalists at
his ECB press conference.

BSS/AFP/HR/0945