Italy’s economy minister says growth could end this year even after strong Q2
2022.07.08 14:25
FILE PHOTO: Italy’s Economy Minister Daniele Franco addresses a news conference after the G7 Summit in Koenigswinter, near Bonn, Germany May 20, 2022. REUTERS/Benjamin Westhoff
By Giuseppe Fonte
ROME (Reuters) – Italian economic growth was probably strong in the second quarter but could slow or even stop in the coming months as inflationary pressures rise, Economy Minister Daniele Franco said on Friday.
“We estimate there was robust growth in the quarter that has just ended,” Franco told a gathering of bankers in Rome.
He added, however, that with recessionary risks rising around the euro zone, “there is certainly a risk that growth will end or slow sharply in the second half of the year.”
Italy has an official forecast of 3.1% growth this year, and Franco said it should have a platform of “carryover” growth of around 3% at the end of the second quarter.
That means that even if there is stagnation over the second half of the year, full-year growth would come in at 3% compared with 2021.
Italian inflation, which stood at 8.5% in June, is “unlikely to come down quickly,” Franco said, pledging that the government would continue to work to limit the impact of surging energy costs on firms and households.
Rome has already budgeted more than 30 billion euros ($30 billion) this year to try to prevent gas and electricity bills rising too much, especially for low-income families.
Despite the recent sharp rise in Italian government bond yields, Franco said Italy’s average debt servicing costs this year would be broadly in line with 2021, and said he expected markets to stabilise soon.
Italy’s public debt-to-GDP ratio will fall significantly this year from last year’s level of 151%, he said, while confirming the current deficit-to-GDP target of 5.6%.
“I’m confident that the sustainability of Italy’s public finances will contribute to restoring more stable market conditions and bond yields in line with our economic fundamentals,” Franco said.
($1 = 0.9858 euros)
(writing by Gavin Jones; editing by Barbara Lewis)