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Saturday, June 29, 2013
Italy to cut spending, sees risks of protests: report
Well it is not over or even close to being over with the economy. It is not just hitting one country this thing is global. Here is a report from Reuters about Italy:
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New Italian Economy Minister Fabrizio Saccomanni attends at the Lower house of the parliament in Rome, …
MILAN (Reuters) - Italy will resume public spending cuts to
find resources for tax cuts to kick start growth, Economy Minister
Fabrizio Saccomanni told daily Corriere della Sera on Saturday.
He warned, however, that cuts could spark social unrest in the euro
zone's third largest economy, where lobbies have so far resisted
previous government attempts to reduce state spending.
"We aim to support economic growth through a reduction of taxes on
labor and companies," said Saccomanni, former deputy governor at the
Bank of Italy.
"We can't do it by raising public debt, so we have to cut public spending," he said in an interview with the Italian daily.
Italy issues some 400 billion euros ($520 billion) of bonds each
year to fund its 2-trillion-euro debt pile, Saccomanni said, reiterating
that Rome could not put at risk its credibility on the markets by
spurring growth with new debt.
Rome has committed to maintaining a budget deficit of 2.9 percent of
gross domestic product in 2013, just under the European Union's 3
percent ceiling, and has just emerged from the EU so-called excessive
deficit procedure.
Saccomanni, under pressure from the centre-right party in the
coalition government to relax austerity in the country, said the
government will launch a new round of spending reviews.
The process, aimed at finding savings from the state's huge balance sheet, would take time and could be painful.
"No one should expect we will find hidden expenses we can cut
without raising protests," the minister said, adding he did not have a
"magic wand".
Few positive signs in the economy, however, could help the government in its difficult task.
"We are confident we will see a recovery towards the end of the
year," Saccomanni said, adding he expects the cost of servicing Italy's
public debt could be lower than estimates, freeing resources for growth.
The right-left government headed by Prime Minister Enrico Letta is
struggling to balance Italy's commitments to the EU with coalition
promises to cut taxes.
At the insistence of Silvio Berlusconi's centre-right, a crucial
part of the ruling coalition, the government has suspended a housing tax
on primary residences and has also temporarily blocked an increase in
sales tax due to take effect next Monday.
($1 = 0.7693 euros)
(Reporting by Francesca Landini; Editing by David Cowell)
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