Bank of Italy lowers economic growth prediction

block
Xinhua, Rome :
The Bank of Italy estimated the Italian economy would grow just 0.1 percent this year, according to its quarterly economic bulletin, a level that economists said would make it “highly unlikely” Italy will manage to honor its recent budgetary promises with the European Commission.
The Bank of Italy said that lower-than-expected industrial production figures were hurting growth prospects and it blamed that on political worries.
“A heightened uncertainty about budget policy from next year on could generate new turbulence in the financial markets and influence companies’ investment plans,” the bulletin said. The bank did predict more robust growth in the coming years, with its models showing the economy growing 0.8 percent next year and 1.0 percent in 2021. But it is the 0.1-percent prediction for 2019 that could cause problems, economists said.
“I don’t want to say it’s absolutely impossible for the government to reach its budget deficit goal with 0.1-percent economic growth so I will say it is highly unlikely,” Giandomenico Piluso, an economist focusing on economic history at the University of Siena, told Xinhua.
Last month, Italy was facing potential sanctions of up to 3 billion euros (3.35 billion U.S. dollars) for failing to rein in its debt enough. It avoided those penalties by promising to close its budget deficit to within 2.04 percent of the country’s gross domestic product this year. Earlier in the year, published estimates were that the deficit could reach as high as 3.1 to 3.3 percent of the country’s gross domestic product.
“Low economic growth hurts on two fronts,” Francesco Daveri, an economist and director of the business administration program at Milan’s Bocconi University, said in an interview.
block