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How Renzi’s flying start slowed to a limp

Matteo Renzi, who formally quit as Italian Prime Minister on Wednesday, once gave himself 1,000 days to change the country and make it stronger and more competitive.

How Renzi's flying start slowed to a limp
Renzi announcing his resignation. Photo: Andreas Solaro/AFP

He passed the 1,000 day mark but the pledge on the economy, made six months after he took office in February 2014, was not to be fulfilled. While Italy denounces austerity in Europe, the country is in a state of economic convalescence.

Growth: still lagging behind

After 1,000 days of Renzi's government, gross domestic product rose 1.6 percent and household consumption by three percent while the deficit fell 0.4 percent, according to official figures.

With growth projected at 0.8 percent this year, Italy lags behind many in Europe.

The main problem is a decline in competitiveness. While many small- and medium-sized enterprises are doing well, particularly in agriculture and luxury goods, other sectors, such as textiles, are not able to compete internationally

“It's a problem that one legislature cannot solve,” said Pietro Reichlin, professor of economics at Luiss University.

A banking crisis lurks

The other big structural problem in the Italian economy is the weakness of its banks, too many in number and wracked with debts – 360 billion euros ($390 billion) across the sector.

Faced with a messy system, Finance Minister Pier Carlo Padoan has moved to group many of them together.

The banks have set up their own relief fund, the Atlante Fund. But its resources are limited and the banks have said they do not expect to return to it.

The Italian banking index has fallen 50 percent on the Milan stock market since the beginning of the year and stocks remain febrile.

High unemployment

Despite opposition from unions and a leftish fringe, the Renzi government in 2015 adopted a “Jobs Act”, a labour market reform which made it easier for companies to make employees redundant but also allowed them to hire people on permanent contracts.

According to Renzi, Italy has 656,000 more people in employment, 487,000 of them on permanent contracts, but another 665,000 are graded as inactive. The unemployment rate fell more than one percent to 11.7 percent.

Massimo Gibelli, an official at CGIL, Italy's largest trade union, gives different figures. “In three years we gave about 35 billion euros to companies, some 18 million for the creation of jobs and little more than 250,000 were created. It's little compared to the cost.”

Same sex couples

In the most important social reform of recent years Italy granted status to same sex couples this summer, the last major European country to do so, having faced resistance from the Catholic Church. Stopping short of marriage, Italy allowed civil unions.

Though it grants rights similar to marriage it does not, as in the initial draft law, allow adoption of the spouses' natural children.

Other initiatives

Administrative reform simplified life for citizens and businesses, in what was a small revolution for Italians who often spent years waiting for answers.

The fight against corruption was also boosted with the creation of an ad hoc administration and a legislative arsenal to combat exploitation of agricultural workers.

Some taxes were abolished or lowered but the great promise of fiscal reform never happened. There was also some judicial reform.

By Olivier Baube

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ACROSS EUROPE

German, Italian and Austrian presidents make joint call for strong Europe

The presidents of Germany, Italy and Austria called for a strong and united Europe in a joint letter published over the weekend ahead of June's European elections.

German, Italian and Austrian presidents make joint call for strong Europe

The joint letter was carried in the Italian daily Corriere della Sera a month before the June 6-9 elections, where far-right parties are expected to do well.

“We see that the fundamental values—our values—of pluralism, human rights, and the Rule of Law are being challenged, if not openly threatened, all over the world,” wrote the three leaders.

“At stake here is none other than the foundations of our democratic order.”

Although they all hold largely ceremonial roles, the presidents are all tasked with ensuring respect for their countries’ constitutions.

“It is therefore essential to defend democratic institutions and values, the guarantees of freedom, the independence of the media, the role of democratic political oppositions, the separation of powers, the value of limits to the exercise of power,” wrote Italy’s Sergio Mattarella, Germany’s Frank-Walter Steinmeier and Austria’s Alexander van der Bellen.

In Italy, the far-right Brothers of Italy party is in first place and credited with 27 percent in polls — while in Germany, the Alternative for Germany (AfD) is at 15 percent in second place behind the main centre-right party.

In Austria, The Freedom Party (FPO) is also expected to make gains.

While Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni — head of the Brothers of Italy — is staunchly pro-NATO and pro-Kyiv, other far-right parties such Matteo Salvini’s League and Marine Le Pen’s National Rally in France are accused of being pro-Russian.

The three presidents said more European unity was necessary to confront those “who question basic democratic principles”.

“Our liberal democratic order is deeply intertwined with the unification of Europe: by anchoring ourselves to a European community of values and legal norms, we have presented to the world a coexistence based on democratic order and peace,” they said.

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