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ECONOMY

‘Out of control’: Why has Italy curbed its building superbonus?

Italy’s ‘superbonus 110’ fund for home renovations has been wildly popular, but the government has abruptly reined it in amid fears it will send the country’s deficit soaring.

'Out of control': Why has Italy curbed its building superbonus?
A building site in Rome's Corviale-Portuense district on February 21st. - Italy's building superbonus has led to fraud and spiralling costs, the government said after it curbed the scheme on February 17th. (Photo by Andreas SOLARO / AFP)

The superbonus, which can be used for anything from insulation to solar panels, new boilers and windows, was introduced in May 2020 to boost the Italian economy amid the coronavirus lockdown – and, the government said at the time, to make homes more energy efficient

READ ALSO: Has Italy’s superbonus been scrapped?

Environmentalists were sceptical about its benefits, but property owners rushed to take advantage of the generous discounts – with state funding available for up to 110 percent of the cost of certain types of renovations.

But the current Italian government curbed the scheme without warning earlier in February – leaving homeowners concerned about the viability of ongoing projects, and tens of thousands of construction companies saying they risk going bankrupt.

The superbonus scheme was introduced amid the pandemic by former premier Giuseppe Conte, whose populist Five Star Movement led the government at the time.

The bonus allowed homeowners to either deduct the cost of work from their taxes over several years or sell the tax credit to their builder, who would sell it to a bank, which would then claim the money from the state.

The current government, led by Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, has now halted access to any further tax credits, meaning the only option now is a tax rebate – but this is only available to those paying the highest rates of income tax.

While the bonus has not been scrapped entirely, the abrupt changes mean it’s now so tightly restricted that new claims are effectively impossible for most people.

So why did Meloni’s government suddenly pull the plug?

The extreme popularity of the scheme means that funding has already been claimed in excess. Almost three years after the superbonus was introduced, it has cost the state a total of €61.2 billion – a figure Meloni says is “out of control”.

Spiralling costs

Meloni, whose coalition government took office in October, has long been a critic of the superbonus and speculation was rife following her election that her government would seek to end the scheme.

Defending the further changes on February 17th, Meloni said the scheme had led to fraud worth nine billion euros, while the tradeable nature of the tax credit system it is based on had “generated a sort of parallel currency, and that parallel currency risks having a devastating impact on the budget”.

Finance Minister Giancarlo Giorgetti meanwhile described it as a “wicked policy”.

Meloni’s government has already sought to restrict the subsidy, reducing the bonus from 110 percent to 90 percent from the beginning of 2023.

Construction works on the outskirts of Rome in 2021 under the superbonus scheme. Photo: Andreas SOLARO/AFP

But the government abruptly stopped issuing tax credits as of February 17th amid concern about the impact of the system on the country’s already high budget deficit.

Reuters reports that the reason is a ruling this month by the European Union’s statistics agency Eurostat on the way tax credits are classified in state accounts, which strongly impacts costly schemes offering incentives for energy saving home improvements.

In November, Italy’s government forecast the 2022 deficit would fall to 5.6 percent of GDP, but as a result of these accounting changes the figure may now exceed 7 percent.

Revised figures potentially incorporating the superbonus scheme are due from Italy’s statistics bureau Istat on March 1st.

Lorenzo Codogno, a former chief economist at Italy’s Treasury, told AFP that Italy’s deficit could be revised up substantially, while both the construction sector and the government “could have liquidity problems”.

Construction boom

As intended, the superbonus boosted the construction sector – which grew by 21.6 percent in 2021, helping fuel a post-pandemic boom.

But the scheme generated much more work than expected, and banks stopped buying credits last year, leaving many homeowners and construction companies in the lurch.

The government says it is now looking into possible alternatives to the credit system and exploring ways to plug a gap in funding which construction industry association ANCE says is putting 25,000 companies at risk. 

READ ALSO: Italy’s building firms warn of bankruptcy risk after superbonus changes

Climate campaigners hope that the government will also change the scope of the bonus.

Experts have lamented what they see as a wasted opportunity to engineer a cultural shift towards building truly green housing.

In a study last year, the Bank of Italy said the superbonus was “not a cost-effective way” to tackle climate change.

Matteo Leonardi, co-founder of Italian climate change think tank ECCO, said it lacked “ambition”.

“It has not been linked to climate targets, which is what would have justified the costs,” he told AFP, adding that renovations had only to boost efficiency by two energy classes.

It also did not sufficiently promote innovative but less familiar technologies, such as heat pumps.

But Leonardi said for all its faults, the superbonus had value if radically revised to meet more ambitious targets.

With the tax credits gone, he said the government is now “just giving a lot of money to high-income families to install gas boilers”.

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ECONOMY

Two-thirds of young Italians now living with parents as unemployment rises

The number of people aged 18-34 still living at home is now as high as 75 percent in some parts of Italy, new official data shows, as wages shrink and youth unemployment grows.

Two-thirds of young Italians now living with parents as unemployment rises

The stereotype of the Italian ‘mammone‘, who lives with mamma until well into his 30s or beyond, is alive and well as the number of young people living at home has risen again according to the latest annual economic report by national statistics bureau Istat, published on Wednesday.

In 2022, some 67.4 percent of all 18-34 year-olds in Italy were living with at least one parent, an increase of almost eight points in twenty years – the rate in 2002 was 59.7 percent.

The number was as high as 75 percent in the southern regions of Campania and Puglia, Istat found.

The phenomenon remained, as ever, more prevalent in young men, with 74 percent of them compared to 66 percent of women in the same age group living at home.

“Today’s young people have increasingly protracted transitions into adulthood,” read the report.

The phenomenon is not unique to Italy, with the most recent Eurostat data, from 2021, showing a similar trend among the 16-29 age group in Italy as well as other southern European countries including Croatia, Greece, and Portugal.

While cultural factors are often suggested as a potential cause, with Italians known for close family ties, Italy’s economic situation appears to play a far larger role in keeping young people living at home for longer.

Istat’s report pointed to a high prevalence of insecure employment among younger Italians, as well as shrinking wages and decreased spending power.

“Permanent employment, which between 2004 and 2023 grew by +9.7 percent, has increased only among the employed over the age of fifty,” Istat noted, partly attributing this to a squeeze on pensions in recent years which means many are retiring later.

READ ALSO:

Italy meanwhile has one of the EU’s highest rates of youth unemployment, which had risen further to 22 percent as of February 2024, according to Eurostat data.

Italian workers of all ages were getting poorer, Istat found, and the number of working people in poverty had risen to 14 percent.

“Despite the improvements observed in the labour market in recent years,” the report said, “Italy retains a very high share of employed people in economically vulnerable conditions.

“Between 2013 and 2023, the purchasing power of gross wages in Italy decreased by 4.5 percent, while in the other major economies of the EU27 it grew at rates between 1.1 percent in France and 5.7 percent in Germany.”

Within this context, the Istat report noted that young Italians were also getting married five years later than in 2002, with men now waiting until an average age of 36.5 before tying the knot, and women 33.6.

KEY POINTS: What is Italy’s government doing to help families?

The age at which women have their first child had also risen, to 31.6 years against 29.7 in 2002.

Italy’s birth rate in 2023 fell to a record low of 379,000 after 15 years of decline, Istat reported in January.

“The substantial decline in births of recent years has deep roots, and is due to the parenting choices (fewer children and increasingly later) of Italian couples today and those of yesterday,” Istat’s latest report found, reporting that lower birth rates 30 years ago also contributed.

Italy’s plunging birth rate and ageing population has been a hot-button topic for the current government, which said this month that it aims to launch a Vatican-backed campaign to increase births to 500,000 per year by 2033.

Italy’s birth rate had previously been boosted by a higher number of births among foreign nationals in Italy, however the number of babies born to non-Italian mothers had also dropped, Istat said, bringing it in line with the trend among the Italian population.

The shift was attributed to various factors, including the challenges immigrants face and the high employment rates among foreign women, many of whom are employed in demanding but low-paid full-time jobs.

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