Llewellyn Consulting: Italy’s fiscal position - A surmountable challenge

28 February 2012

Italy's high public debt makes improving its public finances difficult, but it appears achievable. Relative to other economies, Italy's vulnerabilities near term are considerable, but its longer-term prospects are better.

Italy’s fiscal challenge appears difficult, and near-term vulnerabilities are considerable, owing to its legacy high stock of debt. So, a renewed flare-up of bond spreads, which have now retreated significantly from their levels around the turn of the year, can by no means be excluded. That said, the task, even in the near term, appears manageable under plausible assumptions, and given sufficient political will, which currently seems in evidence.
 
Medium-term challenges relate primarily to Italy’s weak growth trend, but there is much scope for improvement through structural reforms, and these are starting to be undertaken. Moreover, in the long term, Italy’s projected debt burden appears less challenging than in many other Western economies – albeit remaining far from sustainable. Given the fundamentals, it is conceivable that markets will come to increase the relative risk premium that they require of the 
government bonds of other economies. Hence renewed flare-ups in Italian bond spreads could well represent attractive entry points for long-term investors with sufficient composure.
 
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