Italy’s 2019 Budget Wins Senate Approval Amid Outcry

Italy’s 2019 Budget Wins Senate Approval Amid Outcry
The Italian flag flies over the harbour of Rapallo, near Genoa, on Oct. 30, 2018. (Marco Bertorello/AFP/Getty Images)
Reuters
12/23/2018
Updated:
12/23/2018

MILAN—The Italian government won a grueling vote of confidence on its 2019 budget in the upper house in the early hours of Dec. 23, as it races to get the package approved before a year-end deadline.

The budget now has to be approved by the lower house of parliament by Dec 31 so it can take effect from the start of the new year.

The government of the anti-establishment 5-Star Movement and the right-wing League won the vote 167-78, with three abstentions.

On Dec. 19, the European Commission reached a deal with Italy over its 2019 budget after months of verbal sparring, avoiding disciplinary steps against Rome.

But the changes led to extensive re-drafting, and on Dec. 22 a final text only arrived in the Senate at the last minute, triggering uproar from opposition lawmakers.

The Democratic Party said it would ask a top Italian court to rule on the constitutionality of the move, claiming there had been no time to debate the law in detail.

“The budget law is a joke,” former Prime Minister and PD member Matteo Renzi said on Dec. 22.

But on Dec. 23, Deputy Prime Minister Luigi Di Maio said on Facebook that reaching a deal with the EU had inevitably meant more time had been needed to get the measures before parliament.

“I am counting on the budget being finally approved on December 27-28,” he said.

The populist ruling coalition unveiled an expansionary budget in October which included a projected deficit of 2.4 percent of gross domestic product, up from 1.8 percent this year, to help fund welfare and tax reform measures.

In a compromise with Brussels, it then narrowed its deficit forecast for next year to 2.04 percent of GDP while lowering its economic growth outlook to 1.0 percent from 1.5 percent.

On Dec. 22, Bundesbank President and European Central Bank Governing Council member Jens Weidmann said the compromise weakened Brussels’ hand in pressing members of the euro zone to stick to the bloc’s fiscal rules.

In Italy, if budgets are not approved by Dec 31, then automatic provisional financing for the state kicks in.

By Stephen Jewkes