Why Italy may need to leave the euro zone soon

Matteo Renzi’s may know how to win votes but is it just more of the same?

Italy’s prime minister Matteo Renzi:  Instead of reforming the public administration or the judiciary, he has opted for a cut in the housing tax. Photograph: Olivier Morin/AFP/Getty Images
Italy’s prime minister Matteo Renzi: Instead of reforming the public administration or the judiciary, he has opted for a cut in the housing tax. Photograph: Olivier Morin/AFP/Getty Images

Yoram Gutgeld last week made one of the most astonishing economic statements I have heard in a long time. The adviser to prime minister Matteo Renzi said in an interview that Italy's economy was immune to global developments for the next 12 to 24 months because of the tax cuts and reforms of the present administration.

The idea that a G7 club of rich nations is immune to the global economy is ludicrous. This is the 21st century.

Granted, Gutgeld may have spoken as the prime minister’s spindoctor. That is part of his job.

Emerging markets

But what worries me is that the Italian government is not ready for when the impact of the slowdown in China and emerging markets hits Europe. Friday’s preliminary figures for euro zone gross domestic product show that the slowdown has started.

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Italy’s quarter-on-quarter growth rates have been falling: from 0.4 per cent in the first quarter to 0.3 per cent in the second to 0.2 per cent in the third.

Italy's ability to sustain a healthy rate of growth is critical – for the country's political stability, for its young people with no hope of finding work, for debt sustainability and in particular for its future in the euro zone. The euro has brought Italy nothing but stagnation. Real GDP is now at the same level as at the start of 2000, a year after the euro was launched. GDP today is 9 per cent below the pre-crisis level in early 2008.

If Italy fails to bounce back strongly from this recession, it is hard to see how it can stay in the euro zone. At some point it might well be in the country’s undisputed economic self-interest to leave and devalue. So when we ask whether the economic recovery is sustainable, we are not having a technical dialogue about economics. We are talking about Italy’s future in Europe.

There are three reasons why I am sceptical. The first is evident in last Friday’s GDP data. Italy is not exceptional.

The second reason is the lack of restructuring of Italian banks. The stock of non-performing loans as a percentage of all loans is about 10 per cent, which is close to the peak level in the current cycle. Many of the small and medium-sized banks in effect are insolvent.

The clean-up of the banking system – following the 2008 crisis and the two subsequent recessions – has yet to happen. If it does, it will take place in a much tougher regulatory environment.

Rotten banks

From next year EU “bail-in” rules take effect. Then the Italian government will no longer simply be able to bail out banks but will have to make bondholders and depositors pay up first. Can we be sure the rotten banks will continue to sustain the recovery in this environment?

My third concern is Renzi's fiscal policy choices. His priority has been to ensure that these create more winners than losers. This is exactly what Silvio Berlusconi did when prime minister. And it should come as no surprise that Renzi ends up with similar policies. Instead of reforming the public administration or the judiciary, he has opted for a cut in the housing tax. This will win votes but will not deliver the change to the economy. We have been here before.

The danger of this strategy is that it could go horribly wrong if the economic shock is big enough and the banking sector weak enough.

Refugee crisis

On current projections, Italy’s 2016 budget deficit will be 2.2-2.4 per cent, depending on how you account for the cost of addressing the refugee crisis. This includes flexibility clauses that Rome has negotiated with the European Commission to take account of that cost. The original deficit goal would have been 1.4 per cent for 2016, but the EU has allowed more leeway because of economic reforms.

I have no objections to any measure to loosen the grip of austerity. But if the downturn comes along with a banking crisis, the 2.4 per cent could easily turn into 3.4 per cent or 4.4 per cent. At that point all flexibility will come to an abrupt halt. Italy will once again have to tighten policy as the economy slows.

Another non-elected “technical” government might take over. Italy might never choose to leave the euro zone for political reasons. But, if Renzi’s calculations prove wrong, Italy will be at the point where it would be rational to leave for economic reasons.