By Silvia Aloisi and Giulio Piovaccari
MILAN (Reuters) – Shops, restaurants and hair salons prepared to reopen in Italy on Monday as the government further eased one of the world’s strictest coronavirus lockdowns, saying it was taking a “calculated risk” to put the country back on its feet.
The euro zone’s third biggest economy is slowly emerging from more than two months of hibernation, with businesses allowed to gradually go back to work as long they can enforce tight sanitary protocols and keep people at least 1 metre apart.
At Milan’s upscale Rinascente department store, guards will keep count through an app of how many people are in the store at any one time. Clothes tried on in changing rooms will be quarantined for 24 hours and shop assistants will spill perfumes on paper tissues rather than having customers handle testers. Access to restaurants will be strictly limited, with only family members allowed to sit close to each other.
Rinascente’s Chief Executive Pierluigi Cocchini said it was difficult to predict what appetite there would be to shop after weeks of isolation. The store is reopening with markdowns of up to 60% as, like most retailers, it needs to clear unsold stocks.
“The hope is to take a step towards normality. It won’t be business as usual given all the protocols, but this is the new normal for now and we have to accept it,” he told Reuters.
Tourists, still absent, would normally generate a third of the store’s sales.
Italy’s fashion industry alone, boasting brands like Armani, Prada and Moncler, accounts for 5% of gross domestic product.
Business association Confcommercio expects consumer spending for clothing, which stood at 60 billion euros ($65 billion) in 2019, to shrink by 20% this year and a quarter of the country’s 115,000 fashion retailers to go bust.
“I know that for several sectors of the economy, reopening does not mean recovery,” Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte said late on Saturday as he announced the lifting of the restrictions.
With its economy facing severe recession and public debt expected to spiral to more than 150% of its annual economic output, the government has been desperate to get the country back to work without triggering a second wave of the epidemic.
“We have to restart,” said Rosy Riente, which runs the Cafe de l’Ange in the posh Alpine resort of Courmayeur, even though distancing rules mean that she can now sit a maximum of 35 people at any one time in her bar instead of 100.
“So far all we have done is spend money to buy sanitising gels and disinfectants,” she said.
Others prefer to wait until European borders reopen on June 3. Tourism contributes 13% to the country’s economic output.
“My shop looks like a hospital, with plexiglass screens at the till, sanitisers, face masks and gloves,” said Maurizio Di Rienzo, owner of suitcase shop Pellux in central Milan, whose eight employees have been furloughed.
“90% of my clients are tourists, most of them Chinese. It doesn’t make sense for me to reopen just yet.”
($1 = 0.9246 euros)
(Editing by Elaine Hardcastle)