ROME (Reuters) – Italian Economy Minister Roberto Gualtieri said on Friday that the country’s economic contraction this year may be worse than the 8% decline currently forecast by the government.
The Bank of Italy has forecast Italian gross domestic product to fall by 9.2% and the European Commission projects -9.5%, as the economy buckles under the impact of the coronavirus.
Speaking at a forum organised by Goldman Sachs, Gualtieri said in a video link-up that even though data for April and May had been broadly as the government anticipated and a recovery was now expected, some sectors would struggle for longer.
“We may revise to the downside”, he said, in reference to the government’s GDP forecast.
Asked about the sustainability of Italy’s huge public debt, targeted to rise to 155.7% of GDP this year, Gualtieri said the government intended to focus on improving the country’s growth potential while reducing borrowing from next year.
“We want to significantly boost public and private investment… growth enhancing policies and fiscal sustainability, that is the core of our strategy,” he said.
Gualtieri, from the centre-left Democratic Party, said Italy’s debt would come down next year and decline “substantially” in future years when the country would return to running a budget surplus net of interest spending.
This year’s overall deficit is targeted to jump to 10.4% of GDP as the government ramps up borrowing to try to soften the economic impact of one of the world’s worst COVID-19 epidemics.
A wealth tax to raise resources for extra spending or bring down the debt was not in the government’s programme, Gualtieri said.
Despite the recession tax revenues were holding up much better than expected, he said, thanks to the government’s fight against tax evasion which was bearing fruit before the virus outbreak.
These efforts will continue to recoup some of the estimated 100-120 billion euros of lost revenue every year, Gualtieri said, adding that wanted Italy to become a world leader in terms of digital payments and creating a “cashless society.”
(Reporting By Gavin Jones and Giuseppe Fonte, writing by Gavin Jones; Editing by Toby Chopra)