Vi allego un articolo apparso oggi su AP che spiega molto bene ( e da un punto di vista neutrale) su come l`Italia e` arrivata alla situazione di paralisi e sconforto che la sta oggi attanagliando .
Economic, political paralysis threatens
Italy
By
DAVID McHUGH and COLLEEN BARRY
MILAN,
Italy (AP) -- In the 1990s Italy made a mighty effort to shape up its hidebound
economy and qualify for the euro. Then it slacked off - and now it is under
pressure to make up for a lost decade's worth of reforms to convince markets it
can pay its debts.
The
size of its huge debt pile, about 120 percent of annual economic output, is
nothing new. The problem is that because of the past two years of market
turmoil in Europe, investors are suddenly reconsidering countries' abilities to
repay their debt.
And
as they take another look at Italy, they don't like what they see - dismally
low growth that politicians have so far proved incapable of reviving.
The
situation has become critical as investors lose faith in the eurozone's
third-largest economy and charge more to lend it money. Italy is too big to be
bailed out like Greece, Ireland and Portugal were. A default on its euro1.9
trillion ($2.6 trillion) in debt would threaten the euro and the global
financial system with collapse.
It
didn't have to come to this. Unlike much smaller, bankrupt Greece, Italy has a
big, modern and industrialized economy that can actually make things people
abroad want to buy - think Fiat, Armani, Benetton.
Its
budget deficit, this year at 4 percent of GDP, is below the eurozone average of
6 percent and it aims to balance government spending by 2013.
But
the country still has the world's third-largest debt pile and the worry is that
it is no longer productive enough to keep paying it off.
Italy's
economy is hampered by high wage costs, low productivity, fat government
payrolls, excessive taxes, choking bureaucracy, and an educational system that
produces one of the lowest levels of college graduates among rich countries.
Its
economic output last year was 1.9 percent smaller than in 2005, adjusted for
inflation. The International Monetary Fund projects anemic growth of 0.6
percent this year and 0.3 percent next year.
Economist
Tito Michele Boeri, a leading expert on Italy's labor market at Milan's Bocconi
University, says the economy underperforms because its restrictive labor laws
and sluggish educational system leave large groups of people, particularly the
young, languishing without well paid jobs or training that would make them more
productive.
"There
is a serious problem with the way we use human capital in our country," he
said.
Established
workers with seniority enjoy strong protections against being laid off and get
extensive severance if they do. Meanwhile, new entrants into the labor force face
low wages and temporary contracts that mean they can easily be fired. Companies
do little to train them, treating them as temporaries.
University
education can take years longer than in other countries, with five years of
study for a basic credential and several more for professional specialization.
Lawyers in Italy must do a two-year apprenticeship, and most firms get free
labor out of the trainees, many of whom don't even get expenses reimbursed.
The
long education path is a deterrent that means only 20 percent of people between
25 and 34 have a university degree. That leaves Italy 34th of 37 industrialized
countries surveyed by the Organization for Economic Development and
Cooperation.
One
Italian in four under 30 is not in education, employment, or training.
The
universities themselves contribute little to the economy. No Italian university
made the Times Higher Education list of the world's top 200, and while Italy
has prominent scientists and researchers many of them work abroad, where
research grants and investment are easier to come by.
A
whole list of trades and professions is protected, with entrance restricted and
often based on connections: notaries, taxi drivers, pharmacists. The system
discourages competition and limits opportunity.
Bureaucracy
is legend. Italy ranks 87th on the World Bank's ease of doing business index,
and 158th when it comes to getting a business contract dispute resolved - ahead
of Afghanistan but behind Sudan, Togo and Kosovo. It takes 1,210 days to get a
decision in Rome's district court, compared to 518 days for the OECD average.
Taxes take 68.5 percent of company profits, compared to an average of 42
percent among richer countries.
Prospects
for change are uncertain. The fractious party system depends on coalitions,
while Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi is embroiled in criminal accusations he
paid a minor for sex and appears barely able to get legislation passed.
Berlusconi has lost markets' confidence - stocks rallied temporarily on Monday
on a report that he intended to quit.
But
Italy does know how to change - when it has to.
In
the early 1990s, Italy's outsized budget deficits meant it faced the
possibility of being left out of the euro - a deeply humiliating prospect.
Deficits were slashed. The government confronted unions over cuts in pensions
and won. Taxes went up. Government-owned companies were sold to reduce debt.
Italy joined the euro as a charter member in 1999.
But
once it got into the euro club, the country was sheltered from market
speculation by sharing a currency with stronger economies in northern Europe.
Markets were willing to loan to Italy at just a few hundredths of a percent
more than they did to financially solid Germany, letting it carry its large
debt pile with ease. The pressure for reform eased.
The
collapse of U.S. investment bank Lehman Brothers in 2008 and the ensuing
financial crisis made investors look more closely at risk, but Italy stayed out
of trouble while weaker countries like Greece, Ireland and Portugal lost access
to affordable borrowing and needed bailouts. The turning point came in July,
when European Union leaders decided that Greek bondholders would not be repaid
100 cents on the euro. That broke a fiercely held taboo that rich countries'
government debt was supposed to be risk free, sacrosanct.
"What
happened was, investors looked and thought, if you can impose haircuts on Greek
government debt, maybe you can do it for Italy as well, and maybe we should
start pricing in some level of credit risk," said Jacob Kierkegaard, a
research fellow at the Peter G. Peterson Institute for International Economics
in Washington, DC.
As
a result, investors started asking for more interest to lend to Italy. The
yield on the country's 10-year bond rose above 5 percent, then above 6 percent.
On Tuesday, it hit 6.73 percent, the highest since the euro was created in
1999.
Italy
was "essentially bailed out for a very long time by what I regard as a
very deep and persistent market failure," said Kierkegaard. "They
managed to postpone the reforms they needed until the situation became acute
and we're in the pickle that we are in today."
Now
Berlusconi has a list of promised reforms, which economists say reads as if it
were lifted from the 2011 OECD report on Italy's problems. That report noted
that most of its issues were the same as in the 2009 edition.
Government
have postponed change "because they tend to have a short-term horizon,
they don't see the benefits of reforms because those only materialize years
later," said Bocconi University's Boeri.
Meanwhile,
the political costs of confronting unions and professional lobbies have to be
faced today.
It's
a luxury Italy doesn't have any more.
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