CFI.co Summer 2018

Page 16

> Nouriel Roubini and Brunello Rosa:

Italy’s Slow-Motion Euro Train Wreck

F

inancial markets have finally woken up to the fact that Italy could soon be ruled by a populist government with designs to take the country out of the eurozone. And, given Italy's tepid economic performance since adopting the single currency a generation ago, there is little reason to think that the current crisis is a one-off event. The arrival in power of a populist, Eurosceptic government in Italy has focused investors’ minds like few other events this year. The yield 16

differential, or spread, between Italian and German bonds has widened sharply, indicating that investors view Italy as a riskier bet. And Italian equity prices have fallen – particularly in domestic bank shares, the best proxy of country risk – while insurance premia against a sovereign default have increased. There are even fears that Italy could trigger another global financial crisis, especially if a fresh election becomes a de facto referendum on the euro. Even before Italy’s March election, in which the CFI.co | Capital Finance International

populist Five Star Movement (M5S) and the right-wing League party captured a combined parliamentary majority, we warned that the market was being too complacent toward the country. Italy now finds itself in more than just a one-off political crisis. It must confront its core national dilemma: whether to remain shackled by the euro or try to reclaim economic, political, and institutional sovereignty. We suspect that Italy will compromise and remain in the eurozone in the short run, if only to avoid the


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