157
Italy GDP growth is projected to resume very gradually. Global trade uncertainty and softer external demand will continue to weigh on export growth and business investment. Consumption will gradually pick up, as households’ disposable incomes keep rising and as confidence stabilises. Fiscal policy is projected to support activity through reduced tax burdens and social security charges, as well as higher public investment and tax incentives for business investment. The primary budget surplus is expected to continue falling modestly in 2020, and then to stabilise in 2021. This will allow the high public debt-to-GDP ratio to start falling from 2021. A comprehensive fiscal reform is key to improving spending effectiveness, enhancing the equity and efficiency of the tax system and reducing the debt burden. Improving public services, reducing the regulatory burden, and enhancing job-search and training programmes would buttress investment and employment and reduce income and regional disparities. The economy has remained weak GDP growth remains feeble amid low confidence. Firms have drawn down inventories as major trading partners’ growth slows and trade restrictions generate uncertainty about future demand. Industrial production has weakened whereas services activity has been more robust and construction has picked up after a deep recession. Employment has continued to expand, though at a slowing pace, with a larger share of new positions filled by permanent contracts. Flat productivity growth continues to constrain private sector wage increases. Consumer confidence has weakened, hindering private consumption growth through rising household saving rates.
Italy 1 Private consumption and investment are projected to grow slowly Y-o-y % changes 8
Employment growth has moderated
Volumes
% of population 15-74 53
4
% of labour force 13
52
12
51
11
50
10
49
9
0
-4 Private consumption Investment
-8
-12
← Employment rate
48
2011
2013
2015
2017
2019
2021
0
47
Unemployment rate →
2012
2014
2016
2018
2020
8 7
Source: OECD Economic Outlook 106 database. StatLink 2 https://doi.org/10.1787/888934045601
OECD ECONOMIC OUTLOOK, VOLUME 2019 ISSUE 2: PRELIMINARY VERSION © OECD 2019