The FT today reports on the latest speech from Mario Draghi, governor of Italy’s central bank, and , as the FT says: "he bluntly told the nation’s politicians to stop interfering in the Italian banking sector".
More importantly he stressed that:
the Prodi government must lower taxes, cut public spending and reform the pension system in order to reduce Italy’s crushingly high public debt.
I entirely agree, but since we have just had a bout of tax increases rather than decreases, it is hard for me to believe that he will be listened to very enthusiastically. Meantime, as I post elsewhere, the eurozone economy seems to be slowing slightly, this is not good news for Italy.
There are other signs that the euro-region expansion may be cooling. Export growth slowed to 0.3 percent in the first quarter after 3.5 percent in the last quarter of 2006. Retail sales in the euro area fell for the first month in three in May and French business confidence declined.
In manufacturing, new orders gained at the slowest pace since November 2005, with the index reading 55.4 after 55.8 in April, today's report said. Output growth slipped to 56.1 from 56.9, the least since February 2006.
Italy Economy Real Time Data Charts
Edward Hugh is only able to update this blog from time to time, but he does run a lively Twitter account with plenty of Italy related comment. He also maintains a collection of constantly updated Italy economy charts together with short text updates on a Storify dedicated page Italy - Lost in Stagnation?
Friday, June 01, 2007
Wednesday, May 30, 2007
Recent Italian Data
This is just a short post to let any reader who happens by know that I am - after a long leave of absence - back. And that I will now be posting again reasonably regularly.
Just two quick pieces of data while I am here. Firstly business confidence registered a drop earlier this month:
Italian business confidence fell in May from a six-month high on concern that gains in the euro and slowing economic growth in the U.S. will hurt exports. The Isae Institute's confidence index fell to 96.2 from a downwardly revised 97.9 in April, the state-funded research center said today in Rome.
And then just today we have news that retail sales have dropped again in May for the third month in a row:
Italian retail sales fell for a third month in May as consumer spending continued to be hampered by rising gasoline prices and tax increases.The pace of the decline slowed in the month with a seasonally adjusted index of retail sales rising to 47.7 from 47.5 in April, according to a survey of 440 retail executives compiled for Bloomberg LP by NTC Economics Ltd. A reading below 50 signals a decrease.
Now one thing which is interesting is that employment in Italy (as in Germany and Japan) seems to be steadily increasing, but consumption remains weak:
``Today's figure is a snapshot of the situation of household spending in Italy; we're seeing modest levels of spending in line with what is perceived to be the level of disposable income,'' said Annamaria Grimaldi, an economist at Banca Intesa SpA in Milan.
So this really does present us with the question: is Italy getting the German/Japanese elderly society disease of low internal consumption and strong export dependence for growth? If so the export sector really does need to be rejuvenated in order to try and push GDP growth rates about critical levels to maintain debt sustainability. Last years 1.9% rise in GDP - good as it was in Italian terms - simply won't do. And growth this year looks decidedly more wobbly.
More, and more in-depth, soon.
Just two quick pieces of data while I am here. Firstly business confidence registered a drop earlier this month:
Italian business confidence fell in May from a six-month high on concern that gains in the euro and slowing economic growth in the U.S. will hurt exports. The Isae Institute's confidence index fell to 96.2 from a downwardly revised 97.9 in April, the state-funded research center said today in Rome.
And then just today we have news that retail sales have dropped again in May for the third month in a row:
Italian retail sales fell for a third month in May as consumer spending continued to be hampered by rising gasoline prices and tax increases.The pace of the decline slowed in the month with a seasonally adjusted index of retail sales rising to 47.7 from 47.5 in April, according to a survey of 440 retail executives compiled for Bloomberg LP by NTC Economics Ltd. A reading below 50 signals a decrease.
Now one thing which is interesting is that employment in Italy (as in Germany and Japan) seems to be steadily increasing, but consumption remains weak:
``Today's figure is a snapshot of the situation of household spending in Italy; we're seeing modest levels of spending in line with what is perceived to be the level of disposable income,'' said Annamaria Grimaldi, an economist at Banca Intesa SpA in Milan.
So this really does present us with the question: is Italy getting the German/Japanese elderly society disease of low internal consumption and strong export dependence for growth? If so the export sector really does need to be rejuvenated in order to try and push GDP growth rates about critical levels to maintain debt sustainability. Last years 1.9% rise in GDP - good as it was in Italian terms - simply won't do. And growth this year looks decidedly more wobbly.
More, and more in-depth, soon.
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