• Login
Fintedex — Business, Fincance & Investment News
  • Contact
  • Submit a News Releases
No Result
View All Result
  • Contact
  • Submit a News Releases
No Result
View All Result
Fintedex — Business, Fincance & Investment News
No Result
View All Result
Home Finance

How inflation and interest rates might affect Italy’s budget

Timothy Wilson by Timothy Wilson
25.06.2022
in Finance
0
How inflation and interest rates might affect Italy’s budget
0
SHARES
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Finance & economics | Whenever it breaks

Tighter monetary policy could make Italy’s debts harder to pay

Mario Draghi, Italy's prime minister, listens during a debate at the Senate in Rome, Italy, on Tuesday, June 21, 2022. Italys biggest party is set to splinter over the countrys support for Ukraine, just as Draghi defended in parliament his governments stance on the conflict. Photographer: Alessia Pierdomenico/Bloomberg via Getty ImagesMario Draghi, Italy's prime minister, listens during a debate at the Senate in Rome, Italy, on Tuesday, June 21, 2022. Italys biggest party is set to splinter over the countrys support for Ukraine, just as Draghi defended in parliament his governments stance on the conflict. Photographer: Alessia Pierdomenico/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Before the pandemic it was a cause for excitement among economists that the real interest rate governments paid on their debts had fallen below the rate of economic growth in most rich countries, allowing governments to spend more freely and worry less about running up debts. But central banks’ battle with inflation today threatens to turn that relationship on its head, making the fiscal position of indebted governments more perilous.

When interest rates are below growth rates, governments can run primary budget deficits (that is, deficits before interest payments are taken into account) without the debt-to-gdp ratio necessarily rising. But when rates exceed economic growth, primary surpluses are the only way to keep indebtedness stable. The higher the starting debt, the more belt-tightening needed.

Fortunately, inflation reduces the real interest rate, and so most countries will gain a fiscal windfall this year. Some of their debt, in other words, will be inflated away. But if central banks successfully bring inflation down, and if high interest rates endure, things could get more painful. The picture looks especially worrying in Italy. The euro zone’s third-largest economy had net public debt worth nearly 140% of gdp last year. Its government currently pays about 3.5% to borrow for ten years.

Precisely where Italy’s indebtedness and borrowing costs will settle after the energy crisis is uncertain. Our table shows a range of combinations for debt and financing costs, and what they would imply for the country’s budget were growth to match the average imf forecast during 2022-27, and were inflation to fall to the European Central Bank’s target of 2%. In reality, the average tenor of outstanding Italian debt is nearly eight years, so it would take time for its average financing cost to rise to the levels shown on the right-hand side of the table.

At financing costs of 3% or below, Italy can run small primary deficits and still outgrow its debt. (The table also shows one weird effect of growth exceeding interest rates: that debt stability is easier to achieve when starting debts are higher.) As interest rates rise, however, stability requires primary surpluses of 2% or more. The only time Italy has run so tight a budget since the global financial crisis was in 2012, at the height of European austerity.

For more expert analysis of the biggest stories in economics, business and markets, sign up to Money Talks, our weekly newsletter.

More from Finance & economics

Three mechanisms for crypto contagion

How to make sense of bitcoin’s plight

Is the euro zone’s doom loop still to be feared?

Some reforms have weakened its force, but they have not eliminated it altogether

Can the Fed pull off a controlled slowdown of the housing market?

The events of the early 1980s might provide a guide


Previous Post

Three mechanisms for crypto contagion

Next Post

The Bank of Japan v the markets

Related Posts

How American banks are responding to rising interest rates
Finance

How American banks are responding to rising interest rates

by Timothy Wilson
20.07.2022
Is China facing an energy crunch, too?
Finance

Is China facing an energy crunch, too?

by Timothy Wilson
20.07.2022
The legacy of Abe Shinzo will shape Japan’s economy for years
Finance

The legacy of Abe Shinzo will shape Japan’s economy for years

by Timothy Wilson
16.07.2022
American inflation tops forecasts yet again, adding to recession risks
Finance

American inflation tops forecasts yet again, adding to recession risks

by Timothy Wilson
16.07.2022
Inflation shows both the value and limits of monetary-policy rules
Finance

Inflation shows both the value and limits of monetary-policy rules

by Timothy Wilson
16.07.2022
Next Post
The Bank of Japan v the markets

The Bank of Japan v the markets

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Premium Content

The Fed: Fed’s Mester doesn’t support interest-rate hike of 75 basis points in May

The Fed: Fed’s Mester doesn’t support interest-rate hike of 75 basis points in May

23.04.2022

These Samsung Galaxy Store apps could infect your new devices with malware

28.12.2021
Financial Face-Off: Financial Face-Off: Should you use your tax refund to buy I bonds or crypto? One of these options could get a 9.6% return. Let us explain.

Financial Face-Off: Financial Face-Off: Should you use your tax refund to buy I bonds or crypto? One of these options could get a 9.6% return. Let us explain.

18.04.2022

Browse by Category

  • Business
  • Finance
  • Stock Market
  • Technology

Browse by Tags

Europe Oleg Volin Russia Ukraine

Fintedex delivers real-time news about the financial industry: feature stories, industry developments, opinions plus the latest on people and trends.

Categories

  • Business
  • Finance
  • Stock Market
  • Technology

Browse by Tag

Europe Oleg Volin Russia Ukraine

Recent Posts

  • Fujifilm X-T5: everything we know so far and what we want to see
  • This devious attack turns a SATA cable into a data-stealing antenna
  • How American banks are responding to rising interest rates

© 2021 Fintedex.

No Result
View All Result
  • Contact
  • Submit a News Releases

© 2021 Fintedex.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?