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Italy's Conte Promises to End Recession Caused by Lower Exports

Italy's Conte Promises to End Recession Caused by Lower Exports

(Bloomberg) -- Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte blamed global trade tensions and their negative trickle-down effects on Italy’s exports for the country’s first recession since 2013.

Even “the most naïve analysts” are aware of the tariff dispute between Washington and Beijing and its effect on exports, Conte said Thursday after preliminary data confirmed the slump. He called the recession temporary and added that he expects the government’s measures will lead to a recovery in the second half of 2019.

Exports Drive Decline

Italy's Conte Promises to End Recession Caused by Lower Exports

Many analysts expect a return to growth this year in Italy, despite the forecasts of a global slowdown affecting the euro area. David Powell of Bloomberg Economics said the country’s businesses are likely to “resume their normal spending patterns” in the first quarter as the economy expands again.

“The difference between actual and potential output is greater in Italy than in any other of the bloc’s largest economies,” Powell added.

Italy's Conte Promises to End Recession Caused by Lower Exports

Fabio Fois, senior European economist at Barclays, wrote in a note that his assumption is “that Italy’s technical recession will not extend into 2019” and that growth will be “flat” in the current quarter before returning to expansion in the spring.

“A weakening growth outlook represents a serious threat for the stability of the government,” Fois said. He said a government collapse before EU elections in May is unlikely “unless the growth outlook deteriorates notably in the very near term.”

Premier Conte said he doesn’t fear that the European Commission will ask for a budget adjustment to meet Italy’s much-negotiated fiscal targets for this year. A budget adjustment with lower spending could pressure the populist government into curbing some of its expansive plans.

Conte’s government has forecast 1 percent growth this year, though the number has been severely challenged by a wide array of economists. The Bank of Italy and the International Monetary Fund have each forecast 0.6 percent annual growth, while a survey conducted by Bloomberg News earlier this month predicted a 0.2 percent growth in the current quarter.

Separately, Deputy Premier Luigi Di Maio blamed previous leaders for the economic morass. In a Facebook post, the Five Star Movement leader said that the Democratic Party-led governments “lied to us, never brought us out of the crisis.”

Pier Carlo Padoan, who served as finance chief under former premiers Matteo Renzi and Paolo Gentiloni, pushed back, calling such negative comments “disgraceful and ignorant.”

--With assistance from Alessandra Migliaccio and Giovanni Salzano.

To contact the reporter on this story: Lorenzo Totaro in Rome at ltotaro@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Fergal O'Brien at fobrien@bloomberg.net, Kevin Costelloe, Jerrold Colten

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