Friday , April 19 2024
Home / Perspectives Pictet / Europe chart of the week – Italian productivity

Europe chart of the week – Italian productivity

Summary:
Among the main challenges facing Italy, stagnant labour productivity is one of the most important.With less than 30 days to go, the Italian general election remains highly unpredictable. The new electoral system and the fact that 37% of seats are to be allocated on a ‘first-past-the-post’ system make projecting seats from voting intentions particularly hard.Importantly, Italy is going into this election with an economy that is performing relatively strongly relative to recent history. However, cyclical strength is masking structural weaknesses. Over the past few years, Italy has endeavoured to address certain weaknesses, but some reforms have not gone as far as necessary. Labour productivity remains a problem: while the other big euro area economies have seen 1% annual average

Topics:
Nadia Gharbi considers the following as important: , , , ,

This could be interesting, too:

Cesar Perez Ruiz writes Weekly View – Big Splits

Cesar Perez Ruiz writes Weekly View – Central Bank Halloween

Cesar Perez Ruiz writes Weekly View – Widening bottlenecks

Cesar Perez Ruiz writes Weekly View – Debt ceiling deadline postponed

Among the main challenges facing Italy, stagnant labour productivity is one of the most important.

Europe chart of the week – Italian productivity

With less than 30 days to go, the Italian general election remains highly unpredictable. The new electoral system and the fact that 37% of seats are to be allocated on a ‘first-past-the-post’ system make projecting seats from voting intentions particularly hard.

Importantly, Italy is going into this election with an economy that is performing relatively strongly relative to recent history. However, cyclical strength is masking structural weaknesses. Over the past few years, Italy has endeavoured to address certain weaknesses, but some reforms have not gone as far as necessary. Labour productivity remains a problem: while the other big euro area economies have seen 1% annual average productivity growth since 1999, in Italy productivity has been stagnant (see Chart), a key factor behind the poor performance of potential output over recent years. And a fragmented government will reduce the prospects of reforms to improve things on this front. Among election candidates, there has been not much discussion about labour productivity so far. Increasing pension benefits and unfunded tax cuts are the most popular pledge.

Nevertheless, improving long-run potential growth in Italy is key to managing the public debt burden, which is at 134% of GDP (Q3 2017). With interest rates still very low, public debt sustainability risks are likely to be limited in the near term. However, investors are likely to be much less sanguine on the medium-term outlook as monetary and external tailwinds are likely to gradually wane.

Nadia Gharbi
Nadia Gharbi is economist at Pictet Wealth Management. She graduates in Université de Genève, Les Acacias, Canton of Geneva, Switzerland Do not hesitate to contact Pictet for an investment proposal. Do not hesitate to contact Pictet for an investment proposal. Please contact Zurich Office, the Geneva Office or one of 26 other offices world-wide.

Leave a Reply

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