Italian public debt hits high point

Italy's public debt hit an all-time high in June of almost €2 trillion and the annual budget deficit was also bigger than a year…

Italy's public debt hit an all-time high in June of almost €2 trillion and the annual budget deficit was also bigger than a year before, due largely to its share of bailouts for other euro zone states, the central bank said today.

Public debt at the end of June rose €6.6 billion to €1.973 billion, the Bank of Italy said, as the Treasury's cash reserves increased by €10.3 billion.

Italy's benchmark bond yields remain close to 6 per cent despite tough austerity measures introduced by Mario Monti's technocrat government.

With the country mired in a deep recession, markets are sceptical of Italy's ability to bring down a debt pile equivalent to around 123 per cent of output, the second highest debt in the euro zone after Greece's.

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The economy contracted 0.7 per cent in the second quarter and gross domestic product was down 2.5 per cent from a year earlier.

In another worrying sign for public finances, the Bank of Italy reported that in the first half of the year the annual budget deficit, at €47.7 billion, was €1.1 billion higher than in the same period of 2011.

This was due to an increase in spending to help other euro zone countries, which rose to €16.6 billion from €6.1 billion in January-June 2011.

Italy itself is under pressure to request help from Europe's bailout funds, a move now widely seen as the only way to bring down borrowing costs that have soared in recent months, but which the government has so far resisted.

Italy's one-year borrowing costs rose marginally at auction on Monday, with uncertainty over how and when the European Central Bank might move to ease both the country's and the region's mounting debt problems tempering appetite for risk.

Rome is targeting the deficit to fall sharply this year to 1.7 per cent of GDP from 3.9 per cent in 2011, but economy minister Vittorio Grilli admitted yesterday that this target would be missed.

He nevertheless reiterated Rome's position that because the overshoot was due to the steep recession, no further austerity measures were needed.

The structural deficit, the fiscal gap that persists even when an economy is operating at its full potential, would be eliminated next year as targeted, he told Rome daily Repubblica.

Mr Grilli asked the European Central Bank to move more quickly to put together plans to bring down Italy's yields and said no new policy conditions should be imposed on Italy.

He said when the recession is over, Italy could lower its debt-to-GDP ratio by 20 percentage points in five years through a combination of real estate sales, spending cuts and prudent budget management.

Reuters