From the BBC:
“Coronavirus: Are Italians losing
faith in the EU?”
The coronavirus crisis has taken
its toll on Italy and the EU was seen as slow to react When Covid-19 came to Europe it was Italy that
was hit first - and hit hard. Little
help came from its European neighbours in those first weeks in February and
March, as hospitals in the north were overwhelmed. As Italy counts its 31,000
dead, concern is mounting over the economic impact too, and there are signs of
a rise in the number of Italians losing faith in the EU. The Treaty of Rome
launched the then European Economic Community in 1957, with Italy a founding
member. "I have changed my mind a little on Europe. We are facing an absolute
emergency, and seeing countries turning their backs on each other is really
awkward," says Rome real estate agent Marco Tondo, 34. He is currently receiving nine weeks'
redundancy pay from the government at 80% of his normal salary. According to a
survey of 1,000 Italians conducted in April by Tecné, 42% of respondents said
they would leave the EU, up from 26% in November 2018. However, a quarter of that number said they
would be prepared to stay in the bloc if Europe approved concrete measures for
Italy. Italy went on full lockdown on 8 March and tight restrictions on life
were only relaxed on 4 May. The
country's economic output will fall by 8% this year, according to the
government of Giuseppe Conte. That scale of downturn will bloat Italy's public
debt this year to the tune of almost 155.7% of GDP, Italy's National Institute
of Statistics forecasts.
How has Europe responded? When the health crisis broke out, Mr Conte
called for the creation of coronabonds, which would have been underwritten by
all eurozone members to share the burden of economic recovery. But within days Germany and the Netherlands
had ruled out any kind of debt mutualisation. That didn't go down well in
Italy. Critics said the prime minister had been humiliated in the EU. "Asking
for coronabonds was the perfect way to have the door slammed in his face,"
argues Carlo Altomonte, associate Professor of Economics of European
Integration at Bocconi University. "Mutualisation
of debt is forbidden by EU treaties and Germany's constitution. I think Conte
used it as a weapon in negotiations." On 18 March, the European Central
Bank launched a €750bn (£660bn; $800bn) bond purchase programme to help the
eurozone's more indebted countries by pushing down borrowing costs. Two days
later, the European Commission announced the suspension of rules on public
deficits, thus allowing countries to inject as much money as they needed into
their economies. Then, on 8 April, the Eurogroup of eurozone finance ministers
agreed on a €540bn rescue plan. It was made up of: €200bn as a new credit line
for companies, provided by the European Investment Bank. €100bn in loans to
support temporary unemployment schemes. €240bn as a credit line provided by the
European Stability Mechanism (ESM) to fund eurozone health systems. The
political debate in Italy has focused mostly on that last part of the package.
The unpopular ESM is an intergovernmental bailout fund that provided loans to
Greece and some other EU countries during the financial crisis and dates back
to 2012. According to the Eurogroup,
loans will have interest rates close to 0.1%, but the money will be used only
"to support domestic financing of direct and indirect healthcare, cure and
prevention-related costs due to the Covid-19 crisis".
How has Italy reacted? Italy could borrow up to €37bn from the ESM,
but has still to decide whether to ask for the loans. The two parties that make up the technocrat Mr
Conte's coalition government have often held contrasting positions on European
issues, and that is the case too concerning borrowing from the ESM. The
centre-left Democratic Party backs the idea. But the anti-establishment Five
Star Movement has warned the government would collapse if Mr Conte were to tap
into the bailout fund. "The Italian parliament will decide whether or not
it is appropriate for Italy to activate it," Mr Conte finally said, after
repeatedly refusing to make use of the ESM. The main objection is from the
far-right League party, which used to be in government but is now in opposition.
"The ESM is not a gift, it's money lent, to be repaid at precise
conditions chosen in Brussels and not in Italy," said its leader Matteo
Salvini. "We must re-found the EU on new principles and go back to having
control over money production. We need to print money," he argued.
How powerful are the
Eurosceptics? Although the League is
still Italy's biggest party, its popularity has been decreasing over the last
two months, according to a survey by Demopolis. The League rules two key regions in Italy's north:
the industrial powerhouse of Lombardy, and Veneto in the north-east. They were
the first regions to record cases of coronavirus. So the party's handling of
the Covid-19 crisis has come under close scrutiny. Mr Salvini appears to have
lost support, while his challenger inside the party, Veneto governor Luca Zaia,
is becoming increasingly popular. "They
are both Eurosceptic, but Zaia is in charge of managing this crisis in his
region, and he is handling it well," explains Piero Ignazi, Professor of
Comparative Politics at the University of Bologna. "In contrast, Salvini
represents the opposition at national level, his criticism of the government is
not appealing to the people right now." While Luca Zaia launched large-scale testing
of the entire population of the region, Attilio Fontana, governor of Lombardy and
one of Mr Salvini's closest allies, chose not to implement the same strategy. According to recent research published by The
Lancet, Veneto's fatality rate of infected people is 6.4%, whereas in Lombardy
it is as high as 18.3%.
Will the EU offer more? Italy's employment rate, one of the lowest
in the eurozone, decreased slightly to 58.8% in March from 58.9% in February. "I'm
not a fan of the League, but Europe is proving once more to be useless, so we
should leave the EU," says Valentina Rosi, a 45-year-old former Rome
shopkeeper who is now unemployed. What
Italy is looking for now from the EU is a recovery plan that looks beyond
loans. The European Parliament is asking for a €2 trillion recovery fund to be
built into the EU budget and the European Commission is expected to table
proposals shortly. A major part of the next budget is cohesion, aiming to
reduce the big wealth gap between member states. But there are strong divisions
among member states - the biggest is whether countries should receive grants or
just loans. Any recovery plan based mainly on grants would be a victory for Mr
Conte, and could make a dramatic difference to Italians still undecided on
whether to turn their backs on Brussels or not.
^
It is understandable that the Italian people feel abandoned and as
second-class citizens within the European Union. Rather than uniting together
to help each other out as soon as Covid-19 hit places like Italy and Spain the
free-travel right within the EU was done away with and places like Germany
(which wasn’t hit hard by cases) led the way to only focus on Germany and no
other EU country (and whatever Germany does within the EU other EU member
countries follow-suit.) The EU was already hit hard before Covid-19 with the
lost of the UK during Brexit and all the questions relating it the EU’s role
and purpose. Covid-19 has only heightened those issues and made more and more
people around the EU - Italians and
other nationalities – seriously question what the EU is there for. If the EU
wants to nor fracture any more than it already is then it needs to clearly
define what the European Union is within the EU and what it will and will not
do for EU citizens. ^
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-52666870
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