Tuesday 3 March 2026 10:03
Italy Misses EU Deficit Target as Growth Slows and Debt Climbs
Italy Misses EU Deficit Target as Growth Slows, Raising Pressure on Meloni GovernmentItaly has missed the European Union’s deficit target for 2025 and revised its economic growth downward, delivering an unwelcome double blow to Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s government at a politically sensitive moment.New data released this week by national statistics agency Istat show that Italy’s budget deficit reached 3.1 percent of gross domestic product in 2025, narrowly breaching the EU’s 3 percent ceiling. At the same time, annual GDP growth has been revised down from 0.7 percent to 0.5 percent, confirming that the country’s recovery remains fragile.
While neither figure represents a dramatic shock, together they raise fresh concerns in Brussels and financial markets about Italy’s fiscal trajectory and long-term economic performance.
A Symbolic but Significant Breach
The deficit overshoot, just 0.1 percentage points above the EU threshold, may appear marginal. In the framework of EU fiscal rules, however, it carries weight. Crossing the 3 percent line opens the door to a potential excessive deficit procedure by the European Commission, a formal process that can lead to closer oversight and constraints on national budget decisions.
The Meloni government had previously projected that the 2025 shortfall would remain within the limit. The revised figure therefore represents both a technical setback and a reputational one, undercutting Rome’s efforts to present itself as fiscally disciplined after years of tension between Italy and EU institutions over budget compliance.
Should Brussels opt to launch formal proceedings, Italy could face tighter scrutiny in upcoming budget cycles, limiting room for manoeuvre on tax policy, public investment and social spending.
Growth Loses Momentum
Compounding the deficit news, Istat revised 2025 GDP growth down to 0.5 percent. The downgrade aligns with more cautious independent forecasts but reinforces a familiar narrative: Italy continues to expand more slowly than many of its eurozone peers.
As the EU’s third-largest economy, Italy’s performance matters beyond its borders. Persistent low growth has long been a structural weakness, limiting the country’s ability to reduce its debt burden and strengthen productivity. While the economy is not contracting, it is not generating the momentum needed to decisively shift its fiscal position.
Debt Remains a Structural Vulnerability
Public debt climbed to 137.1 percent of GDP at the end of 2025, up from 134.7 percent the previous year. That ratio remains among the highest in the European Union and leaves Italy particularly sensitive to interest rate movements.
Although borrowing costs have eased somewhat since their 2022–23 peaks, even modest fluctuations significantly affect Italy’s debt servicing costs. Following the release of the new figures, Italian government bond yields edged higher, with the spread over German ten-year bonds widening slightly — a sign of renewed investor caution rather than outright alarm.
Scrutiny of the 2026 Budget
Parliament approved the 2026 budget in December, a €22 billion package designed to reduce the deficit to 2.8 percent of GDP this year. The government framed it as proof of fiscal credibility and responsibility.
Now, however, the 2025 overshoot casts doubt on whether those targets are realistic. Critics argue that the budget relies on optimistic assumptions and insufficiently addresses deeper economic weaknesses, including stagnant wages, high taxation and slow productivity growth.
Opposition leaders have renewed calls for a more expansionary strategy aimed at stimulating demand and supporting households rather than prioritizing deficit reduction.
Tensions Over EU Climate Policy
Economic pressure is also shaping Italy’s stance in Brussels on environmental policy. This week Industry Minister Adolfo Urso called for a suspension of the EU’s Emissions Trading System (ETS), arguing that the carbon pricing mechanism is effectively a tax on energy-intensive industries already struggling with global competition.
Italy has justified its position on competitiveness grounds, particularly for sectors such as steel, chemicals and ceramics concentrated in the industrial north. Environmental groups and several member states, however, have criticized the move as an attempt to weaken EU climate commitments.
The dispute highlights a broader balancing act: reconciling industrial policy, environmental obligations and fiscal constraints at a time of slower growth.
A Political Test Ahead
For Meloni’s government, the economic data arrive at a delicate juncture. Approaching the midpoint of her term, the prime minister faces mounting domestic and European pressures, from migration management to industrial disputes and geopolitical tensions.
The deficit breach challenges a central pillar of the government’s narrative, fiscal prudence combined with economic stability. The growth revision, though modest, reinforces the perception of underperformance relative to Italy’s potential.
Italy remains a major European economy with strong manufacturing, tourism and design sectors. Yet the gap between capacity and output continues to define the national economic story.
In the coming months, attention will focus on whether Rome can restore fiscal credibility without deepening stagnation, and whether Brussels opts for formal action or pragmatic flexibility.
For now, the message from this week’s data is clear: Italy is growing, but not fast enough, and balancing its books remains an unfinished task.
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Italy has missed the European Union’s deficit target for 2025 and revised its economic growth downward, delivering an unwelcome double blow to Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s government at a politically sensitive moment.
New data released this week by national statistics agency Istat show that Italy’s budget deficit reached 3.1 percent of gross domestic product in 2025, narrowly breaching the EU’s 3 percent ceiling. At the same time, annual GDP growth has been revised down from 0.7 percent to 0.5 percent, confirming that the country’s recovery remains fragile.
While neither figure represents a dramatic shock, together they raise fresh concerns in Brussels and financial markets about Italy’s fiscal trajectory and long-term economic performance.
The deficit overshoot, just 0.1 percentage points above the EU threshold, may appear marginal. In the framework of EU fiscal rules, however, it carries weight. Crossing the 3 percent line opens the door to a potential excessive deficit procedure by the European Commission, a formal process that can lead to closer oversight and constraints on national budget decisions.
The Meloni government had previously projected that the 2025 shortfall would remain within the limit. The revised figure therefore represents both a technical setback and a reputational one, undercutting Rome’s efforts to present itself as fiscally disciplined after years of tension between Italy and EU institutions over budget compliance.
Should Brussels opt to launch formal proceedings, Italy could face tighter scrutiny in upcoming budget cycles, limiting room for manoeuvre on tax policy, public investment and social spending.
Compounding the deficit news, Istat revised 2025 GDP growth down to 0.5 percent. The downgrade aligns with more cautious independent forecasts but reinforces a familiar narrative: Italy continues to expand more slowly than many of its eurozone peers.
As the EU’s third-largest economy, Italy’s performance matters beyond its borders. Persistent low growth has long been a structural weakness, limiting the country’s ability to reduce its debt burden and strengthen productivity. While the economy is not contracting, it is not generating the momentum needed to decisively shift its fiscal position.
Public debt climbed to 137.1 percent of GDP at the end of 2025, up from 134.7 percent the previous year. That ratio remains among the highest in the European Union and leaves Italy particularly sensitive to interest rate movements.
Although borrowing costs have eased somewhat since their 2022–23 peaks, even modest fluctuations significantly affect Italy’s debt servicing costs. Following the release of the new figures, Italian government bond yields edged higher, with the spread over German ten-year bonds widening slightly — a sign of renewed investor caution rather than outright alarm.
Parliament approved the 2026 budget in December, a €22 billion package designed to reduce the deficit to 2.8 percent of GDP this year. The government framed it as proof of fiscal credibility and responsibility.
Now, however, the 2025 overshoot casts doubt on whether those targets are realistic. Critics argue that the budget relies on optimistic assumptions and insufficiently addresses deeper economic weaknesses, including stagnant wages, high taxation and slow productivity growth.
Opposition leaders have renewed calls for a more expansionary strategy aimed at stimulating demand and supporting households rather than prioritizing deficit reduction.
Economic pressure is also shaping Italy’s stance in Brussels on environmental policy. This week Industry Minister Adolfo Urso called for a suspension of the EU’s Emissions Trading System (ETS), arguing that the carbon pricing mechanism is effectively a tax on energy-intensive industries already struggling with global competition.
Italy has justified its position on competitiveness grounds, particularly for sectors such as steel, chemicals and ceramics concentrated in the industrial north. Environmental groups and several member states, however, have criticized the move as an attempt to weaken EU climate commitments.
The dispute highlights a broader balancing act: reconciling industrial policy, environmental obligations and fiscal constraints at a time of slower growth.
For Meloni’s government, the economic data arrive at a delicate juncture. Approaching the midpoint of her term, the prime minister faces mounting domestic and European pressures, from migration management to industrial disputes and geopolitical tensions.
The deficit breach challenges a central pillar of the government’s narrative, fiscal prudence combined with economic stability. The growth revision, though modest, reinforces the perception of underperformance relative to Italy’s potential.
Italy remains a major European economy with strong manufacturing, tourism and design sectors. Yet the gap between capacity and output continues to define the national economic story.
In the coming months, attention will focus on whether Rome can restore fiscal credibility without deepening stagnation, and whether Brussels opts for formal action or pragmatic flexibility.
For now, the message from this week’s data is clear: Italy is growing, but not fast enough, and balancing its books remains an unfinished task.
