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* Italy has squandered opportunity offered by single

currency

* Public mood has soured towards euro after years of

stagnation

* Politicians want Europe to fix crisis but shy from reform

* Parties fomenting anti-euro sentiment ahead of election

By James Mackenzie and Gavin Jones

ROME, June 25 (Reuters) – Antonio Fazio, the disgraced

former governor of the Bank of Italy, warned half-jokingly in

1998 that the euro would not be paradise but a “purgatory” that

would demand years of pain and sacrifice.

Currently appealing a conviction for improperly trying to

influence a bank takeover in 2005, Fazio is not much listened to

these days, but his words have turned out to be frighteningly

prophetic for Italy.

The country has gained much from its membership of the

single currency over the past decade, notably generously low

borrowing costs and freedom from the wild gyrations that plagued

its old lira currency on foreign exchange markets.

But it has not used the time to purge itself of faults which

have made it the most stagnant economy in Europe for a decade.

Its towering public debt is stifling growth and it is buckling

under the pressure of competing on equal terms with Germany’s

forbiddingly efficient export machine.

“Italy hasn’t grown in the last 15 years,” said Lorenzo Bini

Smaghi, a former member of the European Central Bank Executive

Council, now teaching at Harvard University.

“The markets are currently asking ‘what is Italy doing to

tackle the fundamental problems that have prevented it from

growing?'” he said.

The question is expressed in borrowing costs that are

hovering around six percent on 10 year debt, dangerously close

to the levels that pitched Silvio Berlusconi from power last

year and brought in the technocratic government of former

European Commissioner Mario Monti.

The answer appeared clear when Monti took office promising

to control public finances, open up the economy to more

competition and reform Italy’s sclerotic labour market to get

more young people into permanent jobs.

It is less so now that the tangled realities of Italian

politics have got in the way, eroding support for reform and

fostering an increasingly bitter public mood best expressed in

the angry diatribes of comedian-turned-campaigner Beppe Grillo

and his rebel Five Star Movement, which wants out of the euro.

All that many ordinary Italians have seen of Monti’s

promised reforms are higher taxes, rising unemployment,

declining incomes and yet another year of recession that has

hardened resistance to more sacrifice.

Isolated by politicians gearing up for elections due early

next year, Monti is seeking a Europe-wide solution to the

crisis, with more emphasis on growth and new tools like jointly

issued eurobonds backed by the whole bloc, including Germany.

But Italians, who once trusted Europe far more than their

own scandal-ridden political class, have begun to turn away from

the euro as the single currency has come to be associated with

terms like austerity, tax hikes and pension cuts rather than

stability and low interest rates.

“For years Europe represented ‘something more’ but now it

represents ‘something less’,” said former Prime Minister

Giuliano Amato, who piloted a series of reforms at a time of

severe crisis in the early 1990s.

MAVERICK

Opinion polls have shown steep falls in support for the euro

in Italy but the clearest illustration of the new mood in has

been the runaway success of the maverick Grillo, who wants Italy

to default on its debt and drop the single currency altogether.

“If we had the lira in one night we could write two lines on

a piece of paper and devalue by 30 percent, and then we could

start over. As things are now, we can’t make it,” Grillo said

ahead of spectacular successes at local elections last month.

He has bellowed his defiance in town squares across Italy,

blasting Monti, the euro, bankers and corrupt politicians in a

campaign that has turned his Five Star Movement from a fringe

group to the second biggest political force in the country.

Traditional parties denounce him as a demagogue but they

have been terrified by the explosion of popular anger against

politicians and are scrambling to come up with a response.

Berlusconi, who still controls Italy’s largest centre-right

party, the People of Freedom, is also trying to ride the

anti-European wave, saying leaving the euro was “not blasphemy”

and he did not see why it should make Italians poorer.

In his long political career Berlusconi has frequently

blamed the single currency for Italy’s difficulties, famously

declaring in 2005 that “Prodi’s euro has screwed us all,” in

reference to former centre-left leader Romano Prodi.

This time, out of office and desperate to regain lost

popularity, it may turn out to more than just words.

Monti has acknowledged that the changing mood is now

reflected in Italy’s parliament, which he said “has

traditionally been pro-European, and no longer is”.

The Northern League, which seven years ago tried to promote

a referendum to take Italy out of the euro, is also returning to

its euro-sceptic roots, meaning that at least three large

parties may fight the next election on an anti-euro ticket.

The rising tide of anti European sentiment has come at a

dangerous time with Greece teetering on the brink, Spain

dependent on international support to keep its banking system

afloat and Italy, the euro zone’s third biggest economy, now

once again the next front line in the crisis.

“Nothing irreparable has happened yet but a serious accident

is possible,” said Giampiero Auletta Armenise, chairman of

Rothschild in Italy and former chief executive of UBI Banca.

THROWN AWAY

Italy avoided the frenzied real estate speculation that

ruined Spain and Ireland and has a far stronger economy than

sickly Greece. But it has slid further into stagnation, choked

by one of the world’s heaviest public debts.

“We threw away the euro dividend in those years,

particularly at the start of the 2000s,” said Emma Marcegaglia,

former head of Italy’s main employers federation Confindustria,

who returned to her family-owned steel group this year.

“We went from paying interest rates of 10-12 percent to

rates of 2-3 percent and instead of taking advantage of this by

cutting taxes, investing in research, reducing spending and

building up surpluses, we did the opposite. We threw it away.”

Official data shows gross domestic product has risen by an

average of 0.4 percent a year since 2000, hourly productivity

levels have been stagnant, and in the last five years average

family incomes have fallen 7 percent in real terms.

In 2000, Italy’s unit labour costs, one of the main gauges

of productivity in the economy, were 12.75 percent lower than

Germany’s. Today, they are 6.6 percent higher.

In the same period, Italy’s public debt burden, the heaviest

in Europe after Greece, has climbed from 108 percent of GDP in

2000 to 120 percent in 2011, leaving it perilously exposed to

the changing moods of the bond markets.

Looking forward, the picture gets no better. Growth between

2012 and 2017 will average just 0.5 percent, the Paris-based

Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development forecast

last month, the lowest rate of 41 countries it assessed.

Italy has not been helped by a political system dominated by

special interests and tainted by corruption and cronyism that

has proved singularly inept at pushing though reform.

“It’s a system which has always been very fragmented and

which has always given small groups a disproportionate power of

veto,” said Amato.

BOGGED DOWN

A swiftly approved mix of tax hikes and pension cuts at the

end of last year helped calm the immediate financial crisis, but

since then the government has been bogged down in wrangling over

wider structural reforms to the economy.

It is only now getting around to planning serious spending

cuts and has been slow to tackle a bloated public administration

and deregulate markets shackled by special interest groups

ranging from lawyers to pharmacists and taxi drivers.

The labour market reform degenerated into a fight about the

rights of sacked workers to win reinstatement in court and has

still not been approved by parliament after three months.

The growing ambivalence towards the euro among the political

classes underscores doubts about Italy’s willingness or ability

to accept the rigid fiscal discipline that would be demanded as

part of a truly European solution to the crisis.

“For now, discussion of euro bonds in Italy is only about

the benefits but not the duties,” said Bini Smaghi.

He noted the Italian parliament has dragged its feet over

approving the so-called “fiscal compact”, a German-driven

budgetary pact which would be a first step towards euro bonds

and which European Union leaders signed up to last December.

The intensifying euro crisis may ironically help Monti,

according to Amato, who took office in 1992 after Italy had been

expelled from the European Monetary System and as the political

class was reeling from the “Bribesville” corruption scandals.

“These moments of risk are always good moments because if

there’s no risk it’s difficult to move, you can’t convince

anyone,” he said.

More immediately, many Italians are hoping for a clearer

signpost out of the crisis from a European Union summit at the

end of the month. If not, said Marcegaglia, the consequences for

Italy and the euro zone as a whole could be dramatic.

“I think either something substantial comes out in June or

else we are really at a very serious crossroads,” she said.