OECD Economic Surveys: Italy 2024
Italy has weathered recent crises well. A strong fiscal policy response, enhanced competitiveness and improved banking sector health have supported growth in recent years. But public debt is high and spending pressures are rising from population ageing, higher interest rates, and the green and digital transitions. A steady fiscal consolidation is needed over several years to put debt on a more prudent path. Growth in spending needs to be contained, but public investment in the National Recovery and Resilience Plan should be protected to minimise adverse effects on growth. The ongoing civil justice and public administration reforms will support growth by raising business investment and facilitating the implementation of public investment plans. Regulatory barriers to competition in services should be reduced. Raising employment, including by expanding access to early childhood education to reduce barriers to female labour market participation, would make growth more inclusive. Additional policy efforts are needed to accelerate the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions and adapt to climate change. Renewable power generation has advanced, but complex permitting procedures that hold back the installation of renewable energy capacity need to be simplified.
SPECIAL FEATURE: Achieving the energy and climate transition
Also available in: Italian
Achieving the energy and climate transition
Italy is committed to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 55% relative to 1990 by 2030 and reach net-zero by 2050. Achieving these goals requires a significant strengthening of decarbonisation policies. Fully implementing plans to make carbon tax rates more similar across sectors, including by aligning fossil fuel excise taxes more closely with emissions content, would promote carbon abatement where costs are lowest. Boosting green electricity generation requires further streamlining of permitting processes, notably by defining suitable areas for renewable power plants and raising capacity ceilings for simplified permitting. Continuing to strengthen public transport and regional train networks, reducing the number of highly polluting vehicles and aligning car-related taxes with emissions would contribute to the decarbonisation of transport. In the buildings sector, recently reformed tax credit schemes should be complemented with subsidised loans and grants to promote energy-efficient retrofitting, especially for low-income households. In parallel to strengthening decarbonisation policies, Italy needs to reinforce adaptation policies, notably by mitigating risks from flooding, landslides and extreme heat.
Also available in: Italian
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