IMF hails Italian PM’s radical reforms

IMF hails Italian PM’s radical reforms

PanARMENIAN.Net - The International Monetary Fund on Wednesday, May 16 hailed radical reforms enacted in debt-burdened Italy by Prime Minister Mario Monti, who urged "courageous and ambitious" European efforts to boost growth, AFP reported.

"The progress is really a model when considering progress across Europe," IMF director for Europe Reza Moghadam told reporters in Rome after an annual assessment and in reference to Monti's crash program in the last six months.

"Italy is on the right track and Italy has made remarkable progress in the last six months," he said, adding that Italy was in "a very difficult and dangerous situation" when Monti took power amid a wave of market panic.

"But the job is not yet done," the IMF official said. "There has to be more effort to revive growth," he added, emphasizing the need for more structural reforms, more pro-growth fiscal consolidation and more support from the banks.

Full implementation of structural reforms already announced would push Italy's primary surplus to the highest level in the eurozone by next year and output could rise by up to six percentage points in the medium term, he said.

A former top European commissioner and economics professor, Monti was put in place at the head of a technocratic government with the task of saving Italy from bankruptcy and pushing through long-delayed reforms and painful austerity.

Moghadam urged Italy to move "expeditiously" on a labour market reform plan that has sparked outrage from trade union leaders, saying this would increase jobs with the unemployment rate at a record high of 9.8 percent.

Monti agreed on Wednesday that "much remains to be done to deal with the delays which have built up for years, and with the structural weaknesses. "Now is not the time to drop our guard," he warned.

As European leaders discuss the balance between austerity and growth, he added: "Italy is not asking for less discipline on public finances but for more attention to growth with courageous and ambitious initiatives.”

 Top stories
Yerevan has dismissed Turkey’s demand to shut down the Armenian nuclear power plant as “inappropriate”.
Armenia will loan 2.9 billion drams to Nagorno Karabakh (Artsakh), according to a draft government decision.
The Ministry of Ecology and Natural Resources of Azerbaijan has “strongly condemned” Armenia’s decision.
Kerobyan has said that for the first time in the history of Armenia, the volume of foreign direct investments amounted to about $1 billion.
Partner news
---