Economics

Now Italy's Monti Wants to Save Europe

Italy’s Prime Minister tells France and Germany that Europe needs growth as much as austerity
Monti, right, greets Merkel and Sarkozy at a Jan. 30 meeting in BrusselsPhotograph by Philippe Wojazer/Pool Photo via Bloomberg

In November, Mario Monti, the former European Union official and academic, was tapped by Italy’s President to form a government after Silvio Berlusconi’s regime crumbled. At the time, heavily indebted Italy looked like the next domino to fall.

Under Monti as Prime Minister, Italy has done the unthinkable: regained investor confidence. His government has pushed through €20 billion ($26 billion) in austerity measures, and moved to deregulate services and reduce red tape. He’s pursuing plans to simplify the tax code and overhaul rigid labor rules. Helped by the European Central Bank’s liquidity injections into the euro area’s banks, Italy now enjoys lower borrowing costs: The yield on a 10-year bond has fallen by about 1.5 percentage points since Monti took office, easing fears the nation would struggle to pay its $2.5 trillion debt. Monti “has been a game-changer,” says Nicholas Spiro, managing director of Spiro Sovereign Strategy in London.