US President Donald Trump promised to help Italy finance its public debt, which is the largest in Europe, the daily Corriere della Sera reported Friday.
The paper quoted Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte, who visited Washington at the end of last month, as saying: “Donald Trump offered Italy help from the United States to finance its debt next year.”
The newspaper did not provide any more details about the circumstances in which the alleged promise was made.
Corriere della Sera said Italy needs to sell around 400 billion euros ($463 billion) in bonds next year.
That is nearly 18 percent of its debt which totalled 2,263 billion euros last year, according to Eurostat data. At 132 percent of GDP, Italy has the second highest level of debt compared to its economic output in the eurozone after Greece.
“Conte doesn’t seem to have explained what exactly the US offer consists of or the chances it will materialise,” said Corriere della Sera
“The US administration doesn’t have its own sovereign wealth fund and doesn’t have the power to coordinate banks and private funds,” noted the newspaper, in an implicit indication that Trump may find it difficult to keep the promise.
Source: AFP