The Senate on Saturday voted
confidence requested by the government on the 2025 budget bill,
which has thus become law.
The centre-left opposition has harshly criticised the package
and the centre-right majority was also hit by dissent and
controversy Friday as budget rapporteur Guido Quntino Liris, of
Premier Girogia Meloni's rightwing Brothers of Italy (FdI)
party, quit complaining of a "de facto mono-chamberism" after he
said that the package had been "armour-plated" against change in
the Upper House.
The government is staunchly defending a "prudent" budget, which
Economy Minister Giancarlo Giorgetti said has "rewarded" the
country and that represents "a value".
In the wake of Liris's resignation, Giorgetti said he is also
open to a review of the parliamentary budget rules.
The 2025 budget bill has 30 billion euros worth of new measures.
The package includes a 1,000-euro bonus for the parents of
newborns, although it will be means tested, with wealthier
families excluded, as part of efforts to reverse Italy's
declining birth rate.
Banks, which have enjoyed high profits in recent years thanks to
the ECB putting up interest rates, and insurance companies will
be called on to make a 3.5-billion-euro contribution to the
budget, which will to go the national health system.
Critics have said that the measure, a collection of suspensions
of tax breaks, is only in fact a loan and that the financial
institutions will be effectively reimbursed in a few years'
time.
The budget also maintains cuts in the labour-tax wedge for lower
earners that the government made in its 2023 budget law.
The Quota 103 pension scheme is kept, enabling people to start
claiming a State pension before the retirement age of 67, under
certain conditions.
Around 2.3-2.4 billion euros of the financial coverage for the
budget comes from a review of public spending, with ministries
told to cut their budgets.
Healthcare resources will be boosted by 1.3 billion ahead of
contract renewals in 2028-2030 with higher allowances for
doctors and nurses and healthcare personnel working in ERs.
photo: Giorgetti
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