Thursday, January 9, 2025

Italy Struggles to Harvest Fruits of EU Recovery Fund Boon

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(Bloomberg) — It’s olive season in the hills around Rome, where a century-old family business upgrading its machinery showcases both the fruits and shortcomings of Italy’s efforts to spend European Union cash.

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Pierluigi Ceccarelli plans to use his slice of €100 million ($106 million) in EU funds set aside for Italian olive millers to raise output in his facility by 50% to 6 tons an hour and to improve the quality of the oil harvested from the silver-leafed trees scattered around the town of Fara Sabina.

“In many of these small towns, you find the priest, the mayor and the olive miller,” said Paolo Mariani, head of Assofrantoi, Italy’s association of olive millers. “Financing them is a way of keeping the territory alive.”

More and better could be a motto for what Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni is trying to do with the country’s €194 billion cut of money from Brussels. The test of success or failure will be whether she can achieve such productivity-enhancing results with enough of a scale and impact to revitalize the euro zone’s third-biggest economy.

The recovery fund created three years ago as a response to the pandemic is Italy’s biggest aid effort since its post-World War II reconstruction. The EU program is funneling cash into sectors including infrastructure, schools, health, digitalization, green economy, development of the South and helping businesses boost local communities.

So far, Italy has received about €113 billion in grants and loans. Compared with past EU aid programs, where it often failed to even apply for money, targets are being met and funds distributed. This is key to encouraging other European countries, like Germany, to consider such investment efforts in future.

“It’s a glass half full because Italy is doing very well on receiving the funds and is well ahead of peers,” Eurasia Group senior analyst Federico Santi said in an interview. “However, there are delays in spending, and it’s likely that these delays will increase going forward.”

On another idyllic hillside a 100 miles or so north of Ceccarelli’s olive groves, Mario Draghi spent part of this year drafting his own formula for reviving Europe as an economic and geopolitical power and the former Italian premier is clear that the continent needs much more than an increase in its olive oil output.

“Industrial strategies today – as seen in the US and China – combine multiple policies, ranging from fiscal policies to encourage domestic production, to trade policies to penalize anti-competitive behavior, to foreign economic policies to secure supply chains,” Draghi said in his report. “Europe is lacking focus.”

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