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Table of contents

  1.  
    1. Private consumption and de-stocking at the heart of the contraction
      1. Investments and net exports counterbalanced
        1. Improving confidence data point to a flat first quarter

          Italian GDP contracted by 0.1% quarter-on-quarter in the final quarter of 2022. We now tentatively anticipate flat growth in 1Q23

          italian gdp contraction driven by consumption and inventories grafika numer 1italian gdp contraction driven by consumption and inventories grafika numer 1
          Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II in Milan is Italy's oldest active shopping gallery

           

          Revised data confirms that in the fourth quarter of last year, Italian GDP contracted by 0.1% quarter-on-quarter (from +0.4% in the third quarter of the year) in seasonally adjusted terms. On the year, GDP expanded 1.4% (from +2.5% in 3Q22), confirming the ongoing deceleration.

          Private consumption and de-stocking at the heart of the contraction

          Today’s data add useful information on the demand breakdown. The change in inventories (-1.1% quarterly contribution) and private consumption (-0.9% contribution) acted as a drag, and the positive contribution of gross fixed capital formation (+0.4% contribution) and net exports (+1.4%) did not fully compensate.   

          We had expected that the combined effect of rising inflation and flat wage growth would have ultimately eaten into real disposable income, resulting in softer consumption. This was indeed the case, notwithstanding compensating measures put in place by the government. We noted that in 3Q22, households’ saving ratio had fallen heavily to 7.1% (below the medium-term average), signalling that consumption smoothing had already encouraged households to tap into their savings pool; this was apparently not replicated in the fourth quarter of 2022, when households preferred to adjust consumption. 

          Read next: NAGA analyst on Eurozone inflation: This is likely to trigger a more restrictive monetary policy from the ECB for two reasons | FXMAG.COM

          Investments and net exports counterbalanced

          We had also anticipated that investment would have held up on the back of the combined effect of inflowing EU Recovery funds and domestic tax incentives in the construction sector: data show that transport equipment also helped push quarterly growth. The scope of the positive net contribution of net exports, underpinned by a strong increase in exports and an even stronger contraction in imports, came as a surprise.

          Improving confidence data point to a flat first quarter

          Looking ahead, the impact of the start of a disinflationary process after the November 2022 peak should slowly improve the growth picture. As far as the current quarter is concerned, the only bit of hard evidence available is January labour market data, which confirmed a resilience of employment in the month. Confidence data, whose explanatory power for GDP developments has declined of late, have also improved in manufacturing, which had suffered the negative impact of supply chain disruptions.

          We acknowledge that in the second quarter of this year, industry might again become a supply-side growth driver, but we prefer to remain prudent on the scope of growth developments as we believe the ongoing monetary policy tightening has yet to display its full effect on domestic demand. We now tentatively anticipate flat growth in 1Q23 and average GDP growth in 2023 of 0.7%.        

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          Italy GDP

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          This publication has been prepared by ING solely for information purposes irrespective of a particular user's means, financial situation or investment objectives. The information does not constitute investment recommendation, and nor is it investment, legal or tax advice or an offer or solicitation to purchase or sell any financial instrument. Read more


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