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Mario Draghi is no saviour Why would the bodily incarnation of neoliberalism represent a solution to Italy's woes?

Mario Draghi as he prepares to take the reigns - Credit: Bloomberg / Contributor

Mario Draghi as he prepares to take the reigns - Credit: Bloomberg / Contributor


February 13, 2021   6 mins

Why would anyone choose to drag an immaculate, larger-than-life reputation through the blood, sweat and tears of day-to-day Italian politics? That’s the question on many lips as Mario Draghi, former ECB chief, unveils his new cabinet in preparation for his role as the country’s next prime minister. After all, he only had another year to wait before scooping up the seat of new president of the Republic.

Was it, as left-leaning commentators and supporters of the former PM argue, because Giuseppe Conte’s government’s timid social-interventionist measures incurred the wrath of the country’s business and financial elites? Or was it just a power play by Matteo Renzi gone terribly wrong?

I actually think it most likely that Conte was not considered by those elites to be strong enough to manage the “great reset” of Italy’s economy, an endeavour that can only be pulled off by a “technical” — or technocrat-led — government. But more interesting than the speculation about how he got here is what the prospect of a Draghi government tells us about the nature of Italian (post-)democracy, and the perverse effects that the euro has had on the country’s economic, social and political fabric.

Draghi’s descent into politics has been accompanied by feverish cries of jubilation by the mass media — on a level that would have probably embarrassed North Korean state media. And virtually all parties in Parliament— including Salvini’s Northern League, which seem to have jettisoned what little was left of its “eurosceptic” posturing — have expressed support. The tone of the discussion was captured well by the powerful governor of the Campania region, Vincenzo De Luca (PD), who compared Draghi to “Christ” himself.

Nearly everyone seems to agree: a Draghi government would be a blessing for the country, a final opportunity to redeem its sins and “make Italy great again”.

Such prophecies aren’t based on an analysis of what Draghi’s policies may actually be — and whether they would be in the interest of the country and its citizens, workers and businesses — but on vague references to the man’s “charisma”, “competence”, “intelligence” and “international clout”. This is a reflection of a sick political culture, whereby statecraft is reduced to a purely technical affair, in which notions such as power, class, ideology are erased from the equation. Instead, they are seen as inconvenient hindrances to the “efficient” management of government, which only requires the “expertise” of well-studied (and politically neutral almost by definition) “technicians” or technocrats.

This concept is well summed up by the notion of “technical government”, which most non-Italians readers are likely to be baffled by. Indeed, the concept doesn’t exist in nearly any other Western country. The basic idea is that in moments of deep crisis only “experts” supposedly untainted by political partisanship and unburdened by the complications of parliamentary politics can be trusted with making the “right” and “necessary” decisions.

It’s a concept that, alas, has a long-running history in Italy. It harks back to the fraught relationship the country’s economic elites have always had with mass social democracy, and how they sought to resolve this tension by resorting to self-imposed “external constraints” of various nature. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, Italy’s ruling elites were faced with an increasingly militant and “ungovernable” working class and a state-centric, redistributive political economy (grounded in the country’s socialist-leaning Constitution) that was deeply incompatible with the emerging neoliberal paradigm.

They thus began to theorise that only by “tying the hands” of government via a political-economic straitjacket — an external constraint or vincolo esterno — could they hope to achieve a dual objective. Their aim was to essentially “break the back” of the working classes while spearheading those “reforms” for which there was very little popular consensus. And that vincolo esterno was, of course, the process of European integration, beginning with the system of semi-fixed exchange rates known as European Monetary System (EMS), in 1979, all the way up to Maastricht and then the euro (EMU).

One of the main advocates of the vincolo esterno was Guido Carli, Italy’s highly influential economic minister from 1989 to 1992, not to mention one of the mentors of Mario Draghi. In his memoirs Carli made no secret of the fact that “the European Union represented an alternative path for the solution of problems which we were not managing to handle through the normal channels of government and parliament”. Namely, the wholesale transformation, or neoliberalisation, of the country’s political economy. This can be said to embody what Edgar Grande calls the “paradox of weakness”, whereby national elites transfer some power to a supranational policymaker (thereby appearing weaker) in order to allow themselves to better withstand pressure from societal actors by testifying that “this is Europe’s will” (thereby becoming stronger).

The concept of “technical government” is largely a by-product of the vincolo esterno. On the one hand, the apparently inexorable logic of the external constraint — be it the maintenance of a fixed exchange rate or the need to appease “markets” or “the EU” in order to avoid retaliation — creates a semi-permanent “state of exception”. This means that at any moment the complex dynamics of parliamentary politics may need to give way to “non-political” (i.e., “technical”) governments tasked with “getting the job done”.

Such a move implies that the policies they carry out are not a political choice but something entirely rational and necessary, which Parliament should limit itself to rubber stamping without asking too many questions. On the other hand, the socio-economic effects of the external constraint — particularly disastrous in Italy’s case — create growing tensions between the demands of citizens and the requirements of the external constraint (plus the inter/supranational institutions overseeing it). National parties are unable to resolve these because they lack all the “normal” instruments of economic policy necessary to maintain societal consensus. Which then leads them to turn to technocrats to resolve the impasse, by having them implement the measures the parties don’t want to take responsibility for.

It’s no coincidence that the era of the technical governments begins in the early 1990s, following Italy’s signing of the Maastricht Treaty, which was negotiated by none other than — you guessed it — Mario Draghi, at the time director general of the Italian Treasury. The first technocrat-led government, led by former governor of Italy’s central bank, Carlo Azeglio Ciampi, was formed in 1993 and inaugurated the first round of mass privatisation of state assets. Just a few years later, it was the turn of Lamberto Dini, prime minister between 1995 and 1996.

Throughout this entire period, Draghi, in his capacity as director general of the Treasury, was one of the main proponents of the privatisation of Italy’s state-owned companies, and of the vincolo esterno in general. The fall of Berlusconi’s last cabinet, in 2011, saw the ushering in of another technocrat, Mario Monti, former European commissioner and an international advisor to Goldman, who proceeded to administer a devastating austerity “cure” recommended by Brussels. This was largely a consequence of the decision by the newly-appointed president of the ECB – yes, Mario Draghi again – to stop the purchases of Italian government bonds, which caused Italian interest rates to skyrocket.

In short, either in his capacity as director general of the Treasury or president of the ECB, Draghi oversaw mass privatisation, severe public spending cuts and tax hikes that all had a deleterious impact on Italy.

The experience of the Monti government is a perfect case in point: the healthcare cuts administered by Monti, as well as other administrations, and demanded by the European Commission, left the Conte administration dramatically ill-prepared to fight the Covid-19 outbreak. The architecture of the euro continued to impede an efficient response, despite extensive central bank support and the temporary suspension of the EU’s budget rules. This led to mounting economic and social costs, and ended up placing a growing strain on the government — an impasse that we are now told can only be solved by yet another deus ex machina technocrat.

This is madness. There is little doubt that Italy’s crisis must be regarded as a crisis of the post-Maastricht order of Italian capitalism, and more in general of the logic of the external constraint based upon privatisation, fiscal austerity and wage compression. This hasn’t just entailed the permanent stagnation of Italy’s economy but has also had the effect of disarticulating the normal functioning of democracy. If that is the case, then it is folly to think that Mario Draghi — literally the bodily incarnation of the political-economic model that has ruined Italy — can represent a solution.

Draghi didn’t just directly oversee the dismantling of Italy’s public industry and application of severe austerity in the early 1990s during his position at the Italian Treasury. He also fine-tuned the external constraint itself by spearheading the transformation of the euro system. It changed from a dysfunctional but formally democratic monetary union into an inter/supranational governance structure where governments are punished through a complex array of institutional mechanisms.

A system in which the formal democratic process itself is systematically subverted through financial and monetary blackmail — first and foremost at the hands of the ECB — to the point that one may reasonably question whether euro area member states can still be considered democracies. Even according to the narrow “bourgeois” understanding of the concept, one would certainly be hard-pressed to still consider Italy as such. Especially now that Mario Draghi has been called in to finish the job he began 30 years ago.


Thomas Fazi is an UnHerd columnist and translator. His latest book is The Covid Consensus, co-authored with Toby Green.

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Alexander Morrison
Alexander Morrison
3 years ago

This is an excellent article, which sets out in devastating detail just why this is such a bad idea, but also provides much-needed context for British readers. My wife is Italian, so I’ve had a long education in the nature of “technical” governments and their terrible consequences for the Italian economy, democracy and sovereignty. Italy has not had an elected Prime Minister since Silvio Berlusconi’s resignation in 2011. He of course was not an exactly an advertisement for the quality of those politicians the Italian public do choose to elect, but the consequences of this democratic deficit have been dire. The fact that all the really important decisions are being taken in Brussels is precisely what leads so many Italians to make irresponsible electoral choices like voting for the Movimento Cinque Stelle. They don’t really think it matters – and increasingly they’re right.

Jeremy Smith
Jeremy Smith
3 years ago

Surely you are aware of the “mani pulite” ?
Were those people beamed from space?

Jeremy Smith
Jeremy Smith
3 years ago

67 governments since the end of WW2. Those Italian politicians are not beamed from space – they are the product of Italian society and elected by the Italian people.
Could it be that Italians are to blame?

Jake C
Jake C
3 years ago

How is 5 star “irresponsible ”

Its an entirely mild response to the neoliberal establishment

Clach Viaggi
Clach Viaggi
3 years ago

As always, an Italian like me can read accurate analysis of Italian politics only in a foreign language.
This is an excellent, very well detailed and historically rich article.
I am sick to my stomach to see the members of the new government.
Draghi is rightly compared to Jesus Christ by all servant mainstream media, because he has already resuscitated dead politicians.
Impresentable people like Gelmini and Brunette, who we only hoped has ceased to damage and depredate the public to enrich their masters, instead they’re back en force to ensure they can divide the rich cake of the recovery fund, while they can sell cheaply the rest of the national resources to some foreign hedge fund.

K E
K E
3 years ago
Reply to  Clach Viaggi

Do you think this government will survive long?

Clach Viaggi
Clach Viaggi
3 years ago
Reply to  K E

Unfortunately yes.
Enough time to destroy the small /middle companies that are the backbone of the country.
And for the next elections, the early front runner is the neo fascist party of Fratelli d’Italia, the only one that strategically refused to participate in the big heap of the establishment.

K E
K E
3 years ago
Reply to  Clach Viaggi

Oh dear. What’s your opinion on the euro, do you think that Italy will somehow manage to reform and stick with it, or do you think that Italy will eventually have to leave the eurozone?

stephen f.
stephen f.
3 years ago
Reply to  K E

No governments in Italy survive long, but Italy does…

Clach Viaggi
Clach Viaggi
3 years ago
Reply to  stephen f.

The gossip is that Draghi accepted because he has been assured he’ll be the next President of the Republic, on the footsteps of his mentor Ciampi, so this one will last one year.

David J
David J
3 years ago
Reply to  K E

Judging by post-World War II history, an average government runs for less than 14 months.

Jeremy Smith
Jeremy Smith
3 years ago
Reply to  Clach Viaggi

“…sell cheaply the rest of the national resources to some foreign hedge fund.”
Examples please?

Clach Viaggi
Clach Viaggi
3 years ago
Reply to  Jeremy Smith

The national highways (autostrade) gifted to Benetton, which lead to the Morandi bridge disaster in Genova, Ilva Steels to Mittal (topic of the day), the 6 millions last summer to Fiat (which is no more neither fiscally not legally an Italian company) just to pay their annual yeld…

Graeme Archer
Graeme Archer
3 years ago

This is a superb article. I lived in Italy in the 1993-1998 period that you mention and I do remember trying to get my head round why Italian colleagues were so pleased with the ‘technical’ government. It felt (to my British two-party, FPTP, winner takes all) instincts the opposite of a good idea. I think the writer has described precisely why. Of course, the proximal driver for the vincolo esterno was the bloated nature of public spending in Italy, which didn’t happen by cosmic chance. I remember my landlord, in his 50s (my age now!) retiring on a massive state pension. So I can understand the rationale for the technocracy (“We can’t afford what the people keep voting for”) but the tragedy of Italy shows just how awful these alternatives to democracy can turn out to be.

Jeremy Smith
Jeremy Smith
3 years ago
Reply to  Graeme Archer

Don’t tell people (here) that the troubles of Italy are not the product of “cosmic chance”.

Jonathan Andrews
Jonathan Andrews
3 years ago
Reply to  Graeme Archer

I was in Italy in the middle of that period and like you found the idea of a technocracy astounding but much of Europe, even the UK had been moving in that direction for some time. In particular, I recall the ERM and the considerable economic difficulties it caused in the UK. I think the ,transfer of operational independence to the Bank of England was for similar reasons.
There is a tension here, politicians are reluctant to make unpopular but necessary decisions. Inflation had been a serious problem in the UK (and Italy) and governments had failed to deal effectively with it. More expensive mortgages resulting from higher interest rates would never meet with much approval from the public. I understand the desire to hand over control to experts.
However, I offer two complaints. Firstly, they are rarely as expert as they think. While the consumer price inflation in the UK has been low since 1997, asset price inflation has been shocking; impoverishing the young. The second problem is how easy is it for the population to sack a government of experts?

Sean MacSweeney
Sean MacSweeney
3 years ago

The longer the neoliberal technocrats allow this to go on, the more it will bolster the far right and the worse the backlash will be

Nick Dove
Nick Dove
3 years ago

Interesting article, thanks for putting together a useful timeline.

I suggest the article needs at least the brief assertion of a positive counter-factual? A reader could be excused for thinking that you believe that democracy and gov’t in Italy functioned wonderfully in the 70s and 80s before the technocrats, intermittently, took over! I appreciate there is no control experiment but to suggest that most of Italy’s (economic) woes stem from the technocrats without providing an inkling of what alternative leaders would have done is unconvincing, especially for a non-Italian audience.
A few commenters with closer Italian knowledge agree with the critique, but still can’t help themselves admitting that the situation was so bad that they can understand why technocrats were considered, or that Draghi is better than the genuinely politically popular alternatives.
NB I agree with the commenter that, as usual, the ‘neo-liberalism’ expression is rolled out to mean whatever the writer wants it to mean. I suggest avoiding its use or defining it carefully.

Steve Goldgap
Steve Goldgap
3 years ago

“The bodily incarnation of neoliberalism” ??? (Neo)Liberalism for sure is not characterized by making the EZB the biggest investor in foul credits or keeping zombie companies or economies alive. The side-effects of such an unprecedented economic adventure however favor investors and gamers but this for sure was not intended. Neo-liberalism IMHO is an far too often used expression to defame people with different political or ideological backgrounds

Michael Saxon
Michael Saxon
3 years ago

Italy, if this article is correct, seems to have veered away from populism. I would contend that after a tentative and confused dabble by various parties in extra-EU ideas the Italians have fallen into the usual default phenomenon people with no clear vision for their country succumb to – the Fuehrerprinzip, or leader worship. They look for an establishment figure who appears to have proven gravitas and is a no-brainer option in the absence of anything better. The Fuehrerprinzip is usually adopted by a weary populous careless of downstream unintended consequences. I was hoping for more from the Italians, so I’m very disappointed.

Michael Inglefield
Michael Inglefield
3 years ago
Reply to  Michael Saxon

IMHO in due course the EU will also follow the Fuehrerprinzip, or leader worship principle. It will come in response to an EU crisis (either perceived or manufactured). The job will then be complete and the world will (once again) only have the AngloUSphere to look to for some semblance of democracy.

K E
K E
3 years ago

I don’t know enough about Italy to comment but I will say a good word about the technocrat caretaker government we had in Austria for a brief period after the Conservative-far right coalition imploded in 2019. For a while, politics was about getting stuff which could be done DONE with no drama or power struggles. Proper adults were in charge: no smarmy university drop-outs or other qualification-free losers. It was a refreshing interlude and to be honest politics here are so toe-curlingly awful I’d quite gladly have a technocrat government again for at least one legislature period.

Eleanor Hazleton
Eleanor Hazleton
3 years ago
Reply to  K E

I think the the salient point here is “brief period “

Michael Inglefield
Michael Inglefield
3 years ago
Reply to  K E

Exactly the thought process which abandons democracy (to the detriment of our children and our children’s children). Ultimately its how you choose to live your life. I choose democracy, freedom and (dangerously) personal responsibility. Others are free to choose differently.

stephen f.
stephen f.
3 years ago

Is Discus no longer the forum here? I think that this format is inferior.

George Lake
George Lake
3 years ago
Reply to  stephen f.

Agreed! it is utter cr+p,!

Simon Denis
Simon Denis
3 years ago
Reply to  George Lake

One is forced to wonder as to the motives behind the change.

Ian Barton
Ian Barton
3 years ago
Reply to  Simon Denis

I would hope it is just p*ss poor IT practice, rather than anything else

Vóreios Paratiritís
Vóreios Paratiritís
3 years ago

Italy must leave the euro and reintroduce the lira. Until that is done the economy and society will not recover.

Michael Burnett
Michael Burnett
3 years ago

A very thought provoking article.

Kevin Austin
Kevin Austin
3 years ago

I have been monitoring the MAX KEISER modus operandi for years. We all know that the PONZI financial system is close to breaking point but if the ROBINHOOD and REDDIT people can’t bring it down then WHO CAN? It does seem that the PANDEMIC is a game changer and we are all au fait with the GREAT RESET. I am happy to travel by train but seeing my family in Australia would mean a BIG TRIP along the new SILK ROAD compliments of the CCP…

G Harris
G Harris
3 years ago

I believe Italy has had sixty seven governments since the end of the second world war so maybe it’s little wonder that a well connected ex-EU banking bigwig at least offers Italian voters some hope of improvement in their circumstances compared to anyone else in the current fray.

‘Any port in a storm’, as they say, ‘and at the moment it’s blowing a chuffing gale’.

Not sure exactly why some commenting on here believe this is an excellent article (which it is) and yet are struggling so much with the word ‘neoliberal’ used to describe ex-Goldman Sachs alumni Draghi, particularly given his less than illustrious ‘neoliberal’ history to date?

stephen f.
stephen f.
3 years ago
Reply to  G Harris

“67 governments since the end of the second world war”…and as Helprin wrote: “Italy was the only country to lose to both sides in WWII”. There’s a lesson somewhere in these facts…

Peter Scott
Peter Scott
3 years ago

The question about Italy’s near future can be stated as binary alternatives.

EITHER the pain of carrying on in the Eurozone will increase to the point at which it feels unbearable and any issue is preferred to carrying on with the single currency. The Italians may reach the level of exasperation expressed by the Duchess of Malfi in Webster’s great Jacobean drama. When her brothers offer to murder her she assentingly replies ‘Any way, for heavnen-sake, So I were out of your whispering’.

OR the agonies of remaining with the Euro may continue to look less, if only slightly less, than the risks (potentially disastrous) implicit in opting for their own currency again.

If the Italian banks collapse (highly likely) or the Italian government’s bonds become rubbish upon the market (ditto), these choices will be upstaged by other thunderbolts.

But for the present the above currency-question is the dial, and the needle in it, to watch.

Ian Mullett
Ian Mullett
3 years ago

A superb analysis. And yet I find myself welcoming Draghi as the alternative would surely be Salvini. Italian voters do probably vote for the biggest personality because they don’t feel it really matters. Berlosconi was the prototype for Trump and Salvini is a lot smarter and younger.

Jake C
Jake C
3 years ago
Reply to  Ian Mullett

How can you prefer austerity and privatisation to salvini, whats so scary about salvini?

Last edited 3 years ago by Jake C
Kevin Austin
Kevin Austin
3 years ago

p.s this portrait of me is by the same artist that painted Mervyn King!!

Kevin Austin
Kevin Austin
3 years ago
Kevin Austin
Kevin Austin
3 years ago
Kevin Austin
Kevin Austin
3 years ago

I didn’t realise that a GRUNIAD link was a problem…Not that I read it!

Kevin Austin
Kevin Austin
3 years ago

Anyway, Diana Blakeney, the Artist, is from a famous CONSERVATIVE family. I’m concerned that there is a “waiting to be approved” on this. FREEDOM OF SPEECH sweeties.

Chauncey Gardiner
Chauncey Gardiner
3 years ago

This is a very nice essay.

A couple of questions and ideas:

(1) We’ve been hearing about “technocracy” in the Unites States since at least 1988. The 1988 Democratic candidate for President was Massachusetts governor Michael Dukakis. Michael Dukakis presided over “the Massachusetts Miracle” in the mid-1980’s. That is, he was governor when the country’s economy improved. The economy of Massachusetts improved right along with those of all the other states in the union, but his supporters credited him with turning Massachusetts around. Indeed, his selling point for being President was that he was a “technocrat” and would bring his competence to the Presidency. He said it himself: “The election is about competence”.

That was the basis for his entire campaign: an appeal to some amorphous, mysterious technocratic competence. Never mind the details. Leave those to the experts …

Sound familiar?

(2) I appreciate the general thrust about how anti-democratic the entire concept of handing over power to the self-anointed best-and-brightest who populate the “technocracy”. That said, the essay suggests that the technocracy has implemented policies that have left Italy worse off than it otherwise would have been. But, what is the alterative? There are alternatives, of course, but let’s be real here. The welfare states of countries all over the world have been under distress and will be under distress. Would Italy *not* have been under fiscal distress absent the imposition of technocratic nonsense? Perhaps Italy would just be another Greece, a country that has spent itself into Zorba-the-Greek destitution? (The problem with Greece is not Germany or the EU. It’s Greece. The Greeks took their Euro honeymoon and merely borrowed even more money to finance their unsustainable welfare state.)

Joe Blow
Joe Blow
3 years ago

Fundamental difference between Dukakis and Draghi: he former was elected.

Jon Redman
Jon Redman
3 years ago

What? They’ve changed the comments.
I’m Tyrone Shoelaces again.

Last edited 3 years ago by Jon Redman
Ian Barton
Ian Barton
3 years ago
Reply to  Jon Redman

Yup – and I no longer see a count of new likes/comments that we used to have (a number in a red circle)

hopefully that’s a short term issue rather than a design ….

Jon Redman
Jon Redman
3 years ago
Reply to  Ian Barton

Well I just gave you a like and I can see it. I don’t know if you can.
None of my comments at the Bellylaugh are visible to anyone else (the comment count doesn’t go up) and there’s no link to raise it as an issue.
Commenting tech is worse now than it was 20 years ago.

Ian Barton
Ian Barton
3 years ago
Reply to  Jon Redman

Thanks Jon – I see a like that is presumably from you – but there seems to be no way of knowing who it come from.
it’s a major shame that the Unherd communications on these things is non-existent

Judy Englander
Judy Englander
3 years ago
Reply to  Ian Barton

No comment history either. Don’t think it’s a short term issue. It’s a new comments platform.

George Lake
George Lake
3 years ago
Reply to  Judy Englander

M16 have deemed this forum seditious, and thus it has been duly emasculated.

Consummatum est.

Ian Barton
Ian Barton
3 years ago
Reply to  Judy Englander

Not good – how can you check when new replies have been made without scrolling through every article again ?

G Harris
G Harris
3 years ago

All change since yesterday, but no warning.

Bit of a bummer seeing as I’d just written a long piece about Italy’s chances of exiting the currency.

D’oh!

George Lake
George Lake
3 years ago
Reply to  G Harris

To revert to the vernacular, what the hell is going on?

G Harris
G Harris
3 years ago
Reply to  George Lake

Just apparently successfully cut and pasted the answer from my Disqus comments.

Previously ‘unherd’ of.

Perhaps it’s an improvement!?!?

Charles Rense
Charles Rense
3 years ago

Did you just brexit disqus?

G Harris
G Harris
3 years ago

Italy is one of the very few major countries in the world to run a primary surplus ie it unusually raises in taxes more that it spends, and has done so for many years.

This policy of permanent austerity might be considered the mark of sound financial management by some, and surely runs contrary to the country’s profligate ClubMed image, but this is informed by its many decades of stagnant economic growth, in no small part thanks to the single currency and, despite its harmful effects, is arguably continued in order to try and not make an already bad situation worse and at least allows it to keep up the interest payments on its ballooning debts and its government running.

Theoretically, however, this ongoing austerity policy could, should it ever reach the point where membership of the European Project is deemed untenable or undesirable in future by the Italian electorate, be its trump card.

Defaulting on its past fast becoming unsustainable debts, dropping the Euro and readopting the Lira might seem like the nuclear option and would undoubtedly have consequences on its perceived creditworthiness going forward, but the country itself is far better placed than most to weather that storm if it ever chose to.

Andrew Fisher
Andrew Fisher
3 years ago

Although there is quite a bit to agree with in this if you believe in national sovereignty, the author offers no solutions, although his use of terminology e. g. ‘bourgeois’) and endless repetition of the ‘boo’ word ‘neoliberal’ hints at the far left position he is coming from. He’d probably support mass nationalisation, which is hardly likely to be a remedy for Italy’s woes.

None of Fazi’s issues can be resolved while Italy remains in the EU, and in particular the Euro. Does he, or does he not believe in Italy leaving these institutions or does he not?. Without that, this is really a lot of hot air. Of course it should be obvious by now that the popular will will at least be strongly mediated and managed by EU institutions, and even as we have seen, actively opposed when necessary – see Greece.

Having said that, irrespective of the EU, the Italian population like many others does not have one view and is perfectly capable of electing entirely incoherent and incompetent governments on their own. There is such a thing as better or worse governed nations, including among other things an administrative state which primarily serves the citizens and not its own interests, radically reducing or eliminating corruption, more respect for the rule of law, and a good environment including the right taxation structure to encourage innovation and growth by private companies. The last is absolutely appalling in much of Europe.
Simple popular sovereignty doesn’t address all these essential aspects of a well run society. And it is not all or even mainly about more and more government and social spending. East Asian countries are increasingly showing Europe up in all these respects.

Paul Goodman
Paul Goodman
3 years ago

It is as if Nigel Farage had become articulate.