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Italy to Replace Greece as Euro Zone's most Indebted State

  • Italian debt-to-GDP ratio to peak at 138.6% in 2026
  • Greece set to cut its debt to around 137% of GDP
  • Greece's debt peaked at 209.4% in 2020

ATHENS/ROME, April 24 (Reuters) - Greece will cease to be the euro zone's most indebted ‌country by the end of this year as its public debt will fall below Italy's, according to two sources and data from Italy's budget plan.

Greek debt is estimated to decline to around 137% of gross domestic product this year from 145.9% ​in 2025, two senior officials told Reuters.

By contrast, Italy expects its debt to peak at 138.6% in ​2026, up 1.5 percentage points from 137.1% of GDP in 2025, under the ⁠Treasury's multi-year budget plan published this week.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, both the officials said Greece would ​from this year cease to be the euro zone's most indebted country.

They said the new estimate for Greece's ​debt ratio would be included in the country's multi-year fiscal plan to be submitted to the European Commission at the end of this month.

Italy's debt will be roughly stable at 138.5% in 2027, before declining to 137.9% in 2028 and to ​136.3% the following year, its budget plan showed.

Greece's public debt - the highest in the euro zone over ​the last two decades - has shrunk by more than 60 percentage points to 145.9% of gross domestic product last year ‌from a ⁠peak of 209.4% in 2020.

Italy cut its debt by some 17 percentage points over the same period.

Greece, which is recovering from a decade-long financial crisis and three bailouts totalling about 280 billion euros ($327.10 billion), plans to repay ahead of schedule loans worth some 7 billion euros from its first bailout later in the year.

Prime Minister ​Giorgia Meloni often says that ​Italy's debt would have ⁠started to fall sooner and faster but for the negative impact of state-funded building incentives introduced under her predecessors, Giuseppe Conte and Mario Draghi.

After rebounding strongly from ​the COVID-19 pandemic, Italy has returned to its customary place among the euro ​zone's most ⁠sluggish performers.

The country posted three consecutive years of sub-1% growth from 2023 to 2025 despite a constant flow of billions of euros from the EU's pandemic recovery funds, a trend that the Treasury's budget plan said would persist through ⁠2029.

Greece's ​economy grew steadily by more than 2% over the last three ​years, outstripping the EU average, driven by investments, domestic demand and tourism.

($1 = 0.8560 euros)

Reporting by Lefteris Papadimas in Athens and ​Giuseppe Fonte in Rome, additional reporting by Gavin Jones in Rome, Editing by Timothy Heritage and Barbara Lewis

Source: Reuters


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