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Byline: Jacopo Barigazzi
'I'm an entrepreneur who has grown up in the market.'
Never one to be out of the spotlight, media mogul Silvio Berlusconi is running for another term as Italy's prime minister. NEWSWEEK's Jacopo Barigazzi caught up with him in Rome, where they discussed Italy's economy, power sharing and the anti-Berlusconi movement. Excerpts:
Barigazzi: Italy could be on the brink of a recession. Is this the last chance for Italy?
Berlusconi: The scenario is negative in general. In particular it is negative for Europe, and Italy has even more negative factors. But others are not in an easier situation: the world economy is facing a financial crisis in the U.S., with all the negative impact it can have, as well as the situation in the commodity markets. India and China are consuming not just commodities but also food products, and the price of wheat has skyrocketed. Then there's oil. To all these factors, Europe has to add a hypervaluated euro, which creates an enormous difficulty for exports.
Italy has even more negative factors. We have insufficient infrastructures. We have an inefficient public administration. Then there's a very high public debt. In the world's imagination, the garbage in Naples has turned Italy into a country covered with trash, which does damage to our tourism industry. It is damaging our exports in fashion, high technology and in the agro-industrial sector, for our valuable food and wines. To all of this, we have to add the policy of the left, which has opened our borders. We now have a presence of illegal immigrants higher than in other countries, and this means a fall in terms of security standards for our citizens and a higher degree of criminality. Figures show that 36 percent of crimes committed in Italy are committed by illegal immigrants, and in some big cities in the north, like Treviso, this percentage goes up to 50 percent. Then there's a last fact that sums up all the others, which is the sale of Alitalia.
Where will Alitalia be in six months?
Source: HighBeam Research, The Businessman Prime Minister.(World Affairs; THE VIEW FROM THE...