Italy
A euro-area parliamentary republic with a northern manufacturing core, a southern development gap, exceptional cultural capital, very high public debt, and one of the oldest demographic profiles among large advanced economies.
Italy
Overview
Italy is a euro-area parliamentary republic of ≈ 58.9 million residents anchored by a dense manufacturing and design economy in the north, a deeper development gap in the south, world-scale tourism, very high household wealth, and one of the oldest demographic profiles in the OECD. Public debt above 130 percent of GDP shapes every fiscal choice. Common monetary policy comes from the European Central Bank in Frankfurt; supervision of the largest Italian banks runs through the Single Supervisory Mechanism. Industrial districts in the north and center carry the export base; tourism and the public sector carry the south. The macro question is whether Italy can preserve industrial depth and fiscal credibility while its working-age cohort shrinks faster than its growth model can absorb.
Five structural pillars
Parliamentary republic with dispersed power. The 1948 Constitution distributes authority across Parliament, the President of the Republic, the Council of Ministers, the Constitutional Court, the Court of Auditors, regions, metropolitan cities, and communes. The fascist period left the Constituent Assembly with a strong preference against concentrated executive rule S7.
Industrial-district manufacturing core. Northern and central Italy are dense with small and medium-sized manufacturers in machinery, vehicles, fashion, food processing, furniture, packaging, ceramics, pharmaceuticals, and precision equipment. These districts tie Italy to the German, French, Swiss, and Austrian supply-chain system and account for the bulk of merchandise exports S1,S8,S11.
High public debt inside a common-currency union. The 2025 government debt ratio stood at 137.1 percent of GDP, the second-highest in the euro area after Greece. That stock links Italian fiscal policy tightly to ECB policy, sovereign spreads, and primary-surplus delivery; debt service consumes a larger share of the budget than in any other G7 country except Japan S5,S6,S8,S9.
Ageing and the lowest fertility in the G7. ISTAT's demographic indicators show a population near 58.9 million, a total fertility rate around 1.20 children per woman, life expectancy among the highest in the OECD, and a natural balance that has been negative since 2007. Net migration partly offsets natural decline but does not reverse it S4.
North-south development gap. The Mezzogiorno carries lower employment, lower productivity, weaker public-service delivery, and persistent emigration toward the center and north. The gap is not cosmetic; it changes national averages and shapes the European Cohesion Fund and PNRR investment allocation S10,S11.
Continue with the data
Where to go in the data next
The indicator chapter holds the live snapshot. Read Italy through GDP, HICP, unemployment, ECB rates, sovereign spreads, debt, industrial production, exports, and demographic indicators. The atlas compares Italy with euro-area peers on the same canonical measures.