A Modern Monetary Theory “Superbonus” trial is underway in Italy. The state pays 110 percent of home renovations. 
In an effort to stimulate the economy during Covid, MMT proponent and then Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte came up with a not so brilliant idea that is now so popular no politician has been able to completely turn it off.
Contractors are going door-to-door offering to renovate homes for free.
The cost of scaffolding is up 400 percent, And the cost of the program, estimated at 35 billion Euros is now 220 billion euros and rising.
How to Torch 220 Billion Euros
Please consider How to Torch 220 Billion Euros
In the depths of the COVID pandemic, with the ECB committed to keeping sovereign spreads low and the EU fiscal rules suspended, Italy launched what would become one of the costliest fiscal experiments in history. Prime Minister Conte announced that the government would subsidize 110% of the cost of housing renovations. The “SuperBonus,” as the policy was called, would improve energy efficiency and stimulate an economy that had barely grown in over two decades. Consumers would face neither economic nor liquidity constraints:
Rather than direct cash grants, the government issued tax credits that could be transferred. A homeowner could claim these credits directly against their taxes, have contractors claim them against invoices, or sell them to banks. These credits became a kind of fiscal currency – a parallel financial instrument that functioned as off-the-books debt. The setup purposefully created the illusion of a free lunch: it hid the cost to the government, as for European accounting purposes the credits would show up only as lost tax revenue rather than new spending.
Contractors often inflated renovation costs; for instance, a €50,000 project might be reported as €100,000. The bank would purchase the €110,000 tax credit at near face value, enabling the contractor to pocket the difference, sometimes sharing it with the homeowner. At times, no work at all was carried out, in which case, invoices for non-existent work on fake buildings were a perfect tool for organized financial crime.
Builders were going around offering to pay people money to renovate their houses. A scheme initially budgeted at €35 billion will end up costing Italian taxpayers €220 billion — about 12% of GDP. Annual costs ballooned from 1% of GDP in 2021, to 3% in 2022, and 4% in 2023. Only 495,717 dwellings would end up being renovated – meaning the average cost of the program was around €320,000 per home.
Riccardo Fraccaro – a lawyer, Five Star Movement politician, Modern Monetary Theory adherent and architect of the SuperBonus – saw the program as a way to push a fiscal expansion while complying with EU rules. By designing the Superbonus as a system of transferable tax credits, Fraccaro and his advisors sought to create a parallel financial instrument that did not immediately register as public debt.
The [European] Commission approved the inclusion of the Superbonus in Italy’s NRRP after its design, with full knowledge of the fact this program included a 110% subsidy.
When Italy’s deficit shot up in 2023 due to the Superbonus, rising from a projected 5.5% to 8% of GDP, there was no market panic. Italian bond spreads remained contained, thanks to the ECB’s Transmission Protection Instrument (TPI), which reassured investors without the ECB even needing to intervene. By removing the constraint of market discipline, the ECB allowed the Superbonus to persist far longer than it otherwise would have.
The very mechanisms designed to protect the euro may now be undermining it. When the ECB steps in to prevent market pressure on sovereign bonds, it removes a crucial disciplining force on national fiscal policies, creating perverse incentives for politicians to expand spending without regard for long-term sustainability.
New Rules Scale Back Program
The above article, written February 14 2025, is amusing but dated. The program is still in place, but at a reduced rate.
In 2023, Italy Scaled Back the Program to 90 Percent Free rather than 110 percent free.
With state expenses rising, the new government has announced — through the “Decreto Aiuti Quater” (Amendment to the Subsidies Decree) and the Budget Law 2023 — that it’s immediately scaling back the subsidy to 90%, and then will be gradually reducing it over the next few years (to 70% in 2024 and 65% in 2025). In a nutshell, the main changes to the 2023 Superbonus are:
- The Superbonus deduction has been lowered from 110% to 90% as of January 1, 2023.
- Credit transfers no longer apply, except for work already in progress and with applications submitted by February 16, 2023.
Only 65 Percent Free
This year, renovations are only 65 percent free.
But making repairs free is easy enough via a scheme of fraudulent kickbacks stating with 35 percent fictional markups.
Italy’s Public Debt Tops 3 trillion Euros
Reuters reports Italy’s Public Debt Tops 3 trillion Euros, Highest on Record
Italy’s public debt rose further in November, exceeding 3 trillion euros ($3.1 trillion) and hitting a record high, the central bank of the euro zone’s third-largest economy said on Wednesday.
The sustainability of Rome’s huge public debt has long been seen as a crucial factor for the survival of the euro zone, and Italy has been the most sluggish economy in the bloc since the launch of the single currency around 25 years ago.
The country’s public debt – already the euro zone’s second-largest after Greece in relation to gross domestic product (GDP) – is forecast by the government to rise to around 138% of GDP in 2026, from 135% in 2023.
If economic growth in 2025 comes in significantly below the government’s 1.2% target, as most forecasters expect, the debt-to-GDP ratio is due to increase further.
Rome, which was put under the European Union’s excessive deficit procedure last year, hopes to bring its deficit below the EU’s 3% of GDP ceiling in 2026, from 3.8% targeted last year and 7.2% in 2023.
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European Union’s Excessive Deficit Procedure
France and Italy are both under excessive deficit procedures.
France is ungovernable as a result. Germany is up next.
Not to worry, MMT assures us that government debt does not matter.


And Europe wants to build (and fund) its own armed forces. Lol
Love it.
This is not sugar coated but honey on top of sugar.
I’ll go and buy the whole village in remote.
The people who push these kind of programs are so evil.
Not just stupid, this has implicit malevolence.
Nothing is more expensive than free.
https://psychology-spot.com/basic-laws-of-human-stupidity/
Don’t underestimate stupidity.
Well, didn’t Reagan prove that deficits don’t matter?!
whether deficit is asset building rather than liability spending is the moot question.
Don’t discount Uncle Joe. Beat all others hands down with reckless deficit spending.
Utah is and will loose out big time
Utah here. We have so much to lose. Already the Utah State government was suing the federal government for control of 18.5m acres of BLM land. The Supreme Court declined to hear the case but I suspect now it will be open season for federal land to be returned to (Red) states. I don’t trust the Utah legislature at all to nurture those lands if returned. I expect McMansion housing developments and pet development projects with land doled out to developers who support Republican state legislators.
Assuming it doesn’t all just burn down / water situation becomes even worse with limited federal support/ fire-fighting etc this summer. Governor Cox will do his usual – come out and request all Utahns to participate in a day of prayer to fight fires – and then carry on with the enshittification of this state’s environment. https://frederickjoseph.substack.com/p/americas-last-best-thing?utm_source=post-email-title&publication_id=1217750&post_id=157323115&utm_campaign=email-post-title&isFreemail=true&r=2a6j8u&triedRedirec=
Good article, but I wish you’d dive deeper into the root causes of these policies. Various U.S. states have policies offering “free” money to move to their state as well.
https://www.makemymove.com/articles/states-that-pay-you-to-move-in-2025-opportunities-for-a-fresh-start
Most of the states are “red” states too. Could it be that people don’t want to live in these places?
There is somewhat of an eerie parallel to what Italy is doing and what these U.S. states are doing, they are all in demographic death spiral and starting to get desperate to attract people before the whole thing collapses.
I’ve looked into moving to Italy, there are regions that offer 7% tax rates but they tend to be in rural dying areas. What they don’t tell you about those 1 euro houses in Italy is that it’s difficult to find labor to renovate them, find suppliers to provide supplies and the infrastructure (cable, electricity, etc) take forever to get installed/repaired. A true demographic death spiral coming to a city or state near you soon.
Looks like these states want remote-work immigrants who make OK or better money. As these states go, so go countries around the world. They’ll all be competing for the best people to “Come And Live In Florida” so to speak. Welcome to the future.
MMT = It is fun to spend other peoples money.
Even if that money has to be created out of thin air.
Wall St. has loved MMT since 2008.
buy an entire village!
https://www.azitalianproperties.co.uk/properties-for-sale-italy/entire-village-lunigiana-tuscany/entire-village-tuscany/for-sale/italy
While headline government debt-to-gdp is quite alarming, you’ve got to look deeper if you want to find deadbeat countries.
For instance, look at the private debt. Here the leaders are Canada (by far), USA, Australia, trailed by Germany and the bottom, Italy.
private debt is generally more answerable. debt for asset creation seems better than liability spends.
However asset is contextual. China over building homes relative to future demographics is definitely not asset.
What’s next? Look to Argentina.
You can go for a big government debt death spiral. Or kill the government to save the currency, but cause a spike in unemployment.
Both paths suck. One has a future.
Rather, one is the other’s future. Lather, rinse, repeat.
What can we do but laugh at this absurdity? Meanwhile the US is $36 trillion in debt and few people are alarmed. When do these monetary systems blow up?
The US is not 36 trillion in debt. That is just the federal debt. Add in states, cities and counties and that number rises to ???
So what happens when states and cities ask for assistance with their problems and Washington can’t help? What happens when current federal payments to the states are trimmed or ended?
Could be lots more cities end up like Detroit and will all the bonds issued by places like Cook County or their education board become toilet paper. Lots of juicy pension schemes for teachers and others might cut those benefits to pauper levels
Dance while the music is playing.
Watch the exit while dancing.
There’s no houses available in Tuscany.
Not so, just ask Mr. Cicio…
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LxwUoZgxAIQ
I guess the price of fixer uppers went up.
Well it is Italy…
Georgia Meloni…by far the best leader in Europe except for maybe Orban. So stuff your arrogance.
Best looking too. 😀
The aptly named Meloni. I like her, too.
Probably the most fiscally imprudent nation in the EU. But the foods great.
There will never be another Sophia Loren.
Then again, there once was Monica Vitti.