Italy's Strategic Balancing Act in NATO Defense Spending

Italy, along with other NATO nations, plans to boost defense spending but faces challenges balancing public finances. With innovative accounting, Italy aims to meet NATO's spending goal without jeopardizing other priorities, showcasing civilian infrastructure's potential defense applications to meet targets by 2035.


Devdiscourse News Desk | Updated: 03-07-2025 10:36 IST | Created: 03-07-2025 10:36 IST
Italy's Strategic Balancing Act in NATO Defense Spending
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Italy, in collaboration with fellow NATO nations, has committed to substantially increasing defense spending over the next decade. However, Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni's administration is implementing creative tactics to lessen the impact on the country's already strained public finances.

Italy adhered to the NAC's 5% GDP commitment, unlike Spain, at the recent NATO summit despite internal dissent. Meloni reassured citizens by emphasizing that no government priorities would be sidelined as defense expenditures rise, even as Italy's defense spending was just 1.5% of its GDP in 2024 compared to other NATO allies.

The strategic move by Italy highlights the potential use of civilian infrastructure under the defense spending umbrella. Projects like improving railways, roads, and ports can secure a 'dual-use' defense and civilian application status, thus aligning with EU guidelines while postponing major spending hikes till post-2027 elections.

(With inputs from agencies.)

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