Italy budget: Parliament passes budget after EU standoff Published duration 29 December 2018

image copyright AFP image caption PM Giuseppe Conte said the budget was "the first stage of a broad and ambitious plan of reform"

Italy's parliament has approved a revised budget for 2019, amid opposition complaints that it was dictated by the EU.

The country's populist government had originally vowed to push through costly campaign promises including a universal basic income.

But in October, the European Commission raised concerns about the impact of such spending on Italy's debt levels.

image copyright Reuters image caption Democratic Party deputies accused the government of increasing taxes and cutting pensions

The value of its concessions is understood to be a little more than €10bn (£9bn).

The Senate approved the budget last week, and the lower house of parliament passed the revised proposals in a confidence vote on Saturday, with 327 votes in favour, 228 against, and one abstention.

Opposition lawmakers have complained that the last-minute deal with Brussels left parliament unable to debate the altered proposals.

The centre-left Democratic Party has filed a complaint with Italy's Constitutional Court, and its supporters held a protest outside parliament.

The deadline for passing the budget was 31 December, after which the government would have been forced to continue with the 2018 budget on a monthly basis.

What's in the budget?

Italy's coalition government, made up of the anti-establishment Five Star Movement and right-wing League, has pledged the following:

A new income support scheme known as the "citizens' wage" will pay €780 ($890; £700) a month to 1.7 million of Italy's poorest families. The measure is forecast to cost €7.1bn.

The retirement age will be cut from the current 67 to 62, for workers who have paid into the pension system for 38 years.

More than a million self-employed workers earning under €65,000 a year will see their taxes cut to 15%.

Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte has hailed the budget as "the first step of a broad and ambitious plan of reform" which he said would "turn Italy inside out like a sock" and kick-start economic growth. Critics argue that the plan does not create investment incentives, however.