Former European Central Bank President Mario Draghi meets with Italian President Sergio Mattarella at the Quirinale Palace in Rome, Italy Feb. 3, 2021. (Presidential Palace/ photo handout via Reuters)

Italian President Sergio Mattarella looks set to ask former European Central Bank chief, Mario Draghi, to form a government of national unity to tackle the twin coronavirus and economic crises battering the country.

The head of state will receive Draghi at noon (1100 GMT) and will almost certainly give him the mandate to put together a high-profile administration that he hopes will win the backing of a broad sweep of parties in the fractured parliament.

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Mattarella’s move came after talks aimed at salvaging Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte’s shattered coalition collapsed, leaving him with two options – early elections or a technocrat government to overcome the many challenges facing Italy.

The president said national elections during the coronavirus pandemic were unwise and warned that a new administration had to take office immediately or the country risked missing out on more than 200 billion euros ($243 billion) from a European Union fund designed to help overcome the economic slump.

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However, there was no guarantee that the highly respected Draghi would be able to muster sufficient support, with the largest party in parliament, the anti-establishment 5-Star Movement immediately ruling out its backing.

Draghi is widely credited with pulling the eurozone back from the brink of collapse in 2012, pledging to do “whatever it takes” to save the single European currency.

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He has largely vanished from the public eye since his ECB term ended in October 2019 but his name emerged as a potential premier in recent weeks as political turmoil combined with the health and economic emergencies to form a perfect storm.

The first European country to be hit by the coronavirus, Italy has seen more than 89,000 deaths since its outbreak almost a year ago – the sixth-highest toll in the world.

Lockdowns aimed at curbing the contagion have devastated the economy.

Data, released on Tuesday, showed that Italy’s gross domestic product shrank by 8.8 per cent in 2020 – its steepest annual drop since World War II.

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Italy’s 10-year bond yield fell sharply in early trade on Wednesday touching the lowest level in almost two weeks.

The closely watched gap between Italian and German 10-year bond yields narrowed to 104 bps from 113 bps late Tuesday.

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The first challenge facing Draghi will be parliament.

The 5-Star, which has formed the backbone of Italy’s last two coalition governments, has repeatedly railed against the concept of technocrat governments and would likely face a grassroots revolt if it backed the veteran central banker.

“The 5-Star would only have supported a government led by Giuseppe Conte,’’ said Riccardo Fraccaro, a party bigwig and government under-secretary.

If the 5-Star remains on the sidelines, all eyes will be on the next two largest parties – the centre-left Democratic Party (PD) and far-right League – who are sworn political enemies but might have to vote together to give Draghi a chance.

Asked whether his euro-sceptic party would back the 73-year-old economist, League leader, Matteo Salvini, said it would depend on his plans.

“He has to tell us what he intends to do,’’ Salvini told Italian daily Corriere Della Sera.

One League source said the party would offer its support if it got a commitment from Draghi to hold elections in a year.

The PD was largely supportive of Mattarella’s move but did not offer unconditional backing.

“The Democratic Party will have to think about what to do in relation to what others are doing,’’ said PD deputy leader Andrea Orlando.

A Draghi government would reinforce Italy’s international standing at a time when it has the presidency of the G20.

But taking the job would carry risks for him.

The last time a technocrat took charge was in 2011, when another economist, Mario Monti, was entrusted with helping Italy out of a debt crisis.

Parliamentarians soon turned on him when they deemed that his economic medicine was too pungent.

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