Bank of Italy Engaging World’s Top AI Firms
May 29, 2026 – 11:06 am
Image by: Banca d’Italia
Fabio Panetta, Governor of the Bank of Italy, used the central bank’s annual assembly to advocate for artificial intelligence (AI) as a solution to Italy’s chronic productivity challenge. He revealed that the bank is already in conversations with leading global developers of AI and has initiated discussions with Italian lenders about implementing this technology.
Central bankers typically refrain from disclosing specific tech company names, but Panetta’s statement at the Bank of Italy’s annual assembly on Friday breaks with this tradition. This signals a proactive approach where the central bank aims to understand AI internally rather than merely regulate it externally, particularly in a context where major US labs are establishing a presence in Italy.
Panetta’s argument focused on AI’s potential economic impact. He suggested that while slow adoption might result in a 0.2 percentage point annual increase in productivity, rapid and widespread use could contribute more than a full percentage point annually. This difference translates into vastly differing economic outcomes for an economy struggling to grow.
The governor attributed Italy’s current situation—with around 30% of firms utilizing AI in some form but only about 5% engaging intensively—to an adoption gap. To bridge this gap, Panetta emphasized the need for deeper venture capital and private equity industries to support domestic AI startups’ scaling rather than early sales or overseas relocation.
This comes at a time when major US labs are setting up shop in Italy, with Anthropic opening a Milan office this week, partnering with Italian companies like Generali and Enel. The Bank of Italy’s move to engage these firms directly and encourage bank adoptions hints at Rome actively shaping AI’s arrival and its local impact.
While Panetta’s address provides direction rather than specifics, the conversations with banks and venture capital push he advocated for are crucial watchpoints. For now, the governor has publicly acknowledged the Bank of Italy’s engagement with the AI industry, advocating for faster adoption in Italy.