We are facing the planning of major changes based on a plan of reforms considered indispensable for the modernisation and growth of Italy.” This is an opportunity to reduce inequalities, bridge the territorial gaps between the North and the South and, more generally, rewrite the future also in a sustainable way, through a path of ecological and environmental transition. “As we know, Italy is the main beneficiary of the Next Generation EU and the PNRR represents an unprecedented opportunity to relaunch the competitiveness of our country: it has an evocative name “Italy Tomorrow” and a total value of 222.1 billion, of which 122.6 billion in low-interest financing from the European Union, 68.9 billion in non-repayable grants and a complementary plan of 30.6 billion. We wanted to discuss the issue with Valerio Mancini, Director of the Research Centre at Rome Business School and Program Director of the Master in International Management, who said: The seriousness of the situation has prompted the European institutions to agree on the Next Generation EU, NGEU, a powerful temporary tool for relaunching the economies of the Member States. In a global context of economic slowdown, all Governments and Central Banks, including the ECB, the European Central Bank, have deployed extraordinary measures – both monetary and fiscal – to support businesses in order to absorb the shock caused by the crisis, to ensure their resilience in the period of emergency and to promote their relaunch at the time of recovery. I'm expecting some phone calls from the banks, I've had a couple of missed calls from private numbers today which is unusual on my mobile, so I could potentially / imminently be getting a phone PPI interview, which I believe is a further stage beyond the questionnaires.The Covid-19 showed the structural vulnerability of the global economic system, which in the first two quarters of 2020 experienced its worst recession since the Second World War. I suppose I'm just looking for a bit of reassurance that I've done everything right so far. Please forgive my naivety, I really don't know much knowledge about PPI and the processes involved, I just wanted to have a go, avoid the PPI claims company's, and see if I am due any PPI refund / compensation before the August deadline. I understand if I'm am unsuccessful I can try with the Financial Ombudsman. I've seen some template letters online to make complaints on Which etc.Īt this stage I'm just assuming that as I've been sent several questionnaires for several products the banks have put me on a complaints pathway automatically. My question and confusion is:- should I be making separate complaints for each loan / cc that may have had PPI? I can see from looking online at the banks websites that complaints are logged slightly differently to inquiries. I'm assuming by returning these questionnaires, I'm automatically raising a complaint with the banks, they have given a PPI reference no for each query. In total 2 x MPPI, 2 x Loans PPI, 2 x CC's PPI have asked for questionnaires to be returned. I then received several letters confirming no PPI but also got several others with questionnaires indicating PPI or MPPI on the account. I started off by sending all the PPI inquiries I could recall to the banks directly via online forms. What I'm not sure with all the PPI inquiries that I've sent off in the past few weeks, is whether I need to be making a separate complaint, as opposed to just an inquiry. The operator confirmed the RBS loan was actually a Sainburys loan I took out in 2017, I'm not sure if it would have PPI on this as it was only 2 years ago but I've completed and sent the questionnaire today anyway. I phoned today and it did go through to a Lloyds banking group helpline, they were able to check both the RBS ppi enquiry and another Halifax one.
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