Italy\'s biggest trade union, the CGIL, on Sunday called for a general strike against the government\'s new austerity plans. Union chief Susanna Camusso, speaking in the daily La Repubblica newspaper, said the CGIL (Italian General Confederation of Labour) would hold a meeting on August 23 to fix a date for the strike.\"I can\'t see any other way to oppose the iniquity of this austerity plan,\" she added. Italy\'s cabinet on Friday approved a 45.5-billion-euro ($64.8-billion) austerity package of spending cuts and tax hikes that Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi said was due to pressure from Finland, Germany and the Netherlands. The draft measures -- which must still go before parliament for final approval expected early September -- include a new tax on high earners and deep cuts to local government and cabinet costs.They seek to assuage jittery markets by returning Italy to a balanced budget in 2013 instead of 2014 as previously planned, and come on top of a 48-billion-euro package agreed in July when Rome first came under pressure.CGIL secretary general Camusso said that after the extraordinary meeting of the union\'s leader next week to fix a date for a general strike the proposal will go out to fellow unions to join the industrial action. She warned that the government\'s fiscal plans would hit economic growth. The plans also favour a liberalised economy, privatisations and make it easier for employers to hire and fire.