The percent of Italians who want Italy to leave the Eurozone has risen from 26% at the start of 2014 to 40.1% now, the polling agency says.
More than half of the Euroskeptics think the single currency is the chief cause of Italy's economic woes, as it has deprived the country of the possibility of devaluating its currency at will.
Nearly one of every two Italians, or 45%, would like to leave the country and live abroad.
The agency says this marked an increase of 8% from 2006, two years before the global economic crisis.
The poll also found that almost half of Italians, 47%, say they can't make it financially to the end of the month, 16.4% more than last year.
"What we are seeing are the death-agonies of the Euro," Robin Mitchinson, a Contributing Editor to The Commentator, wrote on its official website. "It will be prolonged and nasty but the single currency must eventually collapse under the weight of its fundamental contradiction: that it cannot work without a fiscal union and the member countries surrendering complete sovereignty over their financial affairs.
Brussels is terrified that a Grexit might start a stampede for the exit among the "Club Med" countries (Greece Spain Italy, and Portugal), he predicts. Monetary union has been a catastrophic failure.
Greece’s new Finance Minister gives it two years. The big question is what can be salvaged from the wreckage, he stated.