
Wednesday, June 23, 2010
Italy's 'Lost Generation': No Country
for Young Men
When Companies
in Italy (or US or any country) "OutSources" JOBS, or "DownSources"
(Illegal Immigrant Sweatshops) it is not suprising that Consumption of
Goods Drop, with Less Income available, and a Fear of the Future and Companies
also Suffer from Less Profits. One Needn't be a Graduate of the London
Academy for Economics to realize that.
Tax Cuts, Don't Create JOBS !!!!!
Getting Money into the Hands of the Consumer, to be able to buy Goods,
creates JOBS to make those additional Goods. If Companies get Tax
Cuts, are they going to create Jobs to make Goods that no one can afford
???? If you say yes, you are a Dunce. !!!
(Said with warmth and love :)
No Country for Young Men; Italy's
'Lost Generation'
News Center; Wed, Jun 23, 2010
Once kept at home by love for mamma's
home-cooked pasta, a growing number of young Italians are now forced to
live with their parents because they can't get a steady job or afford a
home of their own.
When estate agents showed a young
couple a rental apartment in Rome this year, they got a shock: the would-be
tenants arrived with a gang of friends with bottles of bubbly wine.
The "protest party" was a set-up
concocted by the couple who made a date to view a flat they knew they could
not afford.
The serious purpose was to highlight
the fact that renting a home is beyond the reach of many young Italians,
the segment of society hardest hit by the economic crisis.
"We wanted to talk about the fact
that a lot of Italians just can't afford to leave their parents' home,"
said Chiara Bastianni, 25, of the "Fai la Valigia" (Pack your bags) group
behind the unorthodox protest. "It's a type of provocation."
Landing a steady job has long been
hard for the young but a shrinking economy has choked off the few jobs
available to them. Connections are essential to nab the few positions available
in the bloated public sector, while businesses often hire workers only
on short-term contracts to dodge rigid labour laws.
After the steep recession in 2008-2009,
nearly 60% of 18-34-year-olds now live with their parents, up from 49%
in 1983, national statistics agency Istat says.
Nearly a third of people in their
early 30s are still living with their parents -- a figure that has tripled
since 1983.
Mocked as "bamboccioni" (big babies),
who choose to live a pampered life with mamma, a growing number have no
choice.
The desire to stay with the family
came a distant third in the Istat survey among the reasons cited for living
at home, after financial and educational grounds. The percentage of youth
wanting to leave home in the next three years rose to 51.9% in 2009 from
45.1% in 2003.
Lost generation
Gabriele Gentile, 26, lives with
his parents in Rome because taking on a monthly rent would be too risky.
Without a permanent contract enjoyed by older, unionised workers, he can
be fired at any time.
"If you lose your job, you risk staying
at home for a long time. Even when you have a job, you have to keep looking
for alternatives because you never know when you might be let go," he said.
"If I could, if I had a job that gave me more stability, I'd leave my parents'
house tomorrow."
Sociologist Chiara Saraceno says
the trend is worrying for Italy's future, as the younger generation enters
the labour market late, lives with job insecurity, gets fewer chances to
develop skills and founds a family later.
"This is the generation which is
bearing the brunt of an ageing society, of a society which is investing
very little in the young while putting the costs of the economic crisis
and labour market changes on their shoulders," said Saraceno, adding that
young Italians risk becoming a "lost generation".
While retirees -- who form a majority
of members of Italy's largest union -- and public sector workers lead the
outcry over a 25-billion-euro (USD 33.5 billion) government austerity package,
young people quietly endure the sharpest hit from the crisis.
In 2009, Italians between the age
of 18 and 29 accounted for 79% of overall job losses, Istat says. The employment
rate in that age bracket shrank to 44%.
Worse, more than two million people
-- over 21% of 15-29-year-olds -- did not work or study in 2009, making
Italy the European country with the highest number of inactive youth.
"Slow suicide"
Despite frequent laments about the
plight of workers on short-term or "precarious" contracts and successive
governments promising legislation, little change is expected.
Public Administration Minister Renato
Brunetta drew outrage from the left and won little support on the right
this year when he proposed taking money out of the pension system to give
500 euros a month to adults living with their parents.
The gerontocrats who dominate politics
and business show little sign of making way for those in their 30s or 40s,
considered "young" by Italian standards.
While the United States and Britain
have leaders in their 40s, Italy's revolving-door politics revolves around
the likes of 73-year-old Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi and 69-year-old
ally Umberto Bossi. Challengers such as Gianfranco Fini and leftist leader
Pierluigi Bersani are both in their late 50s.
So much so that former Prime Minister
Romano Prodi, 71, says the young must kick the older political class out.
"When does anyone ever leave younger
people room?" Prodi said this month. "Career politicians must be pushed
out."
Business can be equally geriatric
-- Frenchman Antoine Bernheim was 85 when he was replaced at the helm of
Italian insurer Generali this year by Cesare Geronzi, who at 75 remains
among Italy's most influential businessmen.
Prominent sociologist Franco Ferrarotti
says where all this leaves young Italians is simple: "They should learn
foreign languages and move abroad."
The growing youth crisis, he says,
is a blow to the core value that has made the country what it is -- family.
"What is really tragic in Italy is
that the family is strong but having a new family is very expensive, so
if it weren't for immigrants, we'd be below zero percent population growth
rate," said Ferrarotti. "This is a slow suicide.
http://www.moneycontrol.com/news/features/
no-country-for-young-men-italys-lost-generation_465848.html
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