Millions
of poverty-stricken Italians unable to afford heat, meat amid
economic crisis
As
a severe recession and unprecedented unemployment sweeps Italy,
millions of people are struggling to make ends meet. The number of
those receiving food assistance has doubled in the past two years,
according to a government report.
RT,
22
May, 2013
The
data comes from national statistics institute ISTAT, which published
an annual report demonstrating, among other issues, that Italy is
witnessing youth unemployment of nearly 40 percent – the highest in
Europe.
A
reported 23.9 percent of young Italians are neither in the job market
nor receiving education, the report stressed. In southern Italy, one
in three young people aged 15-29 fell into this category.
Just
over half (57.2 percent) of youths who graduated were currently
employed, with the Europe-wide average standing at 77.2 per cent.
Fourteen
percent of Italy’s population – 8.6 million people – is living
on food assistance, a number that has doubled over the past two
years, according to the report.
Nine
poverty indicators were taken into account while carrying out the
study; if a family meets more than four, it is considered to be
seriously deprived. Some 15 million people – 25 percent of Italy’s
population – are living in families that meet three or more of the
poverty indicators, the research found.
Reuters
/ Stefano Rellandini
Over
half of the Italian population is unable to afford a one-week
vacation, including a staggering 69 percent of southern Italians,
according to ISTAT.
The
recession, which has now lasted almost two years, has taken a heavy
toll on Italians, who are increasingly digging into their savings,
ISTAT stressed. The savings rate, traditionally high in Italy, is
currently far below that of France and Germany, Reuters reported.
Italians'
purchasing power also fell by 4.8 percent last year, an
"exceptionally steep" decline caused largely by aggressive
tax hikes aimed at battling the economic crisis gripping the
country.
The
study results come just a few days after thousands gathered in Rome
to protest austerity measures and high unemployment. Demonstrators
urged Prime Minister Enrico Letta to create jobs to pull the country
out of recession. Protesters held banners reading, “We can’t wait
anymore” and “We need money to live.”
According
to a Friday poll conducted by the SWG institute, the government’s
approval rating has dropped to 34 percent, down from 43 percent at
the start of May.
Students
and protesters march in front of the Colosseum during a
demonstration to protest against the cuts in the education budget
and against the austerity measures in Europe on November 17, 2011 in
Rome.(AFP Photo / Andreas Solaro)
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