The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Will Italy ‘disappear’?

A double whammy (aging, low births) makes it the West’s fastest shrinking nation as officials seek solutions.

- Jason Horowitz c. 2023 The New York Times

On one side of a glass wall, three toddlers in a nursery school flattened play dough with plastic rolling pins. On the other, three old women in a nursing home tapped the pane to get their attention. “Let’s say hi to the nonni,” the children’s teacher said before leading them through a door that connected the two rooms. The children stopped to play with the magnifying glass of a delighted 89-year-old woman who had been using it to read obituaries. Then the toddlers, all 2 years old, took an elevator upstairs, where nursing home residents waited to read them picture books in a small library.

“It’s an extraordin­ary thing,” said one of the residents, Giacomo Scaramuzza, 100. “People think we are from two different worlds, but it’s not true. We are in the same world. And maybe I give them something, too. There is an exchange.”

Piacenza’s Elderly and Children Together, an experiment­al project in the country’s most renowned region for childhood education and elder care, seeks to connect the vulnerable at both extremes of life. But it also puts Italy’s two existentia­l challenges under one roof.

Italy’s population is aging and shrinking at the fastest rate in the West, forcing the country to adapt to a booming population of the elderly that puts it at the forefront of a global demographi­c trend that experts call the “silver tsunami.” But it faces a demographi­c double whammy, with a drasticall­y sinking birthrate that is among the lowest in Europe. Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni has said Italy is “destined to disappear” unless it changes.

Health and social overhaul

Last month, Meloni’s government approved a new “Pact for the Third Age,” which she said would lay a foundation for health and social overhauls for Italy’s exploding population of old people. “They represent the heart of society, and a patrimony of values, traditions and precious wisdom,” said Meloni, adding that the law would prevent marginaliz­ation and the “parking” of elderly in institutio­ns.

“To care for the old is to care for all of us,” she said.

The overhaul essentiall­y adopted, experts say nearly wholesale, a measure approved at the end of the previous administra­tion of Prime Minister Mario Draghi. Critically, it followed Draghi’s lead in wrapping the legislatio­n into the European Union recovery fund program, which ensures that it will be enacted.

“This is the acknowledg­ment that long-term care is a welfare policy,” said Cristiano Gori, who leads the Pact for a New Welfare on the Dependent, the umbrella organizati­on that advocated the law.

The new law, he said, will fix a system that is “a mess,” streamlini­ng and simplifyin­g government health care and

social services, and getting local and national government into the growing field of long-term care. At the same time, it seeks to keep aging Italians in their own homes and out of institutio­ns. A key innovation, he said, depends on funding by the Meloni government but would give Italians a choice between unconditio­nal cash benefits or larger in-kind contributi­ons to be used for public care.

“The main shortcomin­g is that there is no money,” Gori said. The hope, he said, is that Meloni’s government, which sold itself to voters as being “family, family, family,” will make the program a real priority and fund it. But without more young people to join the workforce and pay into pension and welfare systems, the whole system is imperiled.

Meloni, who once ran for mayor while pregnant, is Italy’s first female prime minister, and throughout her career, she has made raising the country’s low birthrate and helping working mothers a priority.

But critics say her “Italians First” opposition to immigratio­n — she has gone so far as to warn against “ethnic replacemen­t” — hurts population growth. And Meloni’s government, slowed by local bureaucrat­ic snags, has already delayed a program to build new nursery schools financed with 3 billion euros — or about $3.3 billion — in EU recovery funds.

If Italy does not get serious about encouragin­g young families and working women to

have children, “it will remain and forever be a country that gets older,” said Alessandro Rosina, a leading Italian demographe­r and an author of a “Demographi­c History of Italy.”

The combinatio­n of low employment for women, the fleeing of young profession­als and families, little immigratio­n, low birthrates and radically increased life expectancy amounted to a demographi­c disaster, he said.

The reality of the gray new world poses a make-or-break test for Italy, making it a laboratory for many Western countries with aging population­s, some experts said.

Some of Italy’s regions hope to delay that demographi­c time bomb by prolonging the period in which older people can work, be self-sufficient and contribute, and not be a financial drain on society. The center in Piacenza has sought to invigorate them with its precious resource of children. Before COVID-19 sealed the nursing home off, children in the center ate and even cooked with the older residents. Now things are opening up again.

The children use walkers in the corridor as race cars, they turn a lunch cart into a pirate ship, and they play in the gym while the residents do their fitness routines.

“The most significan­t relationsh­ips were born casually, where the child wanted to go upstairs to the old person’s room, hop on their lap and read a book,” said Francesca

Cavozzi, 41, the project’s coordinato­r. She said having the two extremes of the life span, both sharing sometimes uncertain gaits and a taste for juice, in a shared space was a “first step” toward making Italy’s seniors feel engaged and useful.

“The old person feels that the adult looks at them with pity,” Cavozzi said, “the child doesn’t do this yet.”

Some, however, expressed skepticism that the children got much out of it.

“After five minutes, they refuse you,” said Luisa Tani, 86, who reads to the children in part, she said, out of nostalgia for her early years as an elementary school teacher.

The center has received interest from academics. College students have written theses on the center’s approach to intergener­ational living, which Cavozzi said echoes the traditiona­l Italian home, with the residents as the heads of the family, the staff as the adults and the children as the children.

She said she hoped researcher­s would study the effects on the elderly, but also in the long term, on the children, to see if they grow to be more sensitive to the old and vulnerable. But for now, she said with some bewilderme­nt, “in Italy, it has not been replicated.”

Roots in fascism

Even as Italy slowly comes to terms with the coming transforma­tion, the issues it raises are hardly new to it.

When Benito Mussolini came to power in Italy in 1922, the Fascists immediatel­y got to work on increasing birthrates, stemming emigration and increasing Italy’s population to 60 million (from 40 million) by 1950.

“If the number diminishes, ladies and gentlemen, you don’t make an empire, you become a colony,” Mussolini said in a 1927 speech calling growth a “destiny of the race.”

To address what it came to call Italy’s “problem of problems,” the regime introduced paid maternity leave, among other steps. But the obsession with birthrate by a man who threw in his lot with Adolf Hitler, demographe­rs say, had the effect of stigmatizi­ng social policy on the problem, leading Italy to invest less in assistance for young families than other European countries after the war.

“The belief that family policies had a Fascist echo had a role,” demographe­r Rosina said.

In the 1950s, Italy’s economy boomed, and so did its population, which filled with young workers. But generation­s of leaders largely failed to help Italians with programs like day care, prompting criticism that the country’s conservati­ve culture cared more about mothers staying home to give birth than helping women work and raise children.

In November, Meloni, who has roots in post-fascist parties, encouraged couples to have children and businesses to hire women. She later announced a 50% increase in the “baby bonus” checks parents receive a year after a birth and a 50% increase in assistance for three years to families with more than three children.

“We continue to look at today,” Meloni has said, “not realizing we won’t have a tomorrow.”

But despite billions of euros earmarked for nursery schools by the European Union, Italy has delayed the start date on 1,857 nurseries and 333 kindergart­ens, the majority in Italy’s poorer south. If Italy fails to start building by the latest deadline, in June, it risks losing the money.

Scaramuzza, the centenaria­n, said he hoped some of the new nurseries would also share space with nursing homes, as his does. “Not having had children or grandchild­ren,” he said, “here, I have a great number of grandchild­ren.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY ELISABETTA ZAVOLI/NEW YORK TIMES ?? A nursing home in Piacenza illustrate­s what Italy is facing. The government recently approved a program expected to lay a foundation for health and social overhauls for an exploding population of old people. Italy is also seen as a laboratory for Western countries with aging population­s.
PHOTOS BY ELISABETTA ZAVOLI/NEW YORK TIMES A nursing home in Piacenza illustrate­s what Italy is facing. The government recently approved a program expected to lay a foundation for health and social overhauls for an exploding population of old people. Italy is also seen as a laboratory for Western countries with aging population­s.
 ?? ?? At Piacenza, an experiment­al project in the country’s most renowned region for childhood education and elder care seeks to connect the vulnerable at both extremes of life. Before the pandemic, children ate and even cooked with the older residents. Now things are opening up again.
At Piacenza, an experiment­al project in the country’s most renowned region for childhood education and elder care seeks to connect the vulnerable at both extremes of life. Before the pandemic, children ate and even cooked with the older residents. Now things are opening up again.

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