Skilled, educated and washing dishes: how Italy squanders migrant talent
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[April 28, 2023]
By Alessandro Parodi and Alberto Chiumento
(Reuters) - Marilyn Nabor, an experienced high school mathematics
teacher in the Philippines, moved to Italy 14 years ago with high hopes
of honing her craft in the country of Galileo and Fibonacci.
Now aged 49, she works as a housekeeper in Rome, counting cobwebs and
crockery, and has abandoned hope of returning to her former calling.
"This country does not recognise our diploma or curriculum from the
Philippines," she said. "I cannot get professional work."
Even gaining qualifications in Italy didn't help Abhishek, a 26-year-old
migrant from India who got a master's degree in mechanical engineering
at Turin's Polytechnic University last year.
Abhishek, who declined to give his surname, said he was rejected for a
string of jobs because his rudimentary Italian was deemed inadequate. He
has now found work as an engineer in the Netherlands, where he can get
by with English.
Such stories bring home an uncomfortable truth: there are scant
prospects in Italy for foreign-born workers, however qualified they are,
due to a combination of factors including a strict cap on work permits
and a high citizenship bar.
In contrast to much of the West, it's rare to see migrants working as
doctors, engineers, teachers or in any other skilled professions -
raising red flags for a country with a chronically stagnant economy and
an aging and rapidly shrinking population.
Last month the European Union's statistics agency Eurostat said just
over 67% of non-EU workers in Italy are over-qualified, meaning that
they are stuck in medium- or low-skilled jobs despite having
university-level education.
That compared with an EU average of about 40%. Only Greece did worse in
the 27-member bloc, while France and Germany were between 30-35%.
Italy, which is also contending with an exodus of skilled nationals to
stronger economies, needs qualified immigrants to fill growing skilled
labour shortages, many economists say. Unlike in much of northern
Europe, English is not widely used in the workplace, despite being a
global lingua franca.
The great majority of the country's 5 million foreign residents are
unemployed or have low-skilled jobs as domestic workers, in hotels,
restaurants, factories, construction or as small shopkeepers, labour
ministry data shows.
DECADES-LONG STAGNATION
Italian gross domestic product has barely grown since the start of the
century, after adjustment for inflation, and its labour productivity
rose by just 0.4% per year between 1995 and 2021, less than a third of
the EU average, Eurostat data shows.
For decades, Italian governments have failed to harness the skills of
migrants and integrate them into the workforce, instead treating their
arrival as a cause for alarm, said Filippo Barbera, sociology professor
at Turin University.
This month, the government of right-wing Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni
announced a "state of emergency" on immigration following a sharp rise
in flows across the Mediterranean.
Meloni, who has drafted tougher asylum rules since taking office six
months ago, has also said she will increase channels for legal
migration, though no concrete steps have been taken.
The prime minister's office and the labour ministry declined to comment
for this article.
Meloni rejects the idea that more migrant workers are the answer to
Italy's economic problems.
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A migrant worker prepares food ar a
restaurant prior to lunch time, in Milan, Italy, April 26, 2023.
REUTERS/Claudia Greco
"Before we talk about immigration we should work on the possibility
of involving many more women in the labour market and increasing the
birth rate, these are the priorities," she told reporters last week.
In 2023, work permits will be granted to around 83,000 non-EU
migrants, according to government data, less than a third of the
277,000 who applied for them.
More than half the permits handed out will be for temporary,
seasonal jobs and most of the rest for unskilled work such as
factory labour, with only 1,000 spots for high-skilled workers with
qualifications in their countries of origin.
Many of those that do arrive are dismayed to find that having their
qualifications recognised by employers is often a complicated,
drawn-out affair. Most professional guilds are only open to Italian
citizens, and have rigid requirements based on academic record, work
experience or entrance exam.
Gustavo Garcia, a 39-year-old Venezuelan sociologist, has been in
Italy for four years doing jobs such as food delivery, house
painting and gardening.
His five-year master's degree in sociology obtained in Venezuela was
demoted to a basic three-year Italian degree, and he is now studying
at Padua University to make up for lost time.
"I am forced to redo a master's degree because I want to do a
doctorate," he said. "Italian bureaucracy is very complex and
difficult to interpret."
ITALIAN BIRTHS AT HISTORIC LOW
Migrants could buffer the country's shrinking population and
workforce - births last year were the fewest since the country's
unification in 1861 - and could also help its fragile public
finances, the Bank of Italy and many economists say.
The Treasury calculates that a 33% increase in migrants would reduce
Rome's massive debt as a proportion of gross domestic product by
more than 30 percentage points by 2070 compared to a baseline
scenario.
Rome's debt-to-GDP ratio stood at 144% at the end of last year, the
second highest in the euro zone after Greece's.
For non-EU migrants committed to forging a life in Italy, the road
to citizenship is longer and tougher than most Western European
nations, requiring them to be at least 18 and a legal resident in
the country for 10 years before they can apply.
Oussama, a 32-year-old Moroccan who moved to Italy as a teenager,
has won Italian citizenship and graduated in chemical engineering in
Turin last year - though even this apparent success story still
hasn't had a happy ending.
Instead, he has laboured through six months of failed job
applications and menial work since gaining his master's degree.
"I took all sorts of jobs. I worked at the market, handed out
advertising, and I wouldn't mind doing it again to feed my family,"
said Oussama, who is married with two children and is now on an
internship with a company that develops workplace health and safety
systems.
Barbera at Turin University said the lack of migrants in skilled
professions has become entrenched and hard to reverse.
"Migrants in Italy have virtually no access to the middle class," he
said. "It is partly self-fulfilling. People are used to seeing them
in menial jobs so it becomes perceived as their natural place."
(Additional reporting by Gavin Jones, Alvise Armellini and Vittorio
Maresca di Serracapriola; Writing by Gavin Jones and Alvise
Armellini; Editing by Pravin Char)
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