Adela Lo Celso and Alegria Duran-Ballen | Thursday, 31 August 2006
FOCUS ON KIDS
’There is no greater adventure than having children’
Even a car company can see that more bambini are the future for Italy, but the government still dithers.

In the eyes of the world, Italian culture could be summed up in the formula
f3:
family + fashion + football = heart. Sentimental, no doubt, but with a
kernel of truth. While football and fashion are holding their own,
however, the family is not, at least numerically. With very low
birthrates and an ageing population there are now fewer births than
deaths. As in other parts of Europe -- Germany, Austria, Belgium and
the Czech Republic -- in Italy the one- or two-child family has become
the norm. The country's birthrate rose slightly last year to 1.25
children per woman, but it is still one of the lowest in Europe, far
below population replacement level. Yet this is not necessarily because
Italians do not want to have more children -- the latest research shows
they do. What is holding them back?
Marta Brancatisano, a
mother of seven who teaches anthropology in Rome, sees the trend
developing in two stages: "In the 1970s, women who desired to have more
than two children found themselves sailing against the prevailing
ideology -- the sexual revolution. Having more children meant you were
irresponsible and naive. Today, I believe the problem is not so much
ideological as economic and social. Women are immersed in the labour
market and it is difficult to combine family and work. There is no
labour flexibility, at least not in Italy."
It comes down
to a personal choice, Dr Brancatisano believes. "A woman's fertility
and the energy it takes to have children are very specific things. I
know some Italians (not many) who, after finishing college, have
devoted themselves to raising a family. Once the third child is old
enough, they take up their profession again." This Italian
mamma
feels proud of her large family, which develops her skills in
problem-solving, motivation and management, and therefore
increases her value in the workplace.
Values, women and work Financial
constraints lead other couples to delay starting a family, making it
more likely that there will be "only one". The size of their homes is
also a hurdle. Many Italian families live in relatively small urban
apartments where space is tight for a family of three, and more so with
four. Other reasons can be found in the lack of help from a partner,
work and the desire for individual freedom. Frequently, Italians don't
want to have a second child because they prefer to have a nice car or
brand labelled clothes and shoes. This problem is complex but is
related -- as in the West generally -- to their ideals of
happiness, personal commitment and generosity.
Elsewhere
such aspirations have been realised through women combining motherhood
with careers and paid work. But in Italy, as in Spain and other
southern European countries, there are few opportunities for married
women to earn a second income, and this forces women to choose between
paid work and motherhood. Countries with high female labour
participation rates, such as France and Britain, tend to have higher
fertility than countries such as Italy, where fewer mothers work
outside the home and there is less support for those who do. This
means that fewer women even look for jobs but it also means lower
birthrates because women put off childbearing.
Married
women are not the only ones who find the job market difficult. Young
Italians find themselves jumping from one badly paid job to another,
and so they are allowed to live at home until they reach some
stability. In Italy, more than 80 per cent of men aged 18 to 30 still
live with their parents. The veneration of family and the desire of
young people to live close to their parents runs deep in Italian
culture, but it can also have its downside. As in many countries, the
security of home can encourage young people to focus too much on
satisfying immediate ambitions rather than taking on the burden of
children. In many cases this has caused adolescence to be prolonged
well into the 30s. In the 1980s European women had their first child at
25, today this happens on average at 28-and-a-half. The average Italian
man is 33 when his first child is born, making Italian men the oldest
first-time fathers in Europe.
Family policies 
Although
Italy lags behind in family policy, it has now begun to lift its game.
Since 2003 the government has given families a baby bonus for the
second child. The bonus varies according to the province. In the
capital, under the slogan "Rome cradles you", in addition to 1000 euros
the mother receives a birth kit containing, among other products, a
baby card (for medical care), a photo album, and a CD with traditional
Italian music.
But this is more of a token gesture than a
real answer to low fertility, according to Paola Maria Zerman, a state
lawyer who worked for the Family Commission for three years during
Silvio Berlusconi's administration. "Even though the baby-bonus is
helpful it's not a deep solution since it is only a subsidy. A much
stronger solution would be that the larger families pay less taxes."
Countries
such as France, Sweden and Norway have dealt with the same problem by
increasing the rewards for mothers: more children, more benefits. By
contrast, Italy's policies seem a little half-baked. "Italian policies
have a serious ideological problem," says Dr Zerman. "They equate the
promotion of larger families (three-to-four children) with 'Catholic
policies' and so avoid looking at this solution. In other countries
where this ideology doesn't exist they have been able to effectively
work towards families with more children.
"In Italy, until
it is understood that the family should be the foundation for any
society, no real solutions can be found. Immigration will continue to
be used as a solution to raise the birthrate," Dr Zerman adds.
Traditionally, Italy has been a country of emigrants. In the last 20
years, however, it has reversed to become a country of immigration.
Currently Italy has 58 million inhabitants. In the year 2002, 855,535
visas were offered to immigrants; in 2005, the number increased to
1,076,680.
A popular trend

In
spite of such obstacles, we are seeing in Italy a small but significant
trend towards having more babies. Not everything, after all, depends on
the central government.
Last July, the TeleGiornale
(television newscast) reported with much hype the news that, in one
small town, a baby was born for the first time in 36 years. The
witnesses of this great event were the neighbours of the area, mostly
elders, who with lively banners and shouts of
Auguri! awaited the arrival of the little Italian.
Even
popular culture is starting to promote the birthrate. Luca Bernabei, a
director of Lux Vide Television, recently told a young audience about
one of his upcoming projects: a TV series which takes place in a
maternity clinic. The main theme would be life stories reflecting the
beauty of motherhood.
And earlier this year Nissan ran a
car advertising campaign under the slogan, "There is no greater
adventure than having children." Newspapers, radio stations and
billboards have made this campaign more than a product promo;
it stands for a new attitude to children and to the future.
During
Romano Prodi's political campaign the new Prime Minister offered to
give families 2,500 euros per year for each child until it turned
three. The parent group, MOIGE, known all over Italy for
its monitoring of television content, demands that the new
government keep its promises. President of the association Maria Rita
Munizzi says: "Italy is one of the oldest countries in Europe. We
need to give back to couples the confidence and the means of bringing
children into the world. Now, thousands of families are anxiously
waiting for Mr. Prodi to fulfil the offer."
There is no greater adventure than having children.
Nissan's slogan speaks directly to the anxieties of a society with few
children. Sooner or later the leaders will have to realize that the
"family" element in the
f3 Italian formula is the key for the nation's growth.
Adela Lo Celso and Alegria Duran-Ballen are freelance journalists working in Rome.
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