@Tanmoy Debnath and in place like Canada they end up working as uber drivers, gas station attendants...but back home...they get to say...I live in North America. What has the world come to.
@@WaveRider1989 People need to stop depending on systems like the ones we have. We could have a whole different structure where everyone gets a chance in life.
You don't have to spend a fortune for Bangladesh made goods. And they are at a recruitment day and running jobs. You can't go to those thing wearing rags or you think otherwise?
Style is something we already have before we're born... It's in our blood! Lol just joking! But i think that in many countries in Europe people don't really know how to get dress 🤷♂️
This is a trend in 21st Century's youth. Unlike the past, there a thousands of universities and colleges and it's much easier to get educated. But when everyone's "educated", the standards are set up too high.
Well, it's not that hard to explain since there is also way less demand for manual labour because it's almost all automated. Most rich countries' economies are based on services for the majority.
Same problem in Iran .Instead of sending work force to Germany, how about importing some German politicians and industry managers to Italy and kicking out useless politicians ?
I'd prefer to become a satellite state of Germany then 1 more year of this incompetence, but the average Italian would say that I'm a "traitor" (lol). For us, the only solution is for the EU to become a federal state, to remove corrupted politicians and their clientelism we need a higher power.
At least you can live in London hassle free just because you are Italian ...when I worked in London my employer had to spend a fortune on lawyers and prove to the home office that no other British or EU applicant could be a better fit for the job .. Being Italian Is a blessing ....
@@st4ble869 Nope! Does not affect to anyone which moved to UK before the beginning of the year. We just needed to send some documents proving that we live here already and for how long.
Here in Iraq you can easily find young people holding master and even PHD degrees in Computer Sciences and Engineering yet their biggest hope is to find a work in a supermarket or a fast food restaurant. imagine this happening in a "democratic" country which is considered third largest oil producer in the world.
I am sorry to hear about that. There are so many young educated people who would be able to perform well in a job, but instead they are frustrated and out of work. It's not fair for them.
This is why Germany's dual-education-system is so valuable. Instead of doing your diploma you instantly start working at a corporate + go to a specialized school. After completion you your're often offered a job and stay
Problem with that is the payment - of course you get trained well. I was a trained car painter at a co-company of Audi, the payment was SHIT and there is no other option let alone the opportunity to earn more. This system is destined to fail, as good as it trains the youth, it only leads to poverty now. What is it good for to be the best carpenter in the world if the only option for a fair wage is either make your own company or move to Canada. There are Problems everywhere but germany fucks up so bad atm its insane. We even got a "labor-crisis" because almost no young person wants to become Handyman or Nurse/Caretaker just because of the fucked up wages. Now I studied, get more than I ever dreamed off as car painter and its still a struggle.
@@AB-di1nr I disagree. I think the system needs to be reformed. You could quite easily go from the type of manual labor training that they do now to teach the kids how to program, how to use CAD software, business training etc. The idea is very good but it is slightly aged in terms of what it trains people to do. Going to the university to do 95 % of all engineering jobs is a waste of time. I say that as a software engineer myself. University really ought to be for the 2 % of the population with an IQ above 130 who should be spending their life doing research that benefits all of society. Right now it's just an extended high school that costs the tax payers billions of Euros every year.
@@AB-di1nr i actually am this "handyman" and enjoy it alot! But it's hard for me to come up with a job outside the 2 fields you mentioned. What did you study after car painter for example?
@@johanneswestman935 You disagree and then tell me why I am right - do you realize that? The system is build on stagnation, if you train everyone to go further the ones "left behind" will never be payed fair. Not everyone needs or should be in a academic job, not everyone wants to study and still everyone wants to have living quality to a certain point. Our socitiety NEEDS all jobs, what is it good for to tell, lets say a potential car painter like me the tools to make more money but expect me to stay in a shit payed job with a shit day to day live? You have to pay the lowest end more than the easy to reach other spots. Why would any sane person work shifts and put himself in health-danger if he earns more with some shitty nonsense study?? I studied only to make money - I dont give a shit about "academic research" its a tool to get education - as for most people now at universitys. If I could have had the same job without studying I wouldn't have studied. The solution to your "problem" is pay the workers more. Not even a single one of my classmates REALLY gave a shit about Uni - its plain about the money.
@@AB-di1nr Was studierst bzw. studiertest du? Ich will Pharmazie studieren, aber falls ich keine Zulassung kriege oder das Studium abbrechen muss, suche ich noch ein paar Pläne B, C, D. Ist es IT oder Ingineur?
Chico, its in BR that i heard the phrase along the lines " Quem te recomendou" , because companies have lists of jobs they pass along their network of friends.
@@PHlophe my mother actually married my father for a shot at being a professor. Academia people often call it QI (portuguese for IQ) but they actually mean "Quem Indica" - who wants you to have the job.
I abandoned my dream and then moved to public sector. What a joke, spend a lot of money, time, the government should stop to tell us lies that there are jobs for everyone who are graduated...
Let's not forget that Italy is the third-largest manufacturing country in the EU and part of the G7. I've never had any problem finding a job as an engineer in Italy. Recruiters used to contact me and not the opposite. The same problems highlighted in this video are in some parts of France too. The video showed some villages nearby Naples and the South, which always had problems. Moreover, it is quite popular to see French engineers in Germany/Netherlands/UK /Switzerland, but this channel is pointing against Italy only and gives a wrong picture of the country. Of course, we do have problems related to the job occupation of young generations and there's nothing to hide there, but it is not black and white as the message they're trying to send with these videos. Just look at some other videos from them like "why Italian graduates are choosing life on the farm". It is not that an entire generation is going back to the countryside, but they clearly want to discredit the picture of a country and show it as underdeveloped.
@@pizzaguy8484 hey mate, I’m planing on doing a masters in finance on Bocconi and perhaps staying o Italy to work on banking, do you suggest it? Or is it Noh recommendable at all (according to this video)
@@peterhaberlehner6749 It is a top international Biz school. Italians see it as an elite school and, with all the respect for the people in this video, I'm 100% sure none of them nearly attended something like Bocconi or Polimi/Polito. All my friends from Bocconi found a job in few months and never struggled to find internships while studying. It is pretty international so if you won't find a job in Italy because you don't speak Italian, you’ll still have a very well-recognized degree in Europe.
It depends on the major . But Yeah it is a problem and we need to educate our kids on picking a good major because you’re investing in your career and you better expect a good pay out 1-2 years after you graduate. Know the job market you want to invest into. Not to mention the fact that trade schools are an option and are in my opinion just as good as university . I feel that too many people look down on them but they are much cheaper and are a more economic option for just a simple job you want to do. Plus they are less chaotic and more neutral than a college or university and I’m saying that from experience. We need to tell our kids they have options besides high cost university like community college or trade schools. They try to nickel and dime you for everything. And I think the reason people weren’t realizing this is because many parents never went or had to go to college before so they wouldn’t know what it costs or what would happen if the masses tried to all get in the game at once in the 90s.
@@garybrown2039 Kids weren't told any of that, they were told if they didn't get a 4 year degree, they wouldn't get a good job. Period. The same thing is being told to girls now, get into coding.... until the market is so saturated no one can get jobs in that either.
Actually the problem in italy is that they are being pushed to useless major like "lettere antiche" where they study ancient greek and latin, and 40% of the italian school population studies latin more than 7 hours per week, and they keep saying that latin it's the best thing you can study and they talk about how it opens your mind and a lot of young kids fall for that, and then when they are 23 they realize they don't have a place in the job market and they are forced to emigrate to other countries to find entry level jobs
I have a degree and I am unemployed. I now have to go and do a trade in order to get some sort of job. Having a degree doesn't mean that you will automatically get a job.
Daniel Purdy typical American. Always acting like degrees in America have the same value in other countries. Maybe there’s a thing called a weak labour market and strong competition? Stop acting like you understand how the labour market works
I didn't have any degree, but I made more that most of graduate from college. I never look for someone to give a job, but I always looked at the opportunity around me that was business or investments. I don't understand why people coming out of colleges or universities, that think of themselves as smart individuals are seeking someone to give them a job instead of creating their own opportunities.
@@asharohx, it takes all sorts to make a world. Ask big companies, and they explain that they want people who can thrive as a small part of a big organisation. If everyone was trying to create a business in their parent's back room, Italy would end up with many more small underpowered companies, much as it is today. Still, great to hear that you are having success this way.
Italians are used to leaving their country to pursue opportunities elsewhere. They’ve been doing it for generations. They've even been doing it longer than the Polish.
More of the half of Italians are actually outside Italy, we are talking more of 30 million people since the 900’, pfff Poland who??? I can call my uncle in Canada, my niece in the Us, half of my family is in Germany we are worldwide my friend
Here to bro I am from India I completed my bachelor's degree in Agriculture still I struggle to get a job......from last 3 months there is 7 vacancies and almost 500 Applicant's...so sad...💔
It was soul-crushing for me to watch. I'm American and I've always dreamt of living in Italy because of my heritage (which is really important to me), and seeing stuff like this nearly crushes those dreams.
@Willie Fungo It's just sad for me to hear that young educated Italians feel like they have to leave Italy for job opportunities, because I plan to bring my bloodline back to its native soil by moving to Italy and settling down. Nothing will change my mind about moving to Italy because I believe I was born to return my lineage back to its motherland and to contribute everything I can to better the Italian state, even if financially it's not the best decision. Although I think this was mainly just in Calabria, which is unfortunately not doing to good, however based upon what I've read other places in Italy like Rome or Florence, the job opportunities are particularly good. especially in the automotive industry and to my knowledge, Italy as a whole has been a very popular destination for foreigners seeking to expand their careers within the past couple of years.
@@rickynoodles2816 you are totally right. It's only the south Italy that isn't doing good. But the northern part is doing actually pretty well, north and south Italy are like two different countries.
@@МаксимилианФилипожкиь Yes you're right, sadly they are quite diverse economically. Hopefully the vaccines that are coming out slow down the pandemic so Southern Italy (and the rest of the world) can improve
@r g It’s not about focusing on the right or wrong. When the economy in a certain country is bad almost every one suffers, no matter how educated or talented they are. Besides, you can spend little and look elegant, and Italians know how to do that.
@r g you are talking like all italians study art and study how to dress well. We don't do that, we don't need to study how to dress, and certainly we don't study art for 2 decades. I studied a bit of art in high school, now I'm at univerisity to get a degrees in Computer Science. You know nothing about other countries, so shut your mouth
@r g triggered so much from a joke and went on a rant to portrait Italians as uneducated people who know only how to dress.. :D good job man keep it up
No we don’t have a problem in Spain with the youth not getting jobs. We have a problem with the Youth not having the correct education, this is a very big difference. An art history degree is useless, a degree in romantic languages is useless. The only things these qualify you for is making coffee at a bar unless you have family in a museum who can get you a job. In Barcelona there are always jobs for those with medical, technical, science, mechanical educations. We have many many foreigners working for the Barcelona city as civil engineers because we don’t have enough youth here getting that kind of education. The health system is hiring foreigners daily all over Spain. There is jobs. The youth simply don’t want them or to study for them.
Euclid Avenue quit making excuses. American millennials are doing great if they want it. Millions of open jobs and easier now than ever to become wealthy.
WTF do boomers have to do with shifts in the economy? Did we all sit down together and take a collective decision to ensure that future generations have no jobs? What a stupid and useless excuse you make for yourself.
Sorry but you misread the problem. In a small country you can't all be college degreed high paid workers. Also allowing immigrants who work for cheap in a small country can be disastrous!!
Italy has the oldest population in the world after Japan. They shouldn't have high youth unemployment. Something is fundamentally wrong. Update: Wasn't expecting so many likes and replies. Thank you.
@@chiaras6019 won't or can't because they have no money saved up. Also it's probably hard to start a new business there, government always gets in the way
@@chiaras6019 I don't think it's that, it's not that there is a fixed amount of jobs and that a young person can only start a job when an old person quits. Also the retirement age in Italy is not spectacularly high or anything.
@@Evettecord Government hinders people in multiple ways. They create barriers to entry, lots of red tape. You can't just start a business, you have to register with the government, pay licensing fees, there is a lot of time money and effort, all to satisfy the government. They have all kinds of regulations, large established businesses may be able to cope and deal with the regulations, but small businesses don't have the money or resources. The government is responsible for all the lock downs and restrictions that caused so many small businesses to permanently close, people have gone bankrupt and lost their livelihoods. And say even if you do manage to keep your business the government demands taxes, taxes are the biggest boat anchor on the economy, it punishes success.
My first job was more due to a recommendation than related to my cv. Of course study counts, more as a requirement, but not as guarantee you'll get the job. Working well in many team projects and different places and making connections helps a lot.
I feel sorry for the younger generation, when I finished college there was a job shortage. One time I applied for a job and there were 270 candidates for the 2nd route, but even then there where still opportunities. Today everything seems more difficult.
I'm Italian and I can tell you that this is not happening in all the country. They picked Calabria which is the more disatvantage of the Regions in Italy. Anyway, I hope things will change for them as well.
I am an american citizen and got married to an Italian. I can tell there's no jobs and they pay really bad. I am trying to convince my husband to move out. The South in Italy is having a hard time.
Exactly . Well said. I am from the city of Milan, and I don’t relate to this video at all. I’m 24 with a bachelors degree and master’s degree with a full time job in Milan. They don’t pay me as much as in the U.K ora Germany but it’s more than enough to have a decent lifestyle. I wish this documentary explained the difference between the south, and more precisely Calabria, and the rest of Italy which is doing just fine.
The free time and self humialtion that u feel when u r unemployed is just horrible all I wanted to do something to keep myself engaged so that I don't do anything stupid
I started learning Spanish to ease my stress and anxiety. My anxiety was at peak few weeks ago and I felt the chocking and depressing feeling. Luckily I was able to control it by diverting my attention so as not to be suicidal.
underdeveloped countries are doing just fine, because: A: they can't afford automation technologies yet so they have to hire actual human beings to work in their factories and on their farms B: when there are no jobs available they can just move to countries like italy and undercut the locals
Hi, I'm a 24 yo Italian with a Master degree. I know the Italian situation very well. The biggest problem here is that there is a mismatch between university education and the job offers. Too many young Italians graduate in humanistic studies that are not requested by the job market. At the same time we have a LOT of open positions for engineering and STEM in general. The result is: high unemployment rate among graduated people and low skilled workers and at the same time a lack of workforce for technical professions.
@John Singer I can agree with you on the debt haircut but for the rest I strongly disagree. Euro reinforced the single market and boosted the exports for Italy. The economic stagnation is due to numerous other factors among which there is low competitiveness of Italian companies, lack of credit for companies and startups, lack of digitalization, excess of bureaucracy and many other things. Leaving the EU and the single currency would be a tragedy for Italy, the ECB saved Italy from default with quantitative easing.
@@tdsdesa haha....such bs. Did you graduate from Bocconi to speak like that? The EU is destroying Italy's future, enjoy your "Super Mario" and all the rest that's coming!
For baby boomers, getting a degree was a magical route to get a "high" paying jobs. And they taught the future generation the same and now we are all stuck with our degrees but no jobs around. Baby boomers could easily get a job with a college diploma, could by two houses, could go on vacations, could afford to travel once a year or two. I can't even afford to leave my parents house, let alone dream to afford a house of my own. Home ownership is a long gone dream for millennials.
Yup, same in México... Here, my friend that paint nails earn more than twice money, than my sister in law that has a doctorate in chemistry 😭 the irony
@Anonymous Apple lmao why do you think it's easy for any refugee or immigrant to leave their home and loved ones? They migrate because their original country is struggling or unsafe to live in, stop being such a prick
Un employment is a world wide problem....at young age ppl should be taught valuable skills nd self employment.....and the school system should be changed...its making ppl be labourers than inventors.....
Self employment and entrepreneurship isnt the answer to this world wide issue. But the fact of the matter is human labor is becoming obsolete. The society and government pushes the idea that ANY education, doesn't matter what, will create jobs and opportunity however we know that is false.
Umm, while I agree with the sentiment, it's not exactly a fault of the system. More and more things are getting automated every day. It's a matter of how we deal with.
Yeah, imagine if you were not a weakling with no sense of responsibility and you stayed and fought to make your area better instead of running away from problems.
@@alterego157 sometimes it's beyond one's power to change things. Countries like mine. With an extremely corrupted government and unsupportive people are not showing any signs of progress or change.
No problem. Millions of non-EUers from thousands of kilometers away, simply come over. They get free accommodation, food, money, language courses, job training.
Young Italians having trouble finding work while the French and German run EU advocate for greater immigration of young African and Middle Eastern workers. Who does this policy benefit?
You do realise that immigrants aren't taking high skilled jobs that educated youth would take? You can hardly blame the immigrants or the Germans on this one, italys economy has been in the toilet for decades
downwithjedward The video used the example of youths educated for jobs that aren’t available. Their only option, if they want to stay in their homeland, is to work in less skilled professions. Unfortunately for them, wages have been driven down by immigrants. Who does this benefit?
I'm an african with 2 master's degrees in engineering (avionics and integrated systems), the second from France where I live and i have no job and I'm homeless. I was forced to live in "colocation" with a man who is harassing me and i don't know what to do. So people like you should really shut up. Africans and arabs here, especially africans clean the streets and wash old people, which are jobs that you people don't want to do. If you're african and wish for a little better, you have 0.1 percent chance of succeeding. Most of my classmates who are not black have found jobs or PhDs and i was one of the best in my class in term of marks and i never repeated any module, but can't find anything!
@@sabcam2000 Although I do see your point of few, you have to consider that the fact that 'People do not want to wash old people' need to be a bit more nuanced. You see, those jobs are poorly paid and nobody wants to do the job, meaning the pay should rise. However, they rather open the gates for immigrants then to rise the pay. This phenonmonon can be seen in different sectors.
Same in Greece! The vast majority of the youth own a university diploma and even a Master's degree, but finding a job is absolutely hard. Most of us end up living with our parents till our 30s and even 40s sacrificing the creation of our own family, or we try our luck abroad. Especially those who can afford it.
@@jathebest2835 He is ok, but doesn't want to live there, would like to come back to Italy, but this country doesn't give any working opportunity to young people....
@@ivetad5856 My country is the same, many young people are struggling with finding their jobs. I think it is a global phenomenon that decent job vacancies are decreasing whereas many university graduates are coming out for the job market every year..
Fejzian Petritaj You must had choosen the wrong TV Show time slots. Unemployement and new migration of Italian young people is a very common breaking hit for Italian News. Check for example in RUclips for episodes Italian TV News Show called Petrolio. In any episodes the show indagates about Italian excellences that form our country hidden "oil" i.e. hidden wealth and how we italians can get wealth from our hidden oil of various industrial realities, who are our partners, who are our competitors, how can young people can benefit these opportunities as long as we Italians have many excellences but do not own huge real oil deposits...
All result of the World Order formed after WW2 by filthy greedy Westerners & Freemasons. One of the reasons to make it hard to find jobs was to force the youth towards adult industry.
Well i had a very good job here in italy, then covid destroyed it and now i'm jobless and can't even move from italy. Thank u covid pandemic for having killed the last hopes of every italian guy born into the 80s!
@Mattia Santangelo It's important to point out that it's not the phony "pandemic" (=pandemia farlocca) but the insane restrictions which wreaked havoc to the economy.
The school system in Italy should be changed, Italy needs specific skills that few Italians are trained for! But we also need competence between the politicians and public sector administrators
This is said in every industrialized country. You cannot FORCE people to be a plumber or a programmer any more than you can force them to be a dancer or musician.
44 million tourists came to Italy in 2018 and most of them come for the art and culture. Italians with high degrees in the arts is not unusual in the country. Art is our oil and gas.
Same, after graduation ive been sitting at home all day doing nothing for 6 months. I have tried to get a normal private job but i am still waiting for their call. That's so frustrating.
Italian people are really family orientated. It is often wonderful seeing Italian family businesses abroad. The family work together and live together or close by.
@@valentina_melethiel And don't you think some emancipation is needed? In the south it's still quite common to see 4 generations living under the same roof. Also women going to work is somewhat a novelty (10-15 years) in some southern towns.
Also the guy saying: „I see myself living in my own house in a year or so“ Reality:More and more Germans struggle to pay their rent only a minority manages to ever aquire an own home.
There is no problem. Everyone has the right to live regardless US, the Netherlands, algeria etc... Italians left 40 50 yeards to go to North Africa. Here I am, my father is italian by descent raised in Tunisia. While I still have family in Italy, Cyprus and the Netherlands
In fact, Indians are taking your jobs. They are cheaper and more efficient. They might as well just being automating everything. And it's already the 5th greatest economies in the world.
The people in these videos don't have degrees that are useful in the current society (art's, history, communications etc.) if you're in STEM you'll be OK for now. Plenty of Indians are in IT all across the word...
Happy I never went to collage and went right into the work force, live in Florida make 50k a year no state income tax and my property tax for a 2,300 sqft house is 2,000 a year with a built in swimming pool and almost an acre of land.
@@magk2524 no people here have healthcare and pensions and free and low cost public education from K-12 and for university. So put that in your hat and smoke it.
What do you expect?!! 30% of Italy are pensioners who receive cushy pensions. These uneducated pensioners are merely retired farmers and retired warehouse workers. Yet the Italian government only cares about senior people and considers the younger more skilled generation as 'cows to milk' in order fund these retired farmers. Young people are important too!!!!
Italy is democratic country and the biggest flaw of democracy is that in order to get to power you need to win majority of the votes 15% of Italy population is -18 so they can't vote A lot of young people in Italy are migrants who don't vote even if they have citizenship But there's another important group which is people in their 50's who are about to retire within years and they want their pensions to be payed by the government and are willing to sacrifice the few remaining years of their careers paying other people's pensions just to receive the benefits years later Add to that the average government in Italy doesn't get reelected so for any winning party the effects of public pensions system and low fertility rates are the future governments problems not theirs They just want power and authority during the short term If the consequences of your actions will be felt after your death why would you care it's not your problem once you are dead
While a subject like *_"Art History"_* may be your passion, you *_really need_* to take into consideration the job prospects. Most people cannot afford to go to college for pure enlightenment in esoteric subject matters with employment opportunities that are murky at best.
That logic is more applicable in the US where education is expensive and weighed down by debt. Not so in Europe. You can study whatever you want and should especially if the institution is subsidized. Education and deepening knowledge in university setting should be an experience that overall forms your mind. Unless it's STEM or trade, most of what we study will rarely if never have a direct market for it anyway, but will leave you competent and well-rounded anyway. I've always seen education and specialized schooling (directed towards market needs) as separate. One shapes you as a human; the other shapes you for labor.
Jon Pasciuti i mean he leaves literally in italy.... there should be TONS of opportunities especially on this subject but surprise there aren’t. The problem isn’t the type pf degree you take because literally everyone has this kind of issues from scientific to technologic degrees
@@d3r4g45 Of course...in Italy. Art curation, art events and international visual art installations are part of a both pretentious and seriously monied industry. Anything in Italy operates as closed as the mafia. Literally, all she has to do is step outside the country, and opportunities change. Truly, one trip to Miami and she'll be booked for Art Basel on the spot. C'mon woman!
Then in that case id say why is our system and our life purpose oriented around job prospects and money making? Wouldnt it be much better and efficient of a world if we could organize jobs based on what people actually want to do instead of forcing people in "job slavery". I know Im probably coming off as unrealistic but I think there is actual merit in critiquing these sorts of institutions and seeing which type of people benefit from the way our society is set up.
The majority of businesses in Italy are small and medium size enterprises. Italy hardly depends on corporations for employment. Learn about the economy if you are going to make suggestions.
@@PHlophe I'm also 20 but I feel like I'm still child maybe because I'm younger in home but in India we live with parents no matter how much grown we r
Lol this is happening in the UK too, except we have nowhere to migrate too. We live with our parents or in shared accommodation while the financial sector reaps the fruit of our labour.
@@pneron2032 the central banks print money & slash interest rates. This causes the price of assets like a house to go up massively making them unaffordable for millennials. Asset owners i.e. the 1% subsequently become massively wealthy. Meanwhile, the purchasing power of money decreases. The wages earnt through labour are cut & negatively compound every year, making the average person poorer & poorer, and needing to work harder & harder. The financial sector today adds no value to the economy & doesn't take risks by investing in entrepreneurs. They only lend to speculators who gamble on rising stock & real estate prices. This gamble can never go wrong, and the banks never lose because the speculators know the Fed will bail them out with newly printed money when the market crashes. Thus, all profits are privatised, and all losses socialised. The rich get much richer through theft of labour from the productive portions of society, while contributing nothing of material value back. Like a parasite.
@@craig5261 Good Marxist rhetoric. You obviously paid attention at school. The artificial interest rates and money printing are done by the government: the Fed is not part of the "financial sector". Millennials want it all: free healthcare, free college, "debt forgiveness", free everything but they don't want the *consequences* of fiscal irresponsibility. You don't want the gold standard and balanced budgets back. You love government discretionary spending: as long as it is being spent on you. So, pick your side. Not just "the 1%" have assets - anyone saving for a pension has assets, which is most people in work.
In Portugal, this is also becoming a reality, unfortunately. A lot of portuguese youngsters migrate every year and never come back, and most of them are college educated. So sad.
Not true. Only if you got scammed into going to college.. I never went to college. Instead I went to a trade school to become an electrician. I am now 30 years old and making $95k a year, and have absolutely zero debt.
Stop being "raycist". People have to accept that their grandchildren might not look like them. Remember that diversity is our strength - all the politicians say it, so it has to be true.
@@danc3977 Southern Europe has ceased being white a very long time ago, if you know your history you would know why. The population there looks more Mediterranean than white as in northern European white.
My husband is Sicilian and he left 13 years ago to find work in the UK. He has a masters in chemical engineering and found a job within a week in the UK. Most of his friends live all over the world, Australia, Holland, Germany etc. They all miss Italy but there is zero opportunity there. Very sad.
I have two masters degree in dreaming architecture and hope engineering, and a PhD in imagination management. I work and live in Italy as dolce vita engineer, they pay me with pizza.
Well, when we know, for example, the absurd amount of graduated architects in Portugal, in Spain or in Italy, it is quite normal, that they don’t find job.
Immigration is not the problem, I say that as an italian girl. The problem is that we never recovered from the crysis started in 2007 because we have incompetent corrupted politicians. Immigration takes just the 0,6% of public founding. That's not the problem.
Actually this is very much the case of the South of Italy. Which is the one portrayed in this video. In the North the situation is ways much better. So don’t generalize.
So that's okay then is it? That there is a massive regional imbalance in terms of job prospects and quality of life in virtually every single European country including the UK?
That's not true. I am a dual qualified lawyer (Italy and England) from North Tuscany (Pisa) and moved abroad (London) where I have plenty of friends from Milan, Turin and Venice. In the last 15 years there has been a switch and nowadays people of north are those who expat more..
@@riccardo2823 senz'altro è più selettivo. Ma stavo semplicemente rispondendo al commento sopra che l'ho trovato molto superficiale. Molti ragazzi del nord stanno lasciando il paese. È vero, il nord ha una situazione meno drammatica del sud, ma la situazione è stagnante da almeno 25 anni nel settentrione e la qualità del lavoro è veramente mortificante...
Exactly the same thing is happening in New Zealand..... I have a degree in commercial law and commerce and finding job is so hard... employers are so picky these days. Sometimes I think maybe a degree wasn’t worth the financial burden.
@@stekon9112 Well in hindsight, those types of jobs seem like the answer because the labor force was directed away from those vocational areas, however saturation could easily change the tides as well as technological advancements.
My mother left for economical reasons she didn’t want to leave Italy. But this is a problem that has been going on for years particularly in the south and nothing seems to be changing. Shame as Italy is a beautiful country as is her people. We can only pray and remain positive in the hope that change will come one day!!
India is next. As the reservation system continues for government jobs and private sector is in total collapse I will not be suprised if masses move out of India. But the question is who will take us?
To all the ones disqualifying other degrees and saying that only STEM degrees get you jobs: BULLSHIT. Engineers and Computer Science grads are all unemployed too.
They learn language just like me-learning english now for years. Not for fun but for be able to work in country where I finally living. I started to learn language when i was 35. Omg it was pain it the a.. :-) My mother thong language is Slavic language so for us learning english is hard thing to do...anyway i wish you a nice day :-)
@@littlegenius6932😒you clearly don't understand how population growth works ,India and China have low fertility rates than the US ,Nigeria has one of the highest in the world
Those Europeans (Italians , Spanish , eastern Europeans) take priority in most job centers but their numbers aren't enough which is why Germany needs Syrians and others
@Angelina destroying? Lmao typically Italians blaming others for their own failure, Italy has always been poor and to be never found them to successful economy.
That's literally what you cannot say at an interview: "I will take any position for the start (and than move on)". If it wasn't for the cameras, they would have been expelled.
@@tondajenej3449 Because they don't want to deal with non-commited people who leave after a few months. You are expected to say that your life is committed to their cause for eternity.
@@tondajenej3449 Because you're literally trying to sell yourself to these people and you just started with an approximation of "I have no value and would do everything because I'm not particularly skilled at anything". Desperation is the one thing you should never show to your employer. Desperation can be used against you in many ways even after they take you in. For example, if I know you have nowhere else to go, I'll pay you less than the guy beside you, who is in the exact same situation, but didn't let me get it. You can't bargain with anyone from a position of overt powerlessness.
Why staying with parents is such a bad thing? I am staying with my family having a well paid job for past 9yrs. I am 32yrs old. even after marriage I wish to do the same.
It's a boomer thing. Back when housing wasn't ridiculously expensive it was expected for someone to have their own house when they're in their early twenties and even start families. So living with your parents was seen as someone who didn't do well in their early life. Now things are different but that way of thinking hasn't gone away entirely.
I would that but I even have no room in my parent's house, I sleep in the guest room because my parents live in their parent's house with all their married brothers and married nephews. Housing is so expensive even with a job most of us apply to public housing programs and got it after 20 years.
there's cases where due to differences in religion, politics, views on sexuality and gender where people would want that independence more than anything. i assume you generally see eye to eye with your parents on that. good for you, but that's not always the case.
The universe that she is in, is our universe and her universe. She got 2 arts degrees because it would be impossible for her to ever pass Calculus in our universe and (thus) impossible for her to earn a meaningful STEM degree. She graduated the only thing she could graduate. And her degrees, she got them for "signaling."
@@paulcolburn3855 I've met plenty of soft degree majors who could run intellectual circles around stem students. They just didn't have any passion for stem. We need art too, not just stem graduates
Show some empathy brother , she is a human with dreams and hopes just like you and me. Maybe youre lucky , you got intelligence , so you get to study science , others may not be that lucky , imagine yourself in her shoes , and try to understand
@@oreon4152 : yes I get what you are saying. But education costs money Oreon. And my empathy begins to wither a bit when the education that she earned comes with almost unlimited debt and no real capacity to pay it off.
@@oreon4152 people need to be told the truth because if not these things happen. Everyone needs a dose of reality every here and there. This woman got none of it
Here in Canada we know one simple truth, if ANY nation on earth goes through an economic meltdown we are suddenly flooded with immigrants from that country.
What corruption of system does? Not creating one million jobs for all of those useless degrees? 30 years ago there were less than half of graduates, and more people used to do jobs that today we give to migrants. Today our kids are too posh to work in agriculture or in a factory, as they've been indoctrinated to have an education. That's the result too many people with useless degrees. And that's everywhere not just in Italy.
@@cautarepvp2079 to keep on with the education business which in US and UK alone already make millions yearly. 9000£ to pay every year for any degree in UK, no matter which subject you choose. Without considering the expenses you have to pay for the accomodation and food during this period. The amount of teachers in campuses is ridiculous, considering that today the need of a teacher is literally nonsensical, as we could have lectures means virtual automated platforms. But hey, what those teachers will ever do with their education if not teaching at school? McDonald's is already getting automated, so yours are the options.
Of course it is, but only in Government sector. Still there aren't enough jobs there. However in case of Private sector, exploitation of employees by private companies. Like they are paid hell of a less money than their counterparts abroad!
Very true, my uncle works for the Indian railways and a job for ticket issuer in a small station opened up and upwards of 2000 people applied and ~5 among them were masters graduate. In reality, India does not have a joblessness problem our education system is ancient and completely in shambles. I work for an ecommerce company in Bangalore and we were looking for a machine learning scientist, took the company about two months to find the right candidate. Almost 99% people have certifications and knowledge on paper ONLY, if you present these people with any real world scenarios they'd start sweating.
"Ana and Gianluca are unemployed they're also 30 years old, and still live with their parents." that's the most Brutal cruel opening in the history of documentary journalism.
I fix cars, computers, bake and sew..and build things and make a good living....Jack of all trades. Too many people have the same "ology" degree..It's essentially worthless.
And you guys picked Calabria as a reference for the entire country?? I love this southern region but it's literally the worst benchmark in terms of job opportunities.
@Lotus AfireU.S received millions of Italians, in the other hand Australia, they didn't receive no immigrants but white anglos, they didn't like non Anglo immigrants
I got my 1st job when I was 28 and graduated at 23. I was leaving with my parents, one tip is, join the job whichever you get. If you don't then you will go into procrastination. Good bless 🙏 everyone.
I have a degree in law and currently I’m unemployed, I’m 22, I’m not a lawyer yet, I’m a Trainee, In order to become a Lawyer I need to complete traineeship but it’s hard to find a job. I sent my cv to at least 100 different law firms but no call received yet. I had a job through my Uncle in a fancy law firm but I got fired 2 months ago. Welcome to Mediterranean. I salute my unemployed friends from Turkey to All around the globe. I love us all.
Likewise. Greetings from Greece, the country with the highest unemployment rate in the EU and which is about to get hammered by the coronavirus economically. Stay safe!
@@manuelcastro3506 Imagine spending too much on a firm and if business doesn't works out like most of them after Covid-19 then it would be a massive loss . If he has connections he can work under someone else or has to do nothing if he just want to survive.
I have spent the last 7 years working with Italians in the construction industry. Most had Master´s degrees and yet they were poorly educated, lacking in basic civil engineering knowledge, any form of construction experience and they were easy meet for their corrupt Italian construction managers.
Did you mean: "they were easy *meat* for their corrupt Italian construction managers"? We've had cheating scandals at higher level schools in the US, but it surely has been happening for years. Even before that, online services have been available for writing and coding assignments completed for pay. I guess that "smart" kids thinks it's superfluous to have to learn anything if they "know" that they can do the work.
@@marcosmota1094 More like job experience gives you way more knowledge then some degree. Those who can't do, teach. Many millennials get out of college and immediately think they will get a high paying job because of a piece of paper.
The Italian educational system aims to give you a general theoretical education, without specialization or implementation of the knowledge that you acquired during the years you've studied. It's a corrupted educational system with far too many useless subjects. It's a way to create more jobs within the education field, therefore there are far too many teachers who teach useless subjects, when it'd be easier to cut off that endless theoretical Odyssey and concentrating more on apprenticeship where the graduates can actually learn to work.
It's not just in Italy. Millennials everywhere are facing the same problems.
not only a millennial's problem . Even lads in their 40s are having the same issue
@Tanmoy Debnath and in place like Canada they end up working as uber drivers, gas station attendants...but back home...they get to say...I live in North America. What has the world come to.
It's gonna get worse because of robotics automation. Jobs are going away, people need to stop having kids.
@@WaveRider1989 People need to stop depending on systems like the ones we have. We could have a whole different structure where everyone gets a chance in life.
@Tanmoy Debnath there’s not enough entrepreneurship in india
They are all jobless with impeccable sense of styles.
You don't have to spend a fortune for Bangladesh made goods. And they are at a recruitment day and running jobs. You can't go to those thing wearing rags or you think otherwise?
@@YUE3899 You can buy fashion, but you can't buy style 😎.
Lol
Stylish hobos
Style is something we already have before we're born... It's in our blood! Lol just joking! But i think that in many countries in Europe people don't really know how to get dress 🤷♂️
This is a trend in 21st Century's youth. Unlike the past, there a thousands of universities and colleges and it's much easier to get educated. But when everyone's "educated", the standards are set up too high.
Well, it's not that hard to explain since there is also way less demand for manual labour because it's almost all automated. Most rich countries' economies are based on services for the majority.
@@SonKunSama Theyre only based on services because they import everything from Asia
Yeh. Everyone is educated is a problem.
It is very very hard to outstand among educated people.
@@SonKunSama Objectively wrong. Colleges have risen the standards because they can't adapt to the market due to ridiculius regulation.
@@cartoonhanks1708 oh just desperate to inject an Americanism in the discussion.
Same problem in Iran .Instead of sending work force to Germany, how about importing some German politicians and industry managers to Italy and kicking out useless politicians ?
I'd prefer to become a satellite state of Germany then 1 more year of this incompetence, but the average Italian would say that I'm a "traitor" (lol).
For us, the only solution is for the EU to become a federal state, to remove corrupted politicians and their clientelism we need a higher power.
We put those politicians in power, not someone else. It's a cultural issue, not (only) a political one.
@@zedtrek Yes, what can you eat from beauty?
@@renatotuveri-ellis2276 Learn more, stop doing unnecessary things like those italian
@@اطلبالحقوالرحمة Again, you make no sense mate.
Very sad. Italy is such a beautiful country. We have Italian nurses here in Ireland. They are wonderful.
Love Irish ppl from Rome🔥❤
@@vero-xy3vj bel nome ahahah
@@daviderossi9597 è una massima buddista
@@vero-xy3vj massimo pericolo
Hello marry rose are you from italy?
I am Italian and it makes me almost cry. I live in London for 9 years, so I really know the pain.
At least you can live in London hassle free just because you are Italian ...when I worked in London my employer had to spend a fortune on lawyers and prove to the home office that no other British or EU applicant could be a better fit for the job .. Being Italian Is a blessing ....
@@sammyhm6855 bro, of course that born italian is a blessing😂, i say a lot of time" thanks to my mum that im born italian"
Does Brexit hit you?
@@st4ble869 Nope! Does not affect to anyone which moved to UK before the beginning of the year. We just needed to send some documents proving that we live here already and for how long.
Me too, it's so sad
Here in Iraq you can easily find young people holding master and even PHD degrees in Computer Sciences and Engineering yet their biggest hope is to find a work in a supermarket or a fast food restaurant. imagine this happening in a "democratic" country which is considered third largest oil producer in the world.
I am sorry to hear about that. There are so many young educated people who would be able to perform well in a job, but instead they are frustrated and out of work. It's not fair for them.
Same here in my country Nigeria
Arber UN No offence but Iraq (or Middle East) has more STEM graduates than North America which in theory should give the the upper hand
@Free Like Water very weird I though the job market in U.S very rich and flourishing. especially for CS and IT fields
Arber UN cute guy
This is why Germany's dual-education-system is so valuable. Instead of doing your diploma you instantly start working at a corporate + go to a specialized school. After completion you your're often offered a job and stay
Problem with that is the payment - of course you get trained well. I was a trained car painter at a co-company of Audi, the payment was SHIT and there is no other option let alone the opportunity to earn more. This system is destined to fail, as good as it trains the youth, it only leads to poverty now. What is it good for to be the best carpenter in the world if the only option for a fair wage is either make your own company or move to Canada.
There are Problems everywhere but germany fucks up so bad atm its insane. We even got a "labor-crisis" because almost no young person wants to become Handyman or Nurse/Caretaker just because of the fucked up wages.
Now I studied, get more than I ever dreamed off as car painter and its still a struggle.
@@AB-di1nr I disagree. I think the system needs to be reformed. You could quite easily go from the type of manual labor training that they do now to teach the kids how to program, how to use CAD software, business training etc. The idea is very good but it is slightly aged in terms of what it trains people to do. Going to the university to do 95 % of all engineering jobs is a waste of time. I say that as a software engineer myself. University really ought to be for the 2 % of the population with an IQ above 130 who should be spending their life doing research that benefits all of society. Right now it's just an extended high school that costs the tax payers billions of Euros every year.
@@AB-di1nr i actually am this "handyman" and enjoy it alot! But it's hard for me to come up with a job outside the 2 fields you mentioned. What did you study after car painter for example?
@@johanneswestman935 You disagree and then tell me why I am right - do you realize that?
The system is build on stagnation, if you train everyone to go further the ones "left behind" will never be payed fair.
Not everyone needs or should be in a academic job, not everyone wants to study and still everyone wants to have living quality to a certain point.
Our socitiety NEEDS all jobs, what is it good for to tell, lets say a potential car painter like me the tools to make more money but expect me to stay in a shit payed job with a shit day to day live?
You have to pay the lowest end more than the easy to reach other spots.
Why would any sane person work shifts and put himself in health-danger if he earns more with some shitty nonsense study??
I studied only to make money - I dont give a shit about "academic research" its a tool to get education - as for most people now at universitys.
If I could have had the same job without studying I wouldn't have studied.
The solution to your "problem" is pay the workers more. Not even a single one of my classmates REALLY gave a shit about Uni - its plain about the money.
@@AB-di1nr Was studierst bzw. studiertest du? Ich will Pharmazie studieren, aber falls ich keine Zulassung kriege oder das Studium abbrechen muss, suche ich noch ein paar Pläne B, C, D. Ist es IT oder Ingineur?
It's the realty of Brazilian youth. I'm 28 years old and I'm still looking for a job
Chico, its in BR that i heard the phrase along the lines " Quem te recomendou" , because companies have lists of jobs they pass along their network of friends.
Thanks to Bozo
@@PHlophe my mother actually married my father for a shot at being a professor. Academia people often call it QI (portuguese for IQ) but they actually mean "Quem Indica" - who wants you to have the job.
@@hugodaniel8975 bozo's dream team actually wants everyone employed: working 66h weeks to make 100 dollars a month and never retiring!
I abandoned my dream and then moved to public sector. What a joke, spend a lot of money, time, the government should stop to tell us lies that there are jobs for everyone who are graduated...
"We are all depressed" that is very true.
Not just Italy, it's happening everywhere
Its the same in the UK. Especially, London.
That's the scheme swept under the rug by means of the plandemic. It's a deliberate change in the socioeconomic system.
No. Not happening here in Denmark.
happening everywhere in europe?
@@NisseOhlsen well, yeah, you're the ones importing those workers
I was about to go to Italy to find a new job. Mission ABORTED.
Herny Ferrari there's plenty of Jobs. Unfortunatley not everywhere
Let's not forget that Italy is the third-largest manufacturing country in the EU and part of the G7. I've never had any problem finding a job as an engineer in Italy. Recruiters used to contact me and not the opposite. The same problems highlighted in this video are in some parts of France too. The video showed some villages nearby Naples and the South, which always had problems. Moreover, it is quite popular to see French engineers in Germany/Netherlands/UK /Switzerland, but this channel is pointing against Italy only and gives a wrong picture of the country. Of course, we do have problems related to the job occupation of young generations and there's nothing to hide there, but it is not black and white as the message they're trying to send with these videos. Just look at some other videos from them like "why Italian graduates are choosing life on the farm". It is not that an entire generation is going back to the countryside, but they clearly want to discredit the picture of a country and show it as underdeveloped.
@@pizzaguy8484 hey mate, I’m planing on doing a masters in finance on Bocconi and perhaps staying o Italy to work on banking, do you suggest it? Or is it Noh recommendable at all (according to this video)
@@peterhaberlehner6749 It is a top international Biz school. Italians see it as an elite school and, with all the respect for the people in this video, I'm 100% sure none of them nearly attended something like Bocconi or Polimi/Polito. All my friends from Bocconi found a job in few months and never struggled to find internships while studying. It is pretty international so if you won't find a job in Italy because you don't speak Italian, you’ll still have a very well-recognized degree in Europe.
@@peterhaberlehner6749 I live 5 tram stops from bocconi University in Milan
This started in the 90s when all kids are pushed into college. Now there are no jobs for them. It's a worldwide problem
It depends on the major . But Yeah it is a problem and we need to educate our kids on picking a good major because you’re investing in your career and you better expect a good pay out 1-2 years after you graduate.
Know the job market you want to invest into.
Not to mention the fact that trade schools are an option and are in my opinion just as good as university . I feel that too many people look down on them but they are much cheaper and are a more economic option for just a simple job you want to do. Plus they are less chaotic and more neutral than a college or university and I’m saying that from experience.
We need to tell our kids they have options besides high cost university like community college or trade schools. They try to nickel and dime you for everything.
And I think the reason people weren’t realizing this is because many parents never went or had to go to college before so they wouldn’t know what it costs or what would happen if the masses tried to all get in the game at once in the 90s.
where are the jobs for those who did not push into the college?
@@garybrown2039 Kids weren't told any of that, they were told if they didn't get a 4 year degree, they wouldn't get a good job. Period. The same thing is being told to girls now, get into coding.... until the market is so saturated no one can get jobs in that either.
Actually the problem in italy is that they are being pushed to useless major like "lettere antiche" where they study ancient greek and latin, and 40% of the italian school population studies latin more than 7 hours per week, and they keep saying that latin it's the best thing you can study and they talk about how it opens your mind and a lot of young kids fall for that, and then when they are 23 they realize they don't have a place in the job market and they are forced to emigrate to other countries to find entry level jobs
Fatcs everyone wants to business man, engineer or doctor now. Noone wants to be things like tailor, barber etc
Same in Argentina + if they don't know you through a friend or relative that says you're trustworthy they don't hire you
In Portugal they use the phrase " Quem te recomendou" , says a lot really
Whats the average salary a month in Argentina?
@@jong8876 1 rice bag
@@PracticalExperts 2 coconuts and 1 egg fried rice
@Willie Fungo Around £500 a month
I have a degree and I am unemployed. I now have to go and do a trade in order to get some sort of job. Having a degree doesn't mean that you will automatically get a job.
Tobore Yalaju what is your degree? I bet you have a degree that translate to nothing or you’re just plain lazy.
Daniel Purdy typical American. Always acting like degrees in America have the same value in other countries. Maybe there’s a thing called a weak labour market and strong competition? Stop acting like you understand how the labour market works
What degree? Its not the degree its you mate
I didn't have any degree, but I made more that most of graduate from college. I never look for someone to give a job, but I always looked at the opportunity around me that was business or investments. I don't understand why people coming out of colleges or universities, that think of themselves as smart individuals are seeking someone to give them a job instead of creating their own opportunities.
@@asharohx, it takes all sorts to make a world. Ask big companies, and they explain that they want people who can thrive as a small part of a big organisation. If everyone was trying to create a business in their parent's back room, Italy would end up with many more small underpowered companies, much as it is today. Still, great to hear that you are having success this way.
Italy: "I need to migrate from my country for better jobs. It's depressing."
Poland: "First time?"
Heh, szukałam komentarza o Polsce
Italians are used to leaving their country to pursue opportunities elsewhere. They’ve been doing it for generations. They've even been doing it longer than the Polish.
More of the half of Italians are actually outside Italy, we are talking more of 30 million people since the 900’, pfff Poland who??? I can call my uncle in Canada, my niece in the Us, half of my family is in Germany we are worldwide my friend
@@mrkowalski3479 You realize it's basically the same thing for Poland right?
@@littlefinger4509 I guess so... I didn’t start the race on who has most immigrants I just wanted to fight for my country 😂
Unemployment is an international problem, especially with the new covid pandemic restrictions , it has already increased a lot.
Yes since the Plan-demic governments have been controlling their population more than ever before...
Nice pun
I'm Italian and that's so sad I can't even watch it
Here to bro I am from India I completed my bachelor's degree in Agriculture still I struggle to get a job......from last 3 months there is 7 vacancies and almost 500 Applicant's...so sad...💔
It was soul-crushing for me to watch. I'm American and I've always dreamt of living in Italy because of my heritage (which is really important to me), and seeing stuff like this nearly crushes those dreams.
@Willie Fungo It's just sad for me to hear that young educated Italians feel like they have to leave Italy for job opportunities, because I plan to bring my bloodline back to its native soil by moving to Italy and settling down. Nothing will change my mind about moving to Italy because I believe I was born to return my lineage back to its motherland and to contribute everything I can to better the Italian state, even if financially it's not the best decision. Although I think this was mainly just in Calabria, which is unfortunately not doing to good, however based upon what I've read other places in Italy like Rome or Florence, the job opportunities are particularly good. especially in the automotive industry and to my knowledge, Italy as a whole has been a very popular destination for foreigners seeking to expand their careers within the past couple of years.
@@rickynoodles2816 you are totally right. It's only the south Italy that isn't doing good. But the northern part is doing actually pretty well, north and south Italy are like two different countries.
@@МаксимилианФилипожкиь Yes you're right, sadly they are quite diverse economically. Hopefully the vaccines that are coming out slow down the pandemic so Southern Italy (and the rest of the world) can improve
Jobless Italians look more elegant than American CEOs😂
@r g It’s not about focusing on the right or wrong. When the economy in a certain country is bad almost every one suffers, no matter how educated or talented they are. Besides, you can spend little and look elegant, and Italians know how to do that.
not really
@r g you are talking like all italians study art and study how to dress well. We don't do that, we don't need to study how to dress, and certainly we don't study art for 2 decades. I studied a bit of art in high school, now I'm at univerisity to get a degrees in Computer Science. You know nothing about other countries, so shut your mouth
@r g triggered so much from a joke and went on a rant to portrait Italians as uneducated people who know only how to dress.. :D good job man keep it up
In American culture, gays and women are the ones who are obsessed with clothing and fashion. Not men, I understand Europe may be different....
We have the same problem in Spain
No we don’t have a problem in Spain with the youth not getting jobs. We have a problem with the Youth not having the correct education, this is a very big difference.
An art history degree is useless, a degree in romantic languages is useless. The only things these qualify you for is making coffee at a bar unless you have family in a museum who can get you a job. In Barcelona there are always jobs for those with medical, technical, science, mechanical educations. We have many many foreigners working for the Barcelona city as civil engineers because we don’t have enough youth here getting that kind of education. The health system is hiring foreigners daily all over Spain.
There is jobs. The youth simply don’t want them or to study for them.
America has the same demand for health care workers.
@Alfredo Barragan 502 Japan has 0% unemployment!!!
Not to mention their Marxist indoctrination.
Indonesia need english native speakers from english speaking countries
Millennials everywhere are screwed. What a tainted future we have ahead of us. Thanks baby boomers!
Euclid Avenue quit making excuses. American millennials are doing great if they want it. Millions of open jobs and easier now than ever to become wealthy.
WTF do boomers have to do with shifts in the economy? Did we all sit down together and take a collective decision to ensure that future generations have no jobs? What a stupid and useless excuse you make for yourself.
Not boomers... sweJ. 😉
Sorry but you misread the problem. In a small country you can't all be college degreed high paid workers. Also allowing immigrants who work for cheap in a small country can be disastrous!!
@@recyclespinning9839 exactly, look at the netherlands for example
PhD and unemployed for almost a couple of years now.
Phd= Poor Homeless Depressed
@@unmapa5767 No kiddin
@@krakent8791 which country and which subject?
KRAKEN T Maybe try moving to US or Canada, there are plenty jobs and opportunities here
That's why I stopped at the AAS in Graphic Design. I still get work in small print shops.
Italy has the oldest population in the world after Japan. They shouldn't have high youth unemployment. Something is fundamentally wrong.
Update: Wasn't expecting so many likes and replies. Thank you.
it’s because old people won’t quit their jobs
@@chiaras6019 won't or can't because they have no money saved up. Also it's probably hard to start a new business there, government always gets in the way
@@JosiahK555 how does government get in the way?
@@chiaras6019 I don't think it's that, it's not that there is a fixed amount of jobs and that a young person can only start a job when an old person quits. Also the retirement age in Italy is not spectacularly high or anything.
@@Evettecord Government hinders people in multiple ways. They create barriers to entry, lots of red tape.
You can't just start a business, you have to register with the government, pay licensing fees, there is a lot of time money and effort, all to satisfy the government.
They have all kinds of regulations, large established businesses may be able to cope and deal with the regulations, but small businesses don't have the money or resources.
The government is responsible for all the lock downs and restrictions that caused so many small businesses to permanently close, people have gone bankrupt and lost their livelihoods.
And say even if you do manage to keep your business the government demands taxes, taxes are the biggest boat anchor on the economy, it punishes success.
“Recommended for you”
Me, a high school student: *thanks I hate it*
My first job was more due to a recommendation than related to my cv. Of course study counts, more as a requirement, but not as guarantee you'll get the job. Working well in many team projects and different places and making connections helps a lot.
I feel sorry for the younger generation, when I finished college there was a job shortage. One time I applied for a job and there were 270 candidates for the 2nd route, but even then there where still opportunities. Today everything seems more difficult.
As a high schooler, I’m going to the trades
@@imcarlosjr4898 it feels like it's easier to get a job with trade school rather than having a 4 year bachelor degree.
I'm Italian and I can tell you that this is not happening in all the country. They picked Calabria which is the more disatvantage of the Regions in Italy. Anyway, I hope things will change for them as well.
Does that region face invasion by illegal alliens?
Que_Rico that is fair enough. I just wanted to comment that the title "the exodus of Italy's youth" is not accurate. That's it
yes i knew that,calabria is the poorest region in italy..
I am an american citizen and got married to an Italian. I can tell there's no jobs and they pay really bad. I am trying to convince my husband to move out. The South in Italy is having a hard time.
Exactly . Well said. I am from the city of Milan, and I don’t relate to this video at all. I’m 24 with a bachelors degree and master’s degree with a full time job in Milan. They don’t pay me as much as in the U.K ora Germany but it’s more than enough to have a decent lifestyle. I wish this documentary explained the difference between the south, and more precisely Calabria, and the rest of Italy which is doing just fine.
Same in Turkey. There are teachers who suicide just because of jobless.
This is sad 😔 indeed!
I have noticed a lot of turkish students moving to Australia.
Your english teacher i guess
Sad. Should not happen.
@@peterpacciani666 hahaha
The free time and self humialtion that u feel when u r unemployed is just horrible all I wanted to do something to keep myself engaged so that I don't do anything stupid
I’ve been there but u can take online courses, learn new skills, sell things, or start a business. Many possibilities
I started learning Spanish to ease my stress and anxiety. My anxiety was at peak few weeks ago and I felt the chocking and depressing feeling. Luckily I was able to control it by diverting my attention so as not to be suicidal.
Have you found a job now?
If this is the condition of a developed country try to imagine what's happening in a underdeveloped country.....
Italy is not that developed
underdeveloped countries are doing just fine, because:
A: they can't afford automation technologies yet so they have to hire actual human beings to work in their factories and on their farms
B: when there are no jobs available they can just move to countries like italy and undercut the locals
Hi, I'm a 24 yo Italian with a Master degree. I know the Italian situation very well. The biggest problem here is that there is a mismatch between university education and the job offers. Too many young Italians graduate in humanistic studies that are not requested by the job market. At the same time we have a LOT of open positions for engineering and STEM in general. The result is: high unemployment rate among graduated people and low skilled workers and at the same time a lack of workforce for technical professions.
@John Singer I can agree with you on the debt haircut but for the rest I strongly disagree. Euro reinforced the single market and boosted the exports for Italy. The economic stagnation is due to numerous other factors among which there is low competitiveness of Italian companies, lack of credit for companies and startups, lack of digitalization, excess of bureaucracy and many other things. Leaving the EU and the single currency would be a tragedy for Italy, the ECB saved Italy from default with quantitative easing.
@@tdsdesa haha....such bs. Did you graduate from Bocconi to speak like that? The EU is destroying Italy's future, enjoy your "Super Mario" and all the rest that's coming!
Hi! Can you give me an online internship at your company
For baby boomers, getting a degree was a magical route to get a "high" paying jobs. And they taught the future generation the same and now we are all stuck with our degrees but no jobs around. Baby boomers could easily get a job with a college diploma, could by two houses, could go on vacations, could afford to travel once a year or two. I can't even afford to leave my parents house, let alone dream to afford a house of my own. Home ownership is a long gone dream for millennials.
Spot on!!
This problem is same everywhere in the world.
Amit Sharma same in South America
Same in India
Yup, same in México... Here, my friend that paint nails earn more than twice money, than my sister in law that has a doctorate in chemistry 😭 the irony
@@Edith.G.G. right 👍👍👍👍
Not in German or Scandinavian
The hardest thing ever is to leave your home just for pennies
Definitely
@Anonymous Apple stupid comment doesnt worth a reply :)
@Anonymous Apple lmao why do you think it's easy for any refugee or immigrant to leave their home and loved ones? They migrate because their original country is struggling or unsafe to live in, stop being such a prick
Not much better here in the US. 25-30 year olds with STEM masters degrees can't get entry level jobs. Its honestly a mystery how people get jobs.
@Marcos It's true and the upcoming automation will make it worse
Un employment is a world wide problem....at young age ppl should be taught valuable skills nd self employment.....and the school system should be changed...its making ppl be labourers than inventors.....
Agree!
Totally agree with this
Self employment and entrepreneurship isnt the answer to this world wide issue. But the fact of the matter is human labor is becoming obsolete.
The society and government pushes the idea that ANY education, doesn't matter what, will create jobs and opportunity however we know that is false.
Umm, while I agree with the sentiment, it's not exactly a fault of the system. More and more things are getting automated every day. It's a matter of how we deal with.
100%! Traditional 4-year collage has got to go! 👎👎👎👎👎
"Before the end of the year, Giuseppe will be leaving Italy." I wonder how that worked out.
Same in India here. I'm 26 years old and graduated but still couldn’t find any job.
but is great you can search for work freely across euyrope... imagine if you cant and need work visa
Yeah, imagine if you were not a weakling with no sense of responsibility and you stayed and fought to make your area better instead of running away from problems.
Alpa Cino how is hanging around achieving nothing making anything better? Start a business or travel for work
@@alterego157 sometimes it's beyond one's power to change things. Countries like mine. With an extremely corrupted government and unsupportive people are not showing any signs of progress or change.
@@alterego157
You don't get it, do you?
No problem. Millions of non-EUers from thousands of kilometers away, simply come over. They get free accommodation, food, money, language courses, job training.
Young Italians having trouble finding work while the French and German run EU advocate for greater immigration of young African and Middle Eastern workers. Who does this policy benefit?
You do realise that immigrants aren't taking high skilled jobs that educated youth would take? You can hardly blame the immigrants or the Germans on this one, italys economy has been in the toilet for decades
downwithjedward The video used the example of youths educated for jobs that aren’t available. Their only option, if they want to stay in their homeland, is to work in less skilled professions. Unfortunately for them, wages have been driven down by immigrants. Who does this benefit?
I'm an african with 2 master's degrees in engineering (avionics and integrated systems), the second from France where I live and i have no job and I'm homeless. I was forced to live in "colocation" with a man who is harassing me and i don't know what to do. So people like you should really shut up. Africans and arabs here, especially africans clean the streets and wash old people, which are jobs that you people don't want to do. If you're african and wish for a little better, you have 0.1 percent chance of succeeding. Most of my classmates who are not black have found jobs or PhDs and i was one of the best in my class in term of marks and i never repeated any module, but can't find anything!
@@sabcam2000 Although I do see your point of few, you have to consider that the fact that 'People do not want to wash old people' need to be a bit more nuanced. You see, those jobs are poorly paid and nobody wants to do the job, meaning the pay should rise. However, they rather open the gates for immigrants then to rise the pay. This phenonmonon can be seen in different sectors.
@@St3v3NWL Exactly.
Graduated high school in 2005 no degree & have been employed for 14 years & made a life for myself.
Well done. You're one of the lucky ones.
Employed as what???
@@Michelle-pn9xt i became an underwriter for an insurance company in Australia
Wow
@@jtspiky Australia does not have this problem. You have a really low population density and there are a lot of jobs to fill in.
Same in Greece! The vast majority of the youth own a university diploma and even a Master's degree, but finding a job is absolutely hard. Most of us end up living with our parents till our 30s and even 40s sacrificing the creation of our own family, or we try our luck abroad. Especially those who can afford it.
We Muslims live with our parents even if we have great jobs, are married and have children.
Parents are very valuable for us.
Unfortunately, my son is one of them.. had to leave abroad where he works and studies at university hoping in better future...
I wish your son well from Korea🙏
@@jathebest2835 He is ok, but doesn't want to live there, would like to come back to Italy, but this country doesn't give any working opportunity to young people....
@@ivetad5856 My country is the same, many young people are struggling with finding their jobs. I think it is a global phenomenon that decent job vacancies are decreasing whereas many university graduates are coming out for the job market every year..
@@jathebest2835 normally every country needs programmators, but Italy not even this... Anyway, we have to hope in better future
@@ivetad5856 What about Milan or Rome? Are there many computer programmer jobs there?
I am italian living abroad almost 20 years now ... this is a very old story, italy will never change!
In this moment, no Italian television talks about this plague that is affecting Italy
Fejzian Petritaj You must had choosen the wrong TV Show time slots.
Unemployement and new migration of Italian young people is a very common breaking hit for Italian News.
Check for example in RUclips for episodes Italian TV News Show called Petrolio. In any episodes the show indagates about Italian excellences that form our country hidden "oil" i.e. hidden wealth and how we italians can get wealth from our hidden oil of various industrial realities, who are our partners, who are our competitors, how can young people can benefit these opportunities as long as we Italians have many excellences but do not own huge real oil deposits...
@Russell Richards It is not a channel. it is a News Show. Some put recordings of it on RUclips
Russell Richards Yes...
Russell Richards There is also News telecast from RAI called "Report" that talks of disfunctions of Italian Governance and corruption
Report hasn't talked about unemployment this year. In any case, Report is one tv program and it is clearly not enough for this matter
Very common for young people nowadays throughout the world, most of us are living with our parents and we're getting married later.
All result of the World Order formed after WW2 by filthy greedy Westerners & Freemasons. One of the reasons to make it hard to find jobs was to force the youth towards adult industry.
Well i had a very good job here in italy, then covid destroyed it and now i'm jobless and can't even move from italy. Thank u covid pandemic for having killed the last hopes of every italian guy born into the 80s!
@Mattia Santangelo
It's important to point out that it's not the phony "pandemic" (=pandemia farlocca) but the insane restrictions which wreaked havoc to the economy.
The school system in Italy should be changed, Italy needs specific skills that few Italians are trained for! But we also need competence between the politicians and public sector administrators
This is said in every industrialized country. You cannot FORCE people to be a plumber or a programmer any more than you can force them to be a dancer or musician.
I’m not surprised that two masters degrees in art history still doesn’t guarantee full time employment.
and I am shocked
44 million tourists came to Italy in 2018 and most of them come for the art and culture. Italians with high degrees in the arts is not unusual in the country. Art is our oil and gas.
It may well have done in Italy 40 years ago - things aren't that easy anymore.
She should go all the way for a PhD and work in academia.
It's art history
Same, after graduation ive been sitting at home all day doing nothing for 6 months. I have tried to get a normal private job but i am still waiting for their call. That's so frustrating.
Italian people are really family orientated.
It is often wonderful seeing Italian family businesses abroad. The family work together and live together or close by.
True :)
Just people with no education are family oriented in my country because they’re not able to do anything else
@@valentina_melethiel that makes no sense... Educated or not, being close to family is a normal thing
@@valentina_melethiel
And don't you think some emancipation is needed?
In the south it's still quite common to see 4 generations living under the same roof.
Also women going to work is somewhat a novelty (10-15 years) in some southern towns.
Shaan A if you’re not Italian you can’t understand what I mean
other people from other countries migrate to italy while italians migrate to germany this is like leaving your land for another person to take it.
Also the guy saying: „I see myself living in my own house in a year or so“
Reality:More and more Germans struggle to pay their rent only a minority manages to ever aquire an own home.
There is no problem. Everyone has the right to live regardless US, the Netherlands, algeria etc... Italians left 40 50 yeards to go to North Africa. Here I am, my father is italian by descent raised in Tunisia. While I still have family in Italy, Cyprus and the Netherlands
migrants come in Italy to work in the fields , wash , clean & kitchen which Italian don't want to do .
@@eliasghaznavi448 But they will ruin Italy as well!
@@boerekable German free social systems will cover everything if ull get jobless !
Indians: *Are they talking about us?*
@Jewish Banker That's harsh bro
@Jewish Banker lol you meant jews? Or should I ask Germans about that? 😂🤣
In fact, Indians are taking your jobs. They are cheaper and more efficient. They might as well just being automating everything. And it's already the 5th greatest economies in the world.
The people in these videos don't have degrees that are useful in the current society (art's, history, communications etc.) if you're in STEM you'll be OK for now. Plenty of Indians are in IT all across the word...
@@samyak3405 What's wrong with jews?
Yea, im from croatia, working as a dishwasher in italy because they don't want to do it... They all want to be millioners and models....
And if they have a double master it's FAIR that they don't want to clean dishes
You have to thanks them, then! Otherwise you would be jobless...
At least they didn't go into a lifetime of debt like the US on those false hopes.
Not exactly. Our state is in deep debt due to the cost of having a depressed and old economy. The
Happy I never went to collage and went right into the work force, live in Florida make 50k a year no state income tax and my property tax for a 2,300 sqft house is 2,000 a year with a built in swimming pool and almost an acre of land.
italy is like poor america
@@magk2524 no people here have healthcare and pensions and free and low cost public education from K-12 and for university. So put that in your hat and smoke it.
@@mediterraneanworld chill i am italian. other than that it's similar to america. as in. it's a shit country
What do you expect?!! 30% of Italy are pensioners who receive cushy pensions. These uneducated pensioners are merely retired farmers and retired warehouse workers. Yet the Italian government only cares about senior people and considers the younger more skilled generation as 'cows to milk' in order fund these retired farmers. Young people are important too!!!!
Italy is democratic country and the biggest flaw of democracy is that in order to get to power you need to win majority of the votes
15% of Italy population is -18 so they can't vote
A lot of young people in Italy are migrants who don't vote even if they have citizenship
But there's another important group which is people in their 50's who are about to retire within years and they want their pensions to be payed by the government and are willing to sacrifice the few remaining years of their careers paying other people's pensions just to receive the benefits years later
Add to that the average government in Italy doesn't get reelected so for any winning party the effects of public pensions system and low fertility rates are the future governments problems not theirs
They just want power and authority during the short term
If the consequences of your actions will be felt after your death why would you care it's not your problem once you are dead
While a subject like *_"Art History"_* may be your passion, you *_really need_* to take into consideration the job prospects. Most people cannot afford to go to college for pure enlightenment in esoteric subject matters with employment opportunities that are murky at best.
That logic is more applicable in the US where education is expensive and weighed down by debt. Not so in Europe. You can study whatever you want and should especially if the institution is subsidized. Education and deepening knowledge in university setting should be an experience that overall forms your mind. Unless it's STEM or trade, most of what we study will rarely if never have a direct market for it anyway, but will leave you competent and well-rounded anyway. I've always seen education and specialized schooling (directed towards market needs) as separate. One shapes you as a human; the other shapes you for labor.
Jon Pasciuti i mean he leaves literally in italy.... there should be TONS of opportunities especially on this subject but surprise there aren’t. The problem isn’t the type pf degree you take because literally everyone has this kind of issues from scientific to technologic degrees
@@jonno.alexander and that is why she is unemployed.
@@d3r4g45 Of course...in Italy. Art curation, art events and international visual art installations are part of a both pretentious and seriously monied industry. Anything in Italy operates as closed as the mafia.
Literally, all she has to do is step outside the country, and opportunities change. Truly, one trip to Miami and she'll be booked for Art Basel on the spot. C'mon woman!
Then in that case id say why is our system and our life purpose oriented around job prospects and money making? Wouldnt it be much better and efficient of a world if we could organize jobs based on what people actually want to do instead of forcing people in "job slavery". I know Im probably coming off as unrealistic but I think there is actual merit in critiquing these sorts of institutions and seeing which type of people benefit from the way our society is set up.
The country needs to encourage more small and medium size businesses. If you depend on the government and big corporations little will change.
Yea. Entrepreneurship is the key.
Plus closed borders & having your own currency backed by precious metals. 😉
They need to scrap the "welfare" state and cut the minimum wage. Unemployment will be in low single digits within a year.
The majority of businesses in Italy are small and medium size enterprises. Italy hardly depends on corporations for employment. Learn about the economy if you are going to make suggestions.
@@pneron2032. What do you mean by “cut the minimum wage”? What country are you from?
Same stuff in Greece. The majority of the youth has migrated abroad
Valentina Iakovidou /;
:( same shit in Turkey
And migrants from africa and middle east moved in. Greece is full of them
ATLEAST you can afford migration!
@@minnieme9713 Greeks look like middle Easters and Turks anyway, they are the same ethnicity, couldn't it be you are just confusing them?
I'm on my late 20's and struggling to live, then I feel better when I watch this
ernestino, but do you live the parents, still.
@@PHlophe I'm also 20 but I feel like I'm still child maybe because I'm younger in home but in India we live with parents no matter how much grown we r
Lol this is happening in the UK too, except we have nowhere to migrate too. We live with our parents or in shared accommodation while the financial sector reaps the fruit of our labour.
How does the financial sector reap the fruit of your labour?
@@pneron2032 the central banks print money & slash interest rates. This causes the price of assets like a house to go up massively making them unaffordable for millennials. Asset owners i.e. the 1% subsequently become massively wealthy. Meanwhile, the purchasing power of money decreases. The wages earnt through labour are cut & negatively compound every year, making the average person poorer & poorer, and needing to work harder & harder.
The financial sector today adds no value to the economy & doesn't take risks by investing in entrepreneurs. They only lend to speculators who gamble on rising stock & real estate prices. This gamble can never go wrong, and the banks never lose because the speculators know the Fed will bail them out with newly printed money when the market crashes. Thus, all profits are privatised, and all losses socialised. The rich get much richer through theft of labour from the productive portions of society, while contributing nothing of material value back. Like a parasite.
What about Germany? Oh, yeah, you're now "sovereign" and need work visa, lol
@@craig5261 Good Marxist rhetoric. You obviously paid attention at school. The artificial interest rates and money printing are done by the government: the Fed is not part of the "financial sector". Millennials want it all: free healthcare, free college, "debt forgiveness", free everything but they don't want the *consequences* of fiscal irresponsibility. You don't want the gold standard and balanced budgets back. You love government discretionary spending: as long as it is being spent on you. So, pick your side. Not just "the 1%" have assets - anyone saving for a pension has assets, which is most people in work.
@@craig5261 Well said mate.
In Portugal, this is also becoming a reality, unfortunately. A lot of portuguese youngsters migrate every year and never come back, and most of them are college educated. So sad.
Por favor não fale mal dos portugueses aos estrangeiros
Romania, same thing... They all go to Austria, Germany, UK,Belgium, Netherlands :(
@@hugodaniel8975 ah, o orgulho... até parece que a Joana disse algo absurdo. Só acho bizarro tratar a migração portuguesa como uma novidade.
Here in America we are either poorly educated or buried in dept with a low paying job.
in South America I guess?))
Latin america
I think that's the plan for all western nations, globalists want the return of slavery
The US is borderline thirdworld now thanks to our elites.
Not true. Only if you got scammed into going to college.. I never went to college. Instead I went to a trade school to become an electrician. I am now 30 years old and making $95k a year, and have absolutely zero debt.
Immigrants just south of Italy are moving in while the young natives move out.
@Ryan a Bruh, why’re you ruining the narrative that is being peddled?
Stop being "raycist". People have to accept that their grandchildren might not look like them. Remember that diversity is our strength - all the politicians say it, so it has to be true.
@@danc3977 Fortunately, people in the west are starting to wake up
@@danc3977 stop with the histrionics. You sound like a woman
@@danc3977 Southern Europe has ceased being white a very long time ago, if you know your history you would know why. The population there looks more Mediterranean than white as in northern European white.
My husband is Sicilian and he left 13 years ago to find work in the UK. He has a masters in chemical engineering and found a job within a week in the UK. Most of his friends live all over the world, Australia, Holland, Germany etc. They all miss Italy but there is zero opportunity there. Very sad.
I have two masters degree in dreaming architecture and hope engineering, and a PhD in imagination management. I work and live in Italy as dolce vita engineer, they pay me with pizza.
I wish 🍕
sorry, you don't qualify for the job, we need PhD in bullshitting to impress our investors
LMAO
Well, when we know, for example, the absurd amount of graduated architects in Portugal, in Spain or in Italy, it is quite normal, that they don’t find job.
Well the same in my native country Georgia, I am studing and working in Prague and I want to stay in Prague .. My country goes down :(
I was in Georgia a few days ago, beautiful country. In a few years you should go back
Come to BRAZIL
You're welcome
@@brasil-z4u joga bonito. I am big fan of one and only Roberto Carlos
What do you work in Prague
@Kern Gesund
Kern Gesund but sick in the head, very ill heart.
Imagine now during pandemic the whole world is in crisis ..
Yes since the Plan-demic governments have put people under their control more than ever before..
@@andrewfreeman88 This was already a problem before the pandemic m8.
@@BavarianHobbit Yes but Now more than ever before...thus the concern..
Im muslim but I think Instead of trying to import millions of people from the Middle east, Europe should focus on giving it's own youth work.
@Suraj Kumar lol but you are ones coming to take jobs in the gulf
Immigration is not the problem, I say that as an italian girl. The problem is that we never recovered from the crysis started in 2007 because we have incompetent corrupted politicians. Immigration takes just the 0,6% of public founding. That's not the problem.
@@alphaman7713 the poor Muslims from India are. Middle class always aim for tech jobs in the west.
@@nickn2794 nice analysis at least if we admit what is the problem then blaming it to others
@@nickn2794 what do you Italian girl
Actually this is very much the case of the South of Italy. Which is the one portrayed in this video.
In the North the situation is ways much better. So don’t generalize.
So that's okay then is it? That there is a massive regional imbalance in terms of job prospects and quality of life in virtually every single European country including the UK?
Wasn't the unemployment rate 60% according to the video? That's a lot
That's not true. I am a dual qualified lawyer (Italy and England) from North Tuscany (Pisa) and moved abroad (London) where I have plenty of friends from Milan, Turin and Venice. In the last 15 years there has been a switch and nowadays people of north are those who expat more..
@@francescoc2782 Ora come ora credo sia estremamente difficile andare in Uk, a meno di avere qualifiche altissime.
@@riccardo2823 senz'altro è più selettivo. Ma stavo semplicemente rispondendo al commento sopra che l'ho trovato molto superficiale. Molti ragazzi del nord stanno lasciando il paese. È vero, il nord ha una situazione meno drammatica del sud, ma la situazione è stagnante da almeno 25 anni nel settentrione e la qualità del lavoro è veramente mortificante...
Exactly the same thing is happening in New Zealand..... I have a degree in commercial law and commerce and finding job is so hard... employers are so picky these days. Sometimes I think maybe a degree wasn’t worth the financial burden.
NyandUsaPolitics and so is more than half the population. You know nothing about our country.
It wasnt. Better be a plumber, machanic, plasterer.
And I can imagine how difficult the subjects
@@stekon9112 Well in hindsight, those types of jobs seem like the answer because the labor force was directed away from those vocational areas, however saturation could easily change the tides as well as technological advancements.
@@NzPhenomenon 90% of the population is Pakeha. this guy wanted to start scheisse.. Your name is exotic.i wonder what shaandan means.
My mother left for economical reasons she didn’t want to leave Italy. But this is a problem that has been going on for years particularly in the south and nothing seems to be changing. Shame as Italy is a beautiful country as is her people. We can only pray and remain positive in the hope that change will come one day!!
India is next. As the reservation system continues for government jobs and private sector is in total collapse I will not be suprised if masses move out of India. But the question is who will take us?
That's not only reason BTW most of the upper middle class move to Africa these days
German chancelor Merkel expects more People from india in germany.
To all the ones disqualifying other degrees and saying that only STEM degrees get you jobs: BULLSHIT. Engineers and Computer Science grads are all unemployed too.
Exactly and it's same in almost every country .
Then there Degrees has no value.
how these Italian couples enable to work in health sectors in German without speaking Germany or even English!
Whiteskin
It should be in Germany* without speaking German*
They learn.
They learn language just like me-learning english now for years. Not for fun but for be able to work in country where I finally living. I started to learn language when i was 35. Omg it was pain it the a.. :-) My mother thong language is Slavic language so for us learning english is hard thing to do...anyway i wish you a nice day :-)
0 glad to hear you doing well. So you are also working as an Ambulance officer in Germany?
Nigeria has over unemployed 20 million educated youths and they produce over 500,000 graduates every year
@@503zzach Why not india and china with population of over 1 billiion, learn to use your sense
@C R Yea, we wish your parents had the same great idea 😑
@@littlegenius6932😒you clearly don't understand how population growth works ,India and China have low fertility rates than the US ,Nigeria has one of the highest in the world
All you idiots talking about population, Nigeria has lesser population density than countries like uk Netherlands Germany etc
@@fyanle1382 the population density of India is same as EU or lower but for Chinese its much lesser
Why is it that Germany has a labor shortage and needs to "invite migrants" from syria...... yet all these perfectly good Europeans need jobs
Those Europeans (Italians , Spanish , eastern Europeans) take priority in most job centers but their numbers aren't enough which is why Germany needs Syrians and others
@@baha3alshamari152 .......... so why are they all looking for work.......
Many companies want cheap labors lol
Education is very important. Uneducated people is easy controllable by populists and corrupted politics. Greetings from Ukraine
HAHA says the guy from ukraine
Well, a Ukrainian would know all about populism and corruption 😂
the present Education System grants the same thing
North Africans lived that nightmare for 30 years and it just get worst
@Angelina how they destroy yours?!
@Angelina destroying? Lmao typically Italians blaming others for their own failure, Italy has always been poor and to be never found them to successful economy.
@Angelina tell me then why is Germany economy doing so much better than rest of europe?
That's literally what you cannot say at an interview: "I will take any position for the start (and than move on)".
If it wasn't for the cameras, they would have been expelled.
Why not?
@@tondajenej3449 Because they don't want to deal with non-commited people who leave after a few months. You are expected to say that your life is committed to their cause for eternity.
@@GP-qb9hi it's still a job, not their country's national military!
@@tondajenej3449 Because you're literally trying to sell yourself to these people and you just started with an approximation of "I have no value and would do everything because I'm not particularly skilled at anything".
Desperation is the one thing you should never show to your employer.
Desperation can be used against you in many ways even after they take you in.
For example, if I know you have nowhere else to go, I'll pay you less than the guy beside you, who is in the exact same situation, but didn't let me get it.
You can't bargain with anyone from a position of overt powerlessness.
Come in the balkans and see the country of Kosovo macedonia and albania everyone is jobless
Wow!
@@captainpinky8307 you are saying muslims are terrorists ?
Kosovo is Serbian province 😂
How do you guys survives?
Kosovo is not a country
Why staying with parents is such a bad thing?
I am staying with my family having a well paid job for past 9yrs. I am 32yrs old. even after marriage I wish to do the same.
It's a boomer thing. Back when housing wasn't ridiculously expensive it was expected for someone to have their own house when they're in their early twenties and even start families. So living with your parents was seen as someone who didn't do well in their early life. Now things are different but that way of thinking hasn't gone away entirely.
Dude it varies culture to culture. Stop giving dumb examples
I would that but I even have no room in my parent's house, I sleep in the guest room because my parents live in their parent's house with all their married brothers and married nephews. Housing is so expensive even with a job most of us apply to public housing programs and got it after 20 years.
there's cases where due to differences in religion, politics, views on sexuality and gender where people would want that independence more than anything.
i assume you generally see eye to eye with your parents on that. good for you, but that's not always the case.
2 arts degrees 40 years old and wants to start a family and be financially free. What universe is she in
The universe that she is in, is our universe and her universe. She got 2 arts degrees because it would be impossible for her to ever pass Calculus in our universe and (thus) impossible for her to earn a meaningful STEM degree. She graduated the only thing she could graduate. And her degrees, she got them for "signaling."
@@paulcolburn3855 I've met plenty of soft degree majors who could run intellectual circles around stem students. They just didn't have any passion for stem. We need art too, not just stem graduates
Show some empathy brother , she is a human with dreams and hopes just like you and me. Maybe youre lucky , you got intelligence , so you get to study science , others may not be that lucky , imagine yourself in her shoes , and try to understand
@@oreon4152 : yes I get what you are saying. But education costs money Oreon. And my empathy begins to wither a bit when the education that she earned comes with almost unlimited debt and no real capacity to pay it off.
@@oreon4152 people need to be told the truth because if not these things happen. Everyone needs a dose of reality every here and there. This woman got none of it
Here in Canada we know one simple truth, if ANY nation on earth goes through an economic meltdown we are suddenly flooded with immigrants from that country.
It's the fault of your political system which allows unhindered immigrants from Islamic countries which may proove costly in near future.
Italy is so beautiful. Beautiful people - so kind.
Big deal, college graduates in the Philippines have been leaving the country for greener pastures more than 50 years ago.
Italy is just helpless. Nothing ever changed, nothing ever will.
Please be nice to italians
@@hugodaniel8975 italians won't be nice to themselves. That's the real issue here.
could you elaborate?
this is what corruption of system does
What corruption of system does? Not creating one million jobs for all of those useless degrees? 30 years ago there were less than half of graduates, and more people used to do jobs that today we give to migrants. Today our kids are too posh to work in agriculture or in a factory, as they've been indoctrinated to have an education. That's the result too many people with useless degrees. And that's everywhere not just in Italy.
I am sure your country had no corruption whatsoever instead...
@@fulippuannaghiti1965 then why the system the government allow this "useless" degrees to pursue?
@@fulippuannaghiti1965 Dont be naive. Germans dont have problem with useless degrees. They are just super race!
@@cautarepvp2079 to keep on with the education business which in US and UK alone already make millions yearly. 9000£ to pay every year for any degree in UK, no matter which subject you choose. Without considering the expenses you have to pay for the accomodation and food during this period. The amount of teachers in campuses is ridiculous, considering that today the need of a teacher is literally nonsensical, as we could have lectures means virtual automated platforms. But hey, what those teachers will ever do with their education if not teaching at school? McDonald's is already getting automated, so yours are the options.
No. of Jobless youths in India is more than population of many European countries combined together.
Come to India you will see Phd candidates appearing for watchmen exam
Of course it is, but only in Government sector. Still there aren't enough jobs there. However in case of Private sector, exploitation of employees by private companies. Like they are paid hell of a less money than their counterparts abroad!
Very true, my uncle works for the Indian railways and a job for ticket issuer in a small station opened up and upwards of 2000 people applied and ~5 among them were masters graduate. In reality, India does not have a joblessness problem our education system is ancient and completely in shambles. I work for an ecommerce company in Bangalore and we were looking for a machine learning scientist, took the company about two months to find the right candidate. Almost 99% people have certifications and knowledge on paper ONLY, if you present these people with any real world scenarios they'd start sweating.
What's a Watchman exam?
@@carldrogo9492 security guard*
North is worse in india
this is not just Italy, I know people in Poland with Maters degrees in Engineering working in Mcdonald flipping burgers...
I'm Polish and i never seen any people like this. Unless you are talking about non-polish graduates in Poland for example Indians.
"Ana and Gianluca are unemployed they're also 30 years old, and still live with their parents."
that's the most Brutal cruel opening in the history of documentary journalism.
It's happening everywhere,
Solution for Italy's government: find a scapegoat
Because everybody wants to be engineer, doctor etc. Who wants to bake bread? Fix car? Sew clothes? Stupid system
I fix cars, computers, bake and sew..and build things and make a good living....Jack of all trades. Too many people have the same "ology" degree..It's essentially worthless.
And you guys picked Calabria as a reference for the entire country?? I love this southern region but it's literally the worst benchmark in terms of job opportunities.
It’s a shame the Italian government is not taking advantage of these educated and talented young people.
60 years ago, these youngsters would board a ship to America or Australia to start new life.
Lol. My mum was one of them...
@Lotus Afire More so Latin America as far as the US goes.
@Lotus AfireU.S received millions of Italians, in the other hand Australia, they didn't receive no immigrants but white anglos, they didn't like non Anglo immigrants
I left Italy and found my job in Vatican.
Spare a though for the Africans crossing the sea on a Dinghy to Italy to find them all depressed and in the same situation as them
Not quite, they come to Italy and make €35 a day .
they will make that in a month in Somalia
I got my 1st job when I was 28 and graduated at 23. I was leaving with my parents, one tip is, join the job whichever you get. If you don't then you will go into procrastination. Good bless 🙏 everyone.
I have a degree in law and currently I’m unemployed, I’m 22, I’m not a lawyer yet, I’m a Trainee, In order to become a Lawyer I need to complete traineeship but it’s hard to find a job. I sent my cv to at least 100 different law firms but no call received yet.
I had a job through my Uncle in a fancy law firm but I got fired 2 months ago. Welcome to Mediterranean. I salute my unemployed friends from Turkey to All around the globe. I love us all.
Likewise. Greetings from Greece, the country with the highest unemployment rate in the EU and which is about to get hammered by the coronavirus economically. Stay safe!
Start your own firm.
@@manuelcastro3506 Easier said than done
@@gorillagorilla8192
What else can he do?
@@manuelcastro3506 Imagine spending too much on a firm and if business doesn't works out like most of them after Covid-19 then it would be a massive loss .
If he has connections he can work under someone else or has to do nothing if he just want to survive.
I have spent the last 7 years working with Italians in the construction industry. Most had Master´s degrees and yet they were poorly educated, lacking in basic civil engineering knowledge, any form of construction experience and they were easy meet for their corrupt Italian construction managers.
Did you mean: "they were easy *meat* for their corrupt Italian construction managers"? We've had cheating scandals at higher level schools in the US, but it surely has been happening for years. Even before that, online services have been available for writing and coding assignments completed for pay. I guess that "smart" kids thinks it's superfluous to have to learn anything if they "know" that they can do the work.
@@marcosmota1094 More like job experience gives you way more knowledge then some degree. Those who can't do, teach. Many millennials get out of college and immediately think they will get a high paying job because of a piece of paper.
The Italian educational system aims to give you a general theoretical education, without specialization or implementation of the knowledge that you acquired during the years you've studied. It's a corrupted educational system with far too many useless subjects. It's a way to create more jobs within the education field, therefore there are far too many teachers who teach useless subjects, when it'd be easier to cut off that endless theoretical Odyssey and concentrating more on apprenticeship where the graduates can actually learn to work.