Commento scritto venerdì, lug 3rd, 2009 3:02 pm.
Bello e interessante sto sondaggio, son proprio curioso!
Commento scritto martedì, lug 7th, 2009 3:23 pm.
dipende cosa si intende per vivere bene e da quali priorita o parametri ognuno ha per giudicare la qualita’ della vita. Se ci limitiamo a quello economico probabilente in Italia non si vive piu’ bene da parecchi anni.
Commento scritto sabato, lug 11th, 2009 6:58 pm.
If you have a wealthy, well connected, educated family you live well here. I know a lot of people who have been given apartments by their parents or whose families own beach houses where they get free holidays. Also a lot of people who have been ’sistemato’ by their family connections.
But if you’re not well connected and your family isn’t rich life in Italy is really, really hard. Salaries are abysmal, rents are through the roof. People can’t afford to move out of their parents’ house, get married or have kids (Italy has an extremely low birth rate and Itlaian women have children very late). If you’re not from a rich, educated well connected family, you’d be a lot better off in Australia. Free, beautiful beaches open to everyone, salaries which are enough that you can afford rent and maybe even a car. And you can get a job by doing well at university! You don’t need to know anyone. I got my job after uni without knowing anyone – I just had good marks and interview well. Hard to believe for Italians. Oh and I was able to live completely independently of my parents (financially and physically) as soon as I finished uni. Now that I have a kid I also realise how great the parks and playground are in sydney – they have nothing like that here in Rome. And there are no public pools here. It’s sad for those of us who are stuck here for the summer with kid(s).
BTW – “La Dolce Vita” (the film title) was meant to be ironic.
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