The birthrate has fallen in most nations below the replacement rate. Some nations are acting to stop the free fall. The government of Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni recently approved a new budget that is aimed at boosting the national birthrate. S. A. McCarthy at The Daily Signal reported that 1 billion euros (nearly $1.1 billion) was set aside to support mothers and families.
Some of those measures include
increased financial aid to working mothers with two or more children, increased
government funding for day care facilities, and extended parental leave.
Meloni, herself a working mother, said, “We want to dismantle the narrative
that birthrate is a disincentive to work. We want to incentivize those who give
birth to children and want to work.”
The prime minister added: “We want to
establish that a woman who gives birth to at least two children has already
made an important contribution to society, and therefore, the state partly
compensates by paying social security contributions.
Italy’s birthrate is currently one of
the lowest in Europe. At the end of the 19th century, the Italian
birthrate was 5.06 children per woman, but since the 1970s, the birthrate has
declined rapidly, dropping from about 2.66 children per woman at the end of the
1960s to 1.24 in 2020, and the population’s average age has increased, with 20%
of the population being over the age of 65.
In addition to the measures noted
above, Italian Economy Minister Giancarlo Giorgetti implemented a plan earlier
this year to adjust tax breaks so taxpayers with children can keep more of
their paychecks. He also announced plans to offer income-tax deductions for
families: Those with one child may deduct 2,500 euros ($2,641) from their
taxes; those with two children may deduct 10,000 euros ($10,567), and those
with more than two children may deduct an additional 2,500 euros ($2,641) per
child.
When Meloni came to
power as prime minister last year with the slogan “Dio, patria, famiglia” (God,
fatherland, family), she pledged to make Italian families and the nation’s
birthrate priorities for her administration….
Meloni has made
family – not just birthrates – a chief focus. She opposes abortion, which is
currently legal in Italy during the first 90 days of pregnancy, and same-sex
marriage, which is not legally recognized in Italy. Under Meloni’s
administration, same-sex partners have also been banned from being listed as
parents on a child’s birth certificate; the new laws require both biological
parents to be named.
Surrogacy, which
Meloni called “an abomination that seeks to reduce human life to a bargaining
chip,” is also illegal in Italy, and the prime minister has introduced
legislation in Parliament to criminalize Italians seeking surrogacies abroad.
Italy took its inspiration from
conservative-led Hungary to bolster families. Under the direction of Prime
Minister Viktor Orban, Hungary has implemented “a slew of pro-family policies.
Last year, for example, Orban exempted mothers under 30 from paying income
tax.” In addition, Hungary subsidized “large families and granted tiered tax
breaks for mothers.” The entire effort by Hungary is to “support families in
[the] country and increase birthrates [by] implementing a slew of pro-family
policies.”
No comments:
Post a Comment