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INSIDE ITALY

Inside Italy: The recovery fund mystery, rehoming goats and controversy over crisps

From the mystery of how (or if) Italy's recovery fund is being spent to one island's plan to rid itself of goats, our weekly newsletter Inside Italy looks at what we’ve been talking about in Italy this week.

Inside Italy: The recovery fund mystery, rehoming goats and controversy over crisps
An Italian island's unusual plan to rid itself of goats has attracted international media attention. (Photo by Juan BARRETO / AFP)

Following the money

Where is Italy’s recovery fund money going? That’s the billion-dollar question in the country right now – or €191.5 billion, to be precise.

Italy received the lion’s share of the EU-wide post-pandemic recovery fund, starting back in 2021, after the country was hit especially hard by the Covid-19 crisis. 

The billions in loans and grants spread over five years were seen as a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for the country to upgrade crumbling roads and infrastructure, improve environmental efficiency, and bring in major reforms to solve long-standing economic problems – under the European Commission’s watchful eye.

But is it going as hoped? There’s been so little information publicly available about the spending that it seems no one can say.

One thing we do know is that organised crime groups are profiting – police in Veneto last week seized €600m worth of luxury boats, property, sports cars and jewellery believed to have been bought using recovery fund money, and 8 out of 10 of Europe’s fraud investigations related to the funds are in Italy.

There’s also concern about what the government is doing with the fund. Giorgia Meloni’s administration has changed the spending plan to allocate money to its own priorities – which include funding Transport Minister Matteo Salvini’s dream of building his highly unpopular bridge over the Strait of Messina.

But it looks more likely that the government won’t manage to spend much of the money at all. So far, Salvini’s ministry has only spent 3.3 percent of its share of the fund, the same amount as the health ministry, while the tourism ministry has spent just one percent. It may sound unbelievable, but Italy has done this before with EU funds.

Italian social media has been full of jokes and memes on the subject again this week, though everyone is aware there are serious problems going unresolved. For many, it’s a case of rido per non piangere – if you didn’t laugh, you’d cry.

Beach rules

Newcomers are often surprised to find out that, far from being lawless, Italy is a rule-heavy country where almost every aspect of everyday life is regulated in some way (at least, in theory.)

Italy even has rules governing when beach season officially starts (and ends) in each region, and this week on The Local we also came across some surprising building regulations dictating everything from how you should tile your bathroom to the items you can put on your balcony.

Whether or not these rules are always followed is another question. But with such a large number of regulations in place, maybe the typically relaxed Italian attitude towards rule-breaking is the only really sensible one to take.

British humour or blasphemy?

An Italian crisp manufacturer’s attempt at employing “British-style” humour in a TV ad fell flat this week, at least among Catholics, who accused the company of blasphemy – which is a crime in Italy.

The 30-second advert for Amica Chips is set in a monastery and opens with nuns preparing to receive holy communion. The mother superior realises that the tabernacle is empty of wafers, and so fills it with crisps instead.

After likening the “divine” crisps to Catholics’ daily bread, it ends with the mother superior polishing off the rest of the bag.

The ad was quickly pulled from air after complaints from Aiart, an association of Catholic TV viewers, which accused the company of resorting to blasphemy to sell crisps. Italian Catholic newspaper Avvenire published a furious editorial titled “Christ has been reduced to a potato chip.”

Clearly they were not the target audience. Lorenzo Marini Group, the company behind the commercial, said it was aimed at a younger market and had used “strong British irony” to be deliberately provocative.

The short-lived campaign seems to have paid off in terms of international media coverage this week. Meanwhile, the crisps were trending on Italian Twitter and even sparked debate over secularism in Italian law.

Get your goat

You may be pleased to hear that the local authority on Alicudi island has reported that its call for people to come and remove its excess goats was a resounding success.

Goats are reportedly overrunning the island, outnumbering its 100 or so residents and eating their property – so the authority recently offered the animals for free to anyone who’d like to come and catch them.

The unusual offer whipped international media into a frenzy, and around 2,000 applications have since poured in with people all over Europe and beyond eager to rehome one of the 600 animals available.

Successful applicants will have 15 days to lure a goat off the tiny island’s cliffs and onto a boat, according to Italian media reports. Reassuringly, local politicians have suggested they’ll give priority to those who want to “try to domesticate the animals, rather than eat them.”

Inside Italy is our weekly look at some of the news and talking points in Italy that you might not have heard about. It’s published each Saturday and members can receive it directly to their inbox, by going to their newsletter preferences or adding their email to the sign-up box in this article.

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INSIDE ITALY

Inside Italy: An economic miracle and why Italians drink so much bottled water

From claims that Italy is Europe’s new “economic powerhouse” to a national obsession with bottled water and the unexpected relocation of Times Square, our weekly newsletter Inside Italy looks at what we’ve been talking about in Italy this week. 

Inside Italy: An economic miracle and why Italians drink so much bottled water

Growth miracle

Italians frequently compare their national economy to Germany’s – and always unfavourably. So it was more than a little surprising this week to see German media doing the opposite.

“Will Italy replace Germany as Europe’s economic powerhouse?” was the headline from Deutche Welle on Thursday, and dozens of similarly-titled articles were quickly published by online news outlets worldwide. If you’re as sceptical about that question as I was, I recommend giving the DW article a read.

In it, German economists explain that things are looking up dramatically for the formerly stagnant Italian economy, which has grown by 3.8 percent since 2019 – “twice as much as the French economy and five times more than the German economy” in that time.

They were quick to point out that the current Italian government can’t be given any credit for this rosy outlook, saying most of this growth is based on old policies and new debt. 

Two-thirds of the growth was put down to Italy’s massive construction sector investments since 2019 – particularly the billions poured into the wildly popular ‘superbonus 110’ state-funded home renovation scheme, which Meloni’s government has now cancelled citing out-of-control costs.

But this “Italian growth miracle” will be short-lived, the experts warn, unless Italy spends its €200 billion in EU post-Covid recovery funds wisely. At the moment though, no one seems to know how that’s being spent.

Bottled up

The most surprising Italian statistics I came across this week were in an article on The Local in which we answered a question from a reader about how safe it is to drink Italy’s tap water. The short answer is that it’s as safe as it gets – not that you’d know it from the large proportion of Italians who refuse to drink tap water under any circumstances.

In fact, surveys show that nearly half of all Italians (43.3 percent) drink exclusively bottled water. As a result, the consumption of bottled water in Italy per capita is 208 litres per year – making Italy the biggest consumer of bottled water in Europe, and the second-biggest worldwide after Mexico, with 244 litres per capita per year.

But if the tap water is safe, what’s the reason for this Italian bottled water habit? I tried to answer that question in an article I wrote almost five years ago, and not a great deal has changed since then. Most people blame the influence of marketing, or the widespread Italian preoccupation with hygiene. I’d say it’s a bit of both.

In any case, water filters in homes and restaurants are slowly becoming more popular – but considering the amount of plastic waste a national reliance on bottled water creates, the switch needs to happen a lot faster.

Times where?

Italy’s gaffe-prone Minister of Culture, Gennaro Sangiuliano, has been in the news for the wrong reasons again this week after he told a group of international journalists: “If we think of London, we think of Times Square.”

Italian newspapers and social media users seized on the minister’s slip-up, with Sangiuliano’s name trending on Italian Twitter for several days as users ironically suggested other famous landmarks that could be just as easily mixed up.

In response, the culture ministry issued a official note in which Sangiuliano explained that his confusion was caused by the “very strong emotions” he felt while talking to the reporters, and that he’d got Times Square mixed up with Piccadilly Circus, “not surprisingly, as it’s often called the Times Square of London.” Which will probably be news to Londoners.

Inside Italy is our weekly look at some of the news and talking points in Italy that you might not have heard about. It’s published each Saturday and members can receive it directly to their inbox, by going to their newsletter preferences or adding their email to the sign-up box in this article.

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