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sabato 17 dicembre 2011

Italy country profile by BBC NEWS

Take the art works of Botticelli, Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo, Tintoretto and Caravaggio, the operas of Verdi and Puccini, the cinema of Federico Fellini, add the architecture of Venice, Florence and Rome and you have just a fraction of Italy's treasures from over the centuries. 


While the country is renowned for these and other delights, it is also notorious for its precarious political life and has had several dozen governments since the end of World War II.

The Italian political landscape underwent a seismic shift in the 1990s when the "Clean Hands" operation exposed corruption at the highest levels of politics and big business. Several former prime ministers were implicated and thousands of businessmen and politicians were investigated.

Italy was one of the six countries which signed the 1951 Paris Treaty setting Europe off on the path to integration. It has been staunchly at the heart of Europe ever since, although in the early 2000s the government of Silvio Berlusconi adopted a more Eurosceptic stance.

Mr Berlusconi sought to align Italy more closely to the US, breaking ranks with the country's traditional allies, France and Germany, in his support for the US-led campaign in Iraq.

The Europhile Romano Prodi, who was prime minister from 2006 to 2008, pulled Italian troops out of Iraq and set about restoring good relations with other EU member states.

Italy is the fourth largest European economy and for long enjoyed one of the highest per capita incomes in Europe, despite the decline in traditional industries such as textiles and car manufacturing as a result of globalisation.

But it became one of the first eurozone victims of the global financial crisis of 2008. By the summer of 2011, Italy had one of the highest levels of public debt - a towering 120% of GDP - in the eurozone.

There is concern over Italy's birth rate - the lowest in Europe - and the economic implications of an ageing population.
  • Full name: Italian Republic
  • Population: 60.1 million (UN, 2010)
  • Capital: Rome
  • Area: 301,338 sq km (116,346 sq miles)
  • Major language: Italian
  • Major religion: Christianity
  • Life expectancy: 79 years (men), 85 years (women) (UN)
  • Monetary unit: 1 euro = 100 cents
  • Main exports: Machinery and transport equipment, chemicals, clothes, wine
  • GNI per capita: US $35,080 (World Bank, 2009)
  • Internet domain: .it
  • International dialling code: +39
President: Giorgio Napolitano

Giorgio Napolitano, veteran politician, was sworn in as Italy's 11th post-war president in May 2006.

The former member of the Italian Communist Party was among the leading architects of the party's transformation into a social-democratic movement.

The Italian president heads the armed forces and has powers to veto legislation, disband parliament and call elections.

He played a key role in a fierce right-to-die debate in 2009 by refusing to sign an emergency government decree ordering doctors to resume feeding a woman who had been in a coma for 17 years.

Prime Minister: Mario Monti

Economist Mario Monti took over at the head of a government of technocrats in November 2011 after his predecessor Silvio Berlusconi resigned amid a mounting national debt crisis.

The Berlusconi government had failed to muster a parliamentary majority in a routine budget vote as criticism grew of is handling of the crisis, seen as a serious threat to the financial stability of the eurozone.

Mr Monti, a former European Union competition commissioner, was expected to serve as a non-party prime minister until elections expected early in 2012.

His cabinet included bankers, diplomats and business executives, but not a single politician. Its first task was expected to be implementing an austerity package passed in the dying days of the Berlusconi government.

Before being sworn in, Mr Monti said a return to economic growth was his top priority, but predicted painful sacrifices on the path towards restoring Italy's financial health.

Born in 1943, Mr Monti studied in Italy and at Yale, specialising in the banking sector. Prime Minister Berlusconi appointed him Italy's European Union commissioner in 1994, in which position he championed anti-monopoly measures.

Mr Berlusconi declined to reappoint him in 2004, but Mr Monti continued to work closely with the European Commission and various think tanks on projects promoting closer European economic integration.

Mr Monti's appointment ended Silvio Berlusconi's third stint as prime minister from 2008-11 at the head of a centre-right coalition that included his own Forza Italia party.

One of Italy's richest men, Mr Berlusconi was the dominant figure on Italy's right since he launched his political career during the corruption inquiries of 1994 that swept away Italy's post-World War II party system.

However, his business contacts and media role led to accusations of a conflict of interest, especially over legislation seen as protecting his commercial interests.

Mr Berlusconi was put on trial at least six times over financial matters, and found guilty on three occasions, but later acquitted or benefited from the expiry of the statute of limitations.

Hi sex life also led to controversy, and April 2011 he was put on trial on charges of abuse of power and paying a minor for sex. He insisted the case was politically motivated.

Italy's heady blend of politics and media has made headlines at home and abroad, with watchdogs and some politicians pointing to Prime Minister Berlusconi's influence over public and private broadcasting.

The public broadcaster, Rai, has traditionally been subject to political influence, and Mr Berlusconi's Mediaset empire operates Italy's top private TV stations.

Between them, Rai and Mediaset effectively control Italy's TV market and are a potentially powerful political tool.

News Corp-owned Sky Italia has a near-monopoly of the pay-TV sector.

The Italian press is highly-regionalised. Milan in particular is home to many dailies and news magazines. Most newspapers are privately-owned, often linked to a political party or run by a large media group.

Around 2,500 commercial radio stations broadcast in Italy. Some have national coverage; most are music-based. They share the airwaves with public broadcaster Rai's networks.

Reporters Without Borders has warned of the "grip of mafia gangs" on the media, which it says forces many journalists to tread warily. Meanwhile, there has been stiff resistance to government plans to restrict reporting based on material gained from police wiretaps.

By August 2009 there were 30 million internet users (Internetworldstats).

The press
Television
  • Rai - public, stations include Rai Uno, Rai Due, Rai Tre, rolling news channel Rai News 24 and cable/satellite services
  • Mediaset - main private TV broadcaster, operates Italia 1, Rete 4 and Canale 5
Radio
  • Rai - public, stations include flagship national network Radio 1, entertainment-based Radio 2, cultural station Radio 3 and parliamentary station GR Parlamento
  • Radio 24 - commercial network, news and business
  • R101 - commercial network, pop music
  • Radio Italia - commercial network, Italian pop music
News agency
                                                                                                                      Published: 2011/11/14

Dear students,
I know it's quite long but I'd like your comment on it, please!!!!

7 commenti:

  1. Surely I don't understand anything about policy, but I realize that there is a serious crisis.. I hope the situation will change soon.

    RispondiElimina
  2. Dear prof,
    first of all marry christmas and happy new year, without homework and class tests.
    Secondly,like giulia,i don't understand a lot of policy or state's business,and i can't give my opinion about things that i don't know enough.
    But i hope that the new prime minister will do something to raise italian economy and leave behind the crisis.

    RispondiElimina
  3. I know that now the economic situation in Italy is difficult and the crisis is a really bad fact... I hope that the government will try to solve the economic problems but in my opinion it will be very difficult because of the high level of public debt..

    RispondiElimina
  4. I don't understand much about politics, and often not very interested in what happens, but I know that there is big crisis in our Country.
    I think every person out of the crisis don't think only herself.

    RispondiElimina
  5. I don't want to talk about policy and I don't understand nearly nothing about business, but I think that the only way to cut off this crisis should be to forget the "Berlusconi's Age" and to begin to build the future of our country, that is, obviously, OUR future!!!

    RispondiElimina
  6. sometimes can be very useful to see how other country learn our news, changes, policy ecc.
    Personally I've learned many things about our past history, and texts like these can offer a different point of view on our culture.

    RispondiElimina
  7. As others, I don't know much about policy, but what we have to know? Italy and it's economy are in crisis. For me it's difficult to think how this situation can be in future, because everytime I only see the funny side of things ... but this event hasn't got funny side. The only thing we have to do is smile. Smile and pray.

    RispondiElimina