Post by account_disabled on Feb 25, 2024 6:38:02 GMT 2
Two pieces of news that are better understood together. Giorgia Meloni, when he had been the Prime Minister of Italy for just over a month, made a decision Two pieces of news that are better understood together. Giorgia Meloni , when she had been the Prime Minister of Italy for just over a month, made a decision. While in Spain the social-communist Government perpetuates aid and payments to maintain its electoral majority (unemployment benefits are the second largest item in the Spanish Budget), in Italy, Meloni proposed the reform of the "Reddito di cittadinanza", the most important social plan in the country, which sought to prevent aid or taxpayers from being abused.
For those who can work, the solution cannot be the Citizenship Income,” Meloni assured in his speech in the Italian Parliament. RELATED Italy: the unemployed who refuses a "reasonable" job will lose unemployment benefits The reform consisted of two major measures. On the one hand, for Giorgia it Coinbase Virtual Currency Database is logical that if a person is collecting the subsidy and rejects a "reasonable" job offer, he or she automatically stops collecting the government income. And on the other hand, the Minimum Living Income was charged, a state salary of 780 euros for every unemployed person, which they could receive for 18 months, which were renewable with no stipulated maximum, or in other words, a salary forever and ever. change of nothing.
After the reform, only people who either cannot access the labor market or who are in a vulnerable situation would have access to this aid, and for people who can work and are unemployed, they would be able to access it but only for eight months and then it would be eliminated: during these eight months they would be obliged to participate in job training courses and if they did not accept a "reasonable" job offer they would also automatically lose the subsidy. This will be the case during 2023, but Meloni's plan is to completely end this subsidy in 2024. RELATED Meloni puts Italy to work: eliminates the Italian minimum vital income That is to say, Meloni eliminated the unemployment benefit for those who do not want to work and the minimum vital income in one fell swoop. And now we go with the second news , Italy closes 2023 with an unemployment rate of 7.2%, the lowest since 2008, and with employment growing at levels never seen before.
For those who can work, the solution cannot be the Citizenship Income,” Meloni assured in his speech in the Italian Parliament. RELATED Italy: the unemployed who refuses a "reasonable" job will lose unemployment benefits The reform consisted of two major measures. On the one hand, for Giorgia it Coinbase Virtual Currency Database is logical that if a person is collecting the subsidy and rejects a "reasonable" job offer, he or she automatically stops collecting the government income. And on the other hand, the Minimum Living Income was charged, a state salary of 780 euros for every unemployed person, which they could receive for 18 months, which were renewable with no stipulated maximum, or in other words, a salary forever and ever. change of nothing.
After the reform, only people who either cannot access the labor market or who are in a vulnerable situation would have access to this aid, and for people who can work and are unemployed, they would be able to access it but only for eight months and then it would be eliminated: during these eight months they would be obliged to participate in job training courses and if they did not accept a "reasonable" job offer they would also automatically lose the subsidy. This will be the case during 2023, but Meloni's plan is to completely end this subsidy in 2024. RELATED Meloni puts Italy to work: eliminates the Italian minimum vital income That is to say, Meloni eliminated the unemployment benefit for those who do not want to work and the minimum vital income in one fell swoop. And now we go with the second news , Italy closes 2023 with an unemployment rate of 7.2%, the lowest since 2008, and with employment growing at levels never seen before.