Immigration positive effects in Italy
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Transcript Immigration positive effects in Italy
Italian Australians comprise the fourth
largest ethnic group in Australia.
THE MAIN REASONS OF THEIR
MIGRATION :
The World War II
The poverty,especially for the
rural population
The only solutions for them to get to
Australia were the ships
The trips were long and
characterized by sea sickness,
abuses of the crew and the fear of
the contagious illnesses.
The first worry was finding a job as soon as
possible.
Life wasn't easy for the Italians, most of the
Australians disliked them, they've been called in
miserable ways and marginalized by the
community.
By the 1970s, many Italians ran successful
businesses and owned their own homes in
Australia
They have done a lot for Australia. They introduced
them to coffee, garlic and pasta, and taught them
that olive oil can be used for cooking rather than
medicine.
CIBO ESPRESSO
An exemple of success is this coffee chain
opened in Adelaide in 2000 by four Italian
friends.
Born from a passion to offer the plesures of
great autentic Italian food and coffee.
Italy as a mainly
emmigration
country,as seen,
starts to receive
immigration
flows only in the
1970s
The 1990s, the collapse of the
Soviet Block and Yugoslavia gave
rise to flows from eastern and
south-eastern European countries.
In 2015, there were
5,014,437 foreign
nationals resident
in Italy.
A significant impact on population size and
age structure.
In 2005, 6.1 % of GDP was produced by
immigrants.
Social security contributions paid by
immigrants are nearly 1.27 billion € .
More and more Italian companies are led by
immigrants. In 2015 the 8.9% of national
manufacturing.
Chinese entrepreneurs buck Italy's
recession with the number of new
businesses rising by 6.1 %
Matteo Wang, whose
family has owned the Fu
Hao restaurant in Rome
for 26 years, told The
Local that achieving that
success has meant
working all-year-round,
with only a break for
Christmas.
In 2014
entrepreneurs
MoneyGram Award
in Italy gave the
most prestigious of
awards to Christine
Chua (Philippines).
When people migrate
they bring a lot more
than a suitcase.