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18 commenti

  1. AvantGardeLeo on

    No surprises here. Same climate and culture with higher salary to cost of living ratio while still close enough to their family. I don’t see how this is news-worthy tbh

  2. Busy_Environment_371 on

    Good amount are Argentinians with Italian passport

  3. tyger2020 on

    I’m not surprised.

    Spain has a much better outlook than Italy, imo. Better economic growth, younger population (although not by much), endless supply of culturally similar immigrants, etc.

  4. Pablogr_1515 on

    To all of those saying that most of them are Latin Americans, as a Spaniard I can tell you that this is not the case. There’s a lot of Italians coming and we locals don’t really even get why lol

  5. quattropapa on

    I’m Spanish. What can Italy offer to me to move there?

  6. Sium4443 on

    I have no idea what is the cause of the spike, I can say I have witnessed many left wing (specially Fatto quotidiano which is a pro russian left wing journal) starting some kind of “pro emigration” propaganda campaign starting after the pandemic, I dont know how many of the spike comes from this and how many comes from south americans hable to get easily the italian passport but in 2025 a law was passed against these “fake italians” so probably the figures are going to drop in 2026 and partially in 2025.

  7. Basically all Argentines that get an Italian passport thanks to having an Italian grandfather or great grand father.

  8. One has a progressive government and one a far right one that focuses on making life hard for people instead of solving things. So no surprise tbh.

  9. VLamperouge on

    This just shows how economic figures such as GDP are completely meaningless. Italy “supposedly” is the 3rd largest economy in the EU and the 4th in Europe, but everyone, especially young people, are fleeing the country as soon as they can because there is no economic future here.

  10. kallisto19988 on

    Southern EU is slowly becoming the new “eastern EU”

  11. TheJewPear on

    I’ve been living in Italy for about 8 years, I can count on one hand the people I’ve met who live here and are originally from a different EU country. The number of times I heard old Italians here speak about a child or grandchild of theirs who lives in Spain, Switzerland, France or Germany, though… if I had a euro for each I’d be able to move to Switzerland myself.

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