Woman saves the world Ebook
by Laura Lolli Marilena Marcato
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About the Ebook
Interview with Professor Gotti Tedeschi.
Professor Gotti Tedeschi, President of IOR, believes that the strong
contraction in the birth rate in the West, with the subsequent ageing
population, has caused a rise in the fixed expenses from enterprises and in
the social costs (health and pensions), promoting a rise in direct and indirect
taxation, and a rise in consumer prices (such as petrol, for instance) and has
caused families to go into debt. The demographic drop is therefore the
trigger for the present economic-financial crisis.
Q. What can be done?
A. We need to plan the implementation of policies aiming to support
families, with incentives to encourage maternity.
Family in fact, not only guarantees a natural progression of society, but
it’s the main income, saving and development generator of human capital.
In order to develop this plan we need a new anthropological vision
where the human being is not simply a mean of production or
consumption.
Demographic dynamics is not a typical topic of discussion because it
appears to be metaphysical, but as we discussed before, the changes it will
bring about will affect all of us and our future generations.
Therefore, the future, seemingly so far out, involves all those young
adults who are now 20, who will be 40 in 2030 and 60 in 2050.
As a matter of fact this topic is without age, social context and mostly
borders because the demographic variations in each country are
interconnected in the world demographic synergies.
Family is an integral part of the State, which is like a business and as such
it has to manage human resources without marginalizing them in the way it
has always been doing with women, and with mothers, in particular.
Family is the primary unit where to bring up the children who will
become part of tomorrow’s society and will regenerate the state we belong to.
Professor Gotti Tedeschi, President of IOR, believes that the strong
contraction in the birth rate in the West, with the subsequent ageing
population, has caused a rise in the fixed expenses from enterprises and in
the social costs (health and pensions), promoting a rise in direct and indirect
taxation, and a rise in consumer prices (such as petrol, for instance) and has
caused families to go into debt. The demographic drop is therefore the
trigger for the present economic-financial crisis.
Q. What can be done?
A. We need to plan the implementation of policies aiming to support
families, with incentives to encourage maternity.
Family in fact, not only guarantees a natural progression of society, but
it’s the main income, saving and development generator of human capital.
In order to develop this plan we need a new anthropological vision
where the human being is not simply a mean of production or
consumption.
Demographic dynamics is not a typical topic of discussion because it
appears to be metaphysical, but as we discussed before, the changes it will
bring about will affect all of us and our future generations.
Therefore, the future, seemingly so far out, involves all those young
adults who are now 20, who will be 40 in 2030 and 60 in 2050.
As a matter of fact this topic is without age, social context and mostly
borders because the demographic variations in each country are
interconnected in the world demographic synergies.
Family is an integral part of the State, which is like a business and as such
it has to manage human resources without marginalizing them in the way it
has always been doing with women, and with mothers, in particular.
Family is the primary unit where to bring up the children who will
become part of tomorrow’s society and will regenerate the state we belong to.
Features & Details
- Primary Category: Business & Economics
- Version Fixed-layout ebook, 71 pgs
- Publish Date: Mar 22, 2018
- Last Edit Apr 10, 2018
- Language English
- Keywords demographic drop, economic-financial crisis
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