Posted by Belarnmino Dabalos Saguing
Rome, Italy 03 Dece4mber 2014
The
Inflow of Migrants in Italy
Picnic in the Park, Palermo, Sicily (Photo by Fr. Rey Culaba) |
Italy is host to more than mi4 million
migrants of diverse nationalities. They comprise about 5 percent of the
country’s total population.. Fifty percent of the migrants are Europeans, 20
percent are Africans, twenty percent are from Asiatic Countries, and ten percent from the Americas, predominantly
South and Central American.
About
sixty percent of the immigrant community are living in Northern Italy, twenty
seven percent are in Central Regions, and about thirteen percent in Southern Italy.
The
main worry among the immigrants is the problem of housing, employment and their
integration to the Italian society. Many
migrants has to struggle to pay rents, and for the majority, buying a house is
just out of reach. On the average, the income of migrant workers in Italy is
half of the income of the average Italian worker. There is no job security for
the immigrant population, and many of them do not have regular work. ( Data from
CARITAS Report of 2010)
Italy has been one of the
countries in Europe that experienced a sustained growth in Filipino labor
migration. The works at home previously carried out by Italians, men women and
alike, are not compensated by the public service.
It should be well noted
that the political conditions and rising economic growth in Italy, the labor
segmentation, the demographic collapse, among other factors, has necessitated
the services of migrant workers
including domestic services has increased the demands for Filipinas.
However, Italy is
distinguished from the others since it was more through the personal
initiatives of the migrants themselves rather than the planning of the
Philippine government that brought most of them to this country, to flee from
poverty and lack of employment that would support decent life for workers in
the Philippines.
Philippine-Italy studies indicate that most Filipinos
travel with tourist visas and found works here afterwards. The advent of
stricter immigration policies in 1986 made this mode of entry more difficult,
forcing the migrants, Filipinos included, to find other means to enter the
country, legally or otherwise, despite the insertion of more formal migration
channels.
The Number of Filipinos in
Italy
In 2006, the Philippine
Commission on Filipinos Overseas (CFO) estimated that there are 128,080
Filipinos residing in Italy: of which 23,108 are permanent residents, 84,972
are OFWs (temporary workers whose stay in foreign countries are limited by the
duration of their contracts), and the remaining 20,000 are illegally working
and living in Italy
The CFO estimates maybe a bit
conservative since they are basing their count from the annual departures from
Manila airport. Since the Philippine government normally has no direct control
on the contracts signed by the workers in Italy, and their estimate on
undocumented migrants is based mainly on the estimates of the Philippine
Embassy in Rome. It should of course be noted that other estimates indicate
higher numbers of Filipinos residing in Italy with some guess indicating that
there are more than 200,000 Filipinos residing in Italy.
The CARITAS di
Roma 2013 reported that there are 165, 763Filipinospresent in Italy of which
46, 773are in surrounding Lazio
province in Rome of which majoriryt are concentrated in the city of Rome and it
indicated indicated that about sixty-one
percent of them are women.
Incongruent may be these
figures, these studies and estimates confirm the fact that within Europe, Italy
is host of the largest Filipino migrants community in Europe preceded only by
Spain, Greece and Austria. Italy is among the top ten destinations of Filipino
migrants preceded only by Saudi Arabia, Hong Kong, Japan, Taiwan and the United
Arab Emirates. The largest concentration of the Filientratedpino migrants in
Italy could be found in Rome and Milan and its surroundins.
The Feminized Migration Flow
to Italy
The researches of the
Italian Institute for Statistics (ISTATS) concerning the regular temporary
workers in Italy points out that women comprise about sixty-three percent of
the migrants present in Italy. Sixty to
seventy percent of the Filipinos are employed in the service sector, with
Filipino women in large majority. In cities like Rome and Milan female
Filipinos account up to seventy percent of all Filipinos in these cities. It
cannot be considered an exaggeration to say that Filipino outward migration to
Italy and elsewhere has always been dominated by women.
The great majority of
Filipino female migrants work in the domestic service according to some
specific studies, points out that ninety-five percent are employed in domestic
field. Nursing and employment in the entertainment sector and employment in
hotels are the other fields where Filipinas are represented in minor numbers.
It is noteworthy that the economic recession in the Philippines in the mid-90’s
led to the presence of male migrant labor in Italy, although women are still in
great majority. It is also the Filipinas who made great efforts to reunite
their families in Italy more than the other nationalities when the Italian
migration policies made it easier for the migrants to petition the entrance of
the members of their family into Italy in the mid-90’s. Also, three profiles of
the Filipinas are distinguished: married women with children, single mothers
and singles women.
Education and Income
Levels
Although it is somewhat
difficult to assess the exact figures regarding the different levels of
education characterizing the Filipinos in Italy, anecdotal evidence indicates
that the Filipino migrants are more than fairly educated compared to other
migrants present in Italy, The majority of Filipino migrants are high school
graduates, and most having at least some university education. Philippine
sources have the same conclusion. Many of them are even university graduates
and most are experienced skilled workers before leaving for overseas. It could,
therefore, be concluded that it was the salary, living conditions or job
opportunity factor that drove most of them to migrate.
The Filipino migrants in
Italy could now be classified as being part of the middle-class in the
Philippines, despite their relatively low income in Italy. It should be
important to note that the middle class in the Philippines has diminished
drastically in the years of the Marcos regime. Vast numbers of the Filipino
middle class has fled the country for political or economic reasons due to
severe repressions during that period, and the majority of those who remained
were either absorbed by the lower classes, and few, indeed very few, were
graduated to the upper class.
Remittances
In 2004, the
total remittance of Filipino migrants was 8.5 billion US Dollars. These figures
does not even include remittances sent through informal channels which, should
it be included, the total could reach a very much higher figure.
Of the total USD 20.5 B
sent by the OFWs scattered in the whole world in 2013, more than USD 46 M was
from the OFWs in Italy, making them the fourth in the rank of remittance sender
to the Philippines.
The actual bulk of remittance sent by
the OFWs into the country for that year was estimated between US$14 billion to
US$21 billion (1/3 from USA, 1/3 from Middle East and 1/3 from other countries)
based on the studies for the Asian Development Bank (Kevin Melynn, ADB
Consultant, Worker Remittances as a Development Tool: Opportunity for the
Philippines, ADB, 2003)
The present restrictions
on money transfers that is being enforced by the Italian authorities, may make
it harder to estimate how much really are being sent from this country. Most of
the undocumented Filipino migrants can not avail of the services of banks and
money transfer firms and are forced to use informal venues to send their money
to their families, and this, of course can not be included in the estimates on
the total remittances.
François Bourguignon, World Bank Chief Economist,
wrote: “We have now a research program on migration issues surrounding
remittances, high-skilled migration, temporary movement of persons, social
protection and governance of migration, and the link between trade, foreign
direct investment, and migration.” – Global Development Finance 2003 Annual Report. (Global Economic Prospects 2006: Economic
Implications of Remittances and Migration.)
In the midst of a crisis, they use this
tool as a crushing vise in exploiting the country. The Philippines, like all
the labor exporting countries, are dependent on the remittances being sent home
by the migrants. In fact, about 10% of the nation’s Gross Domestic Product
income are the remittances of the OFWs.
3. The impact of the Global Financial Crisis
“THE PRESENT
SITUATION IS THE CULMINATION OF DECADES OF NEOLIBERALISM, CORPORATE GLO-BALIZATION
AND FINANCIALIZATION BETWEEN 1995 AND 2007 THAT REDUCED THE SHARE OF INCOME
GOING TO WORKERS’ WAGES BUT INCREASED THE SHARE GOING TO THE FEW RICH
CAPITALISTS AND CORPORATES IN THREE QUARTERS OF THE WORLD’S NATIONS.”
- Prof
William K. Tabb
The words of this American
Economist echoes the sentiments of world’s workers including the migrant
workers who are shouldering the heavy burden of sufferings caused by
globalization, and now, the same workers again has to be sacrificed by the
people who created the sufferings by saving themselves and leaving them in a
mire of hardships they have to endure.
The problem has hit most the lower
income bracket workers which includes the migrants. Thousands has been the
victims of retrenchments or cutting shorts of working time and lowering of
salaries. The migrants most affected in Italy are those working in factories,
constructions, and hotel/restaurant and supermarket services, where hundreds
were laid off or whose working times are abbreviated. But worst is the flight
of those who do not have regular contracts since they cannot avail on
unemployment compensations and has to tighten their belts. There are still no
official record of Filipino migrants in Italy directly affected by the global
crisis, but sixty to seventy percent of Filipino migrants in Italy are in the
service sector most domestic workers.
This phenomenon is universal. Like
this crisis, it is global. It affects both rich and poor country, although the
third world countries are hit harder because they are dependents of the
neocolonist countries, they do not have
the means to remedy the situation.
Like the others, Filipino migrants
has suffered the same fate. I do have the data on migrants of other
nationalities, but the table shows how the loss of jobs, and also the stoppage
of jobs long awaited by other workers that is by now held in abeyance by the
employers in the countries of destination caused by the global crisis, is real
and steps has to be done specially by the countries that are dependent on the
remittances being sent home by us migrants. The Philippines is the world’s third
largest recipient of remittances after India and Mexico, The remittances of
Filipino migrants represent 10.5 percent of the country’s GDP, and about 20
percent of the country’s total earnings. The diminished numbers of remittance
senders could also affect the national economy.
In terms of human sufferings, almost
all of the migrants, with a few exceptions are from the poorest sectors of the
society of the country where they are from. The loss of jobs would mean hunger
for many families. And since the majority are not covered by unemployment
insurance, it would mean more than just being hungry. It would mean the
education, housing and many others.
Italy: the
frontline of Fortress Europe
Italy has seen a sustained inward migration
in the past 20 years, given its geographical position in the center of the
Mediterranean, with more 8,000 km. of coastline, the country is considered as
the most accessable to Europe by the migrants of many countries of origin.
The
economic gaps between various regions of Italy also governs the way in which
migrants has entered the labor market. In the north, more markedly in the
industrialized northeastern regions with a low unemployment rates, immigrants
are mainly employed in industrial activities and are occupied in more or less
regular positions. In the central regions, notably in the city of Rome and its
surrounding provincial regions populated by well to dos, the migrants are
employed in the service sectors, mostly as domestic helpers, nannies and
caregivers especially the female migrants, In the South, the majority of
migrant workers are employed in seasonal jobs and in the clandestine
underground economy particularly in agriculture and construction sectors.
Aside
from legal immigrants with regular documents and resident permits, there is a
great number of illegal migrants present in Italy. There are no precise count
available for the clandestines. The only estimate availble is from the Caritas,
a Catholic Church agency which gives assistance to the poor including the
clandestine migrants.
Because of negative propagandas by some political parties particularly
the extrem right Lega Nord and Forza Italia, criminality was tied with clandestine
migrants, breeding hatred and distrust among the people. As a result, incidents
of migrants being mauled by some extremist gangs, leading in some cases, to
death of the victims has occurred. Due to discriminations, migrants find it
very hard to find work and
accomodations. They are also
deprived of social rughts and services.
Immigration Laws
The earliest attempt at regularizing and integration
of migrants was conceived in latter parts of 1988 and finally was
approved by the Italian Parliament in the beginning of 1990 as Law 39/90
otherwise known as the Martelli Law. This law aims to make plans on migratory
inflow to the country with the collaboration of the immigrant’s country of
origin. This law was later further amended by the Amato-Ferrero Law.
In
1998, the center-left coalition government passed the Law 40/98 also called the
Turco-Napolitano Law which was an attempt to regularize the position of non EU
immigrants and improve their integration into Italian society. This law imposed an intricate procedures for the
deportation of illegal immigrants, who, once accosted by the authority and
tried by a magistrate and could be deported in the event that he is judged by
the court as illegal immigrant. The immigrant is given 2 weeks to appeal his
case. In most cases, this period is utilized by the migrants to go underground.
The
Bossi-Fini Law
The
xenophobic leader of Lega Nord Umberto, Bossi and the extreme right Forza
Italia of Silvio Berlusconi criticized the Law 40/98 as too soft. The
Center-Left coalition used, what in their opinion, the shortcomings of the law,
and the black propaganda against illegal immigration, as campaign issue and won
the May 2001 general election. From the onset of their coming to power, the Center-Right
government has made the immigration issue a priority and after a bitter debate
in the Parliament, passed the Law 189/2002 that regulates immigration in a more
strict term and issued a decree to regularize immigrants already present in the
country.
This
law 189/02 also known as Bossi-Fini Law named after the politicians who
proposed it, took effect on July, 2002, amended the 1998 Imigration Law and
introduced new stringent clauses. The most significant aspects of the law are
the following:
·
Before
November 30 of each year, the Prime Minister will lay down the number of non-EU
workers to be admitted into Italy for the following year (the so called Flussi
Decree).
·
There
shall be no limitations for the entry in Italy for highly skilled workers
(university lecturers and professors, professional nurses, etc.).
·
Other
workers of non-EU origin will be allowed to enter Italy only after obtaining a
“residence contratct”, signed both by the employer and the worker (contratto di
soggiorno).1
·
An immigration
office will be set up in every province of Italy to oversee the rectruitment
all migrant workers.2
·
Residence
permits for reason of employment with a maximum validity period of 2 years shall be issued to migrant workers.
·
Clandestines
and irregular workers shall be
accompanied by the authorities to the border and deported. Deportations are
immediate and cannot be suspended even through an appeal through the courts.
·
After 6 years
of regular residence in Italy, non-EU citizens with stable jobs and the
necessaty economic requisites to support themselve and their family may apply
for a permanent residence permit.
·
Minors
of non-EU origin in Italy shall be issued a residence permit when they reach
adult age (18 years), provided that they have already lived in Italy for at
least 3 years, and have attended a social and civil integration programme
provided by a public or a private organization. This organization must
guarantee that they have adequate accommodations, study school or go to work.
The number of resident permits issued on
this condition shall be deducted from the pre-defined number of total annual
permits.
Regularization
A
decree on regularization was issued on 6 September, 2002 provides the
regularization of of two types of irregular immigrant worker: The undocumented
or clandestine migrants who had not been
regularized since ttheir entry into the trretory and the irregular immigrants
with expired residence permits. The categories
include Domestic workers and home helpers, ie:caregivers and nannies;
and other dependent workers engaged in other suburdinate employment.
The
requirements fot the regularizations are as follows:
The worker must have been employed by a company or
individual employer for at least 3 months.
The empl;oyer must agree to engage the worker on an
open-ended or on a fixed term contract the worker must receive a minimum monthly salary of € 700
within 10 daysfrom the submission of the application
for the regularization, boththe workewr and employer shall be convoked by the
prefecture or the police to formalize the working contract.
and to other EU Member States. For instance, there is anecdotal evidence
indicating that a number of Filipino domestic helpers brought along by their
Arab employers for a vacation in Europe succumb to the temptation of abandoning
their employment in favour of irregular stay in Italy or Europe with the help
of other Filipinos.
The CFO does not have any available information on human trafficking or
smuggling activity involving Italy. Meanwhile, there are some reported cases of
Filipinos being recruited for fictitious work in EU countries including Italy,
with the aid of illegal recruiters – Filipino and Chinese – using fake
passports and visas. A 2006 advisory from the POEA reported that some Filipinos
in Hong Kong were lured into paying HKD 25,000 to HKD 40,000 (or USD 3,214.83
to USD 5,143.73) for their plane tickets and for processing tourist visas for
Italy (POEA, 2006a).
Migrant workers who are in Italy without the proper work documentation
are ineligible for basic social services and often find themselves in
vulnerable and exploitative work conditions. They cannot access formal
financial, banking or remittance services because of the inability to present
formal work documents, or for fear of disclosing their undocumented status.
This sector has no choice but to send money home through informal channels and,
as the survey showed, keep their earnings at their residences or carry money
personally wherever they go. It is expected that these irregular workers will
persevere in such status in the hope of obtaining amnesty in the future.
A significant number of undocumented Filipinos in Italy have availed of
the amnesty and regularization program offered by the Italian Government. The
last amnesty was in 2002,when 646,829 foreigners were granted permits –
including 9,82_ Filipinos. Among regularized migrants who are in domestic work,
Filipinos (89% of regularized undocumented domestic workers) are the biggest
ethnic group (Carfagna et al., 2008). From June to September 2009, the Italian
government accepted amnesty applications from irregular foreign workers
(Buenafe, 2009).
Integration and occupational mobility of Filipinos. There are programs
and procedures available to foreigners who wish to upgrade their credentials to
qualify themselves for higher occupations. Among these are advanced
professional training programs administered by the regions.7 Legal
recognition of academic qualifications through an application with the
appropriate university or educational institutions, which must issue decisions within
prescribed periods, or recognition of professional titles such as nurses,
doctors, teachers, lawyers, accountants, biologists, consultants, and various
other expertise may be obtained through applications filed with the different
ministries. The basic requirements are a high level of knowledge of the Italian
language, and a valid permit to stay, aside from educational credentials and
other requirements. Scholarships and grants are also available to those wishing
to pursue higher studies.8 Some of the key informants suggested that Filipinos are not benefiting
from such programmes, as a good number of Filipinos are juggling multiple jobs
to augment their incomes to support the family’s immediate needs or pay for
various financial obligations, leaving no time for upgrading their skills.
Filipino migrants often do not have time for self-improvement because of
their multiple work engagements. In the words of Cristina Liamzon, a Filipino
advocate for socio-economic empowerment, Filipino migrant workers “lack the
confidence or mindset for self-improvement, in availing of language and
training programmes, or even educational grants, particularly those offered by
city or provincial authorities.” 9 This
stresses the need for more initiatives in capability building and raising
awareness of opportunities for the Filipino community. As many of these workers
are focused on increasing their incomes through hired work, and few are
self-employed, the Filipinos as a group miss out on the numerous
entrepreneurship programmes promoted by the Italian government. _0
Whether due to the pressure to provide for the family’s needs or to
cultural inhibition, a good number of Filipino workers prefer earning a stable
income by taking more than one domestic or caregiving job. Doing so enables
them to send more remittances and/or increase their savings. This is preferable
to upgrading their skills or handling a business that does not offer prospects
of financial gains in the short term. As the survey for this research reveals,
many depend on a stable high income to pay for investments, house
amortizations, insurance premiums and loans in the Philippines.
Those who advocate that in the long term, it would be beneficial for
migrant workers to take advantage of such training courses (which reportedly
are in abundance) may perhaps highlight stories of migrants who successfully
made the leap from domestic to professional or self-employed status.It is also
possible that there could be cultural barriers involved, since such training
courses are reportedly provided by Italian agencies in Italian language. It may
therefore be worth studying by the Philippine NGOs in Italy that they initiate
the conduct of such training courses in the embassy or Filipino church grounds.
A vehicle to do this might be the Filipino Workers Resource Center (FWRC),
whose successful FWRC skills training in Kuala Lumpur can be replicated in Rome
and/or Milan, where there are none at present.
Filipino youths in Italy. The family reunification policies of Italy
have provided for Italy-based Filipinos a remedial solution of sorts to address
issues relating to the prolonged absence of their loved ones, as well as
expanding their household’s income base. The outcome of the family
reunification, however, appeared to be a little rather more complex. For one,
there are concerns that Filipino youths in Italy face immense challenges,
including cultural adjustment and acculturation. Some are seen engaged in
socially destructive behaviour such as juvenile delinquency and drug abuse,
particularly among Filipino youths whose move to Italy was decided by their
parents. Given this opportunity to join their parents, there are also
documented cases of children not finishing their schooling in the Philippines
to join their parents in Italy and become domestic workers (Añonuevo & and
Añonuevo, 2002). The Italy–Philippines Migration and Remittance Corridor
The Italy–Philippines Migration and Remittance Corridor
In another survey of 99 Filipino youths and 101 parents and NGO workers
in Rome (Liamzon, 2007), it was found that:
• Filipino youths in school
face serious social and academic problems, given their lack of Italian language
skills that hinders them from making friends; and
• Filipino parents admit to
difficulty in dealing with the struggles their children face in integrating
into Italian society, especially in circumstances where many parents have the
desire to work extra hours to augment the family income. Children (especially those aged below 18 years old) complain of lack of
family time, and of the decision of their parents to have them come to Italy.
While documentation on the Filipino minor population is not available,
the issues that face the youth are worthy of consideration, as many of them
appear to have been forced to move to Italy in order to contribute to the
family income. Their inclusion in programs on the productive use of remittances
might be considered as early as possible, although psychosocial counselling
appears also to be a paramount need. In the long term, the real cause for
concern regarding migrant Filipino minors is the emergence of a generation of
OFs in Italy that pose new challenges to:
• both the sending and
receiving governments in terms of the demand for the smooth integration of the
young migrants transplanted in a new country;
• OFs who have to cope with
their socially and culturally challenged youth; • the Philippine government that must prepare for the future
reintegration of Italy-based
Filipinos that may want to return to the Philippines upon retirement or
old age.
The global economic crisis and Filipinos in Italy. Many expected the
global economic crisis that began in 2008 to affect migrants in various ways.
The impacts, as mentioned by IOM (2009), include:
• restrictions on new
admissions of migrant workers and non-renewal of work permits; • job losses, wage reductions, ineligibility
of newly arrived migrants for social benefits; • racism and xenophobia;
• return
migration of displaced migrant workers;
• diminished remittance
volumes for countries;
• increased
irregular migration; and
• specific
gender issues, e.g. which gender was more affected by job attrition.
The admission of new migrant workers was heavily restricted in Italy.
For the first time, in 2009, no quotas were provided for new workers except for
80,000 slots for non-EU seasonal workers. A report by the OECD (2009) states
that Italy may see its employers abandoning applications for immigrant workers. Last year, about 10,000 employers
withdrew requests for immigrant workers. However, it seems that demand for
domestic workers remains significant in Italy and elsewhere despite the
downturn. Most (at least two thirds) of the 2008 quota for foreign workers –
and the entire quota for entries in 2009 – are reserved for domestic and
personal care workers (OECD, 2009). Although the trends do not portend a doom
scenario for Filipino workers in Italy (including domestic workers), the
Filipinos’ economic survival and better management of resources remain urgent
needs.
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