Italy and ‘the fourth country in the OECD for the percentage of long-term unemployed (ie, people who do not work for a year or more’) of the total unemployed. And ‘what emerges from the OECD report on Italy the series’ Oecd360′.
From 2007 to 2013, the share of long-term unemployed to total unemployed and ‘climb in our country from 45% almost 60% , a percentage surpassed only by Ireland, Greece and Slovakia, bringing up the rear with a reading above 70%.On the other side of the ranking is South Korea, where the phenomenon of long-term unemployment would be, according to figures, almost ‘non-existent. Despite an adjusted disposable income per capita of households, amounting to $ 24,724 a year, is higher than the OECD average ($ 23,938 a year), in Italy “there is’ a significant gap between the more ‘rich and more’ poor “. “The 20% more ‘rich population”, the report says, “earns almost six times more’ than 20% more ‘poor’. In Italy tax revenues to 2011 amounted to about 950 billion dollars at current values, more than twice the OECD average, amounting to little more ‘than 400 billion dollars.
In the tax revenues Italian voice prevailing and ‘consists of contributions for social security (31.2%), followed by income tax and profits (26.8%) and taxes on goods and services (26.1%), which are the main source of revenue in the OECD average, with 32.9% (following the contributions to social security to 26.2% and taxes on income and gains to 24.4%). In 2012, household debt and Italian ‘rose to 94.2% of disposable income, a dramatic upsurge since 2000, when the figure stood at just below 60%. Simultaneously, she adds the organization of Paris, and ‘witnessed a sharp drop in household savings, which fell to 3.6% of disposable income in 2012, compared with about 10% in 2006.
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