PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
Italian Republic
Geography
Area: 301,225 sq. km. (116,303 sq. mi.); about
the size of Georgia and Florida combined.
Cities: Capital--Rome (pop. 2.8 million).
Other cities--Milan, Naples, Turin.
Terrain: Mostly rugged and mountainous.
Climate: Generally mild Mediterranean; cold
northern winters.
People
Nationality: Noun and adjective--Italian(s).
Population: 57.8 million.
Annual growth rate: 0.28%.
Ethnic groups: Primarily Italian, but there are
small groups of German-, French-, Slovene-, and
Albanian-Italians.
Religion: Roman Catholic (majority).
Language: Italian (official).
Education: Years compulsory--18.
Literacy--98%.
Health: Infant mortality rate--5.76/1,000
live births. Life expectancy--76.08 years
for men; 83.0 years for women.
Work force (23.8 million): Services--57.6%;
industry and commerce--28.9%;
agriculture--4.2%; unemployed--9.2%.
Government
Type: Republic since June 2, 1946.
Constitution: January 1, 1948.
Branches: Executive--president (chief of
state), Council of Ministers (cabinet), headed
by the president of the council (prime
minister). Legislative--bicameral
parliament: 630-member Chamber of Deputies,
315-member Senate (plus a varying number of
"life" Senators). Judicial--independent
constitutional court and lower magistracy.
Subdivisions: 94 provinces, 20 regions.
Political parties: Forza Italia, Democratic
Party of the Left, National Alliance, Northern
League, United Christian Democrats, Democrats,
Italian People's Party, Christian Democratic
Center, Socialist, Communist Renewal, Social
Democratic, Republican, Liberal, Greens, Italian
Renewal.
Suffrage: Vote for House; universal over 18;
vote for Senate; universal over 18.
Economy
GDP (purchasing power parity, 2005 est.): $1.645
trillion.
GDP per capita (purchasing power parity, 2005
est.): $28,300.
GDP growth: 0.1% (2005); 0.9% (2003 est.); 0.4%
(2002); 1.8% (2001).
Natural resources: Fish and natural gas.
Agriculture: Products--wheat, rice,
grapes, olives, citrus fruits, potatoes, sugar
beets, soybeans beef, dairy products.
Industry: Types--tourism, machinery,
iron and steel, chemicals, food processing,
textiles, motor vehicles, clothing, footwear,
ceramics.
Exports (2005 est.): $371.9 billion f.o.b.
Partners (2004)--Germany 13.6%, France
12.4%, U.S. 7.9%, Spain 7.3%, U.K. 7.1%;
mechanical products, textiles and apparel,
transportation equipment, metal products,
chemical products, food and agricultural
products. Imports (2005 est.): $369.2 billion
f.o.b. Partners (2004)--Germany 18%,
France 11%, Netherlands 5.9%, Spain 4.7%,
Belgium 4.5%, U.K. 4.3%, China 4.2%; machinery
and transport equipment, foodstuffs, ferrous and
nonferrous metals, wool, cotton, energy
products.
PEOPLE AND HISTORY
Italy is largely homogeneous linguistically and
religiously but is diverse culturally,
economically, and politically. Italy has the
fifth-highest population density in
Europe--about 200 persons per square kilometer
(490 per sq. mi.). Minority groups are small,
the largest being the German-speaking people of
Bolzano Province and the Slovenes around
Trieste. There are also small communities of
Albanian, Greek, Ladino, and French origin.
Immigration has increased in recent years,
however, while the Italian population is
declining overall due to low birth rates.
Although Roman Catholicism is the majority
religion--85% of native-born citizens are
nominally Catholic--all religious faiths are
provided equal freedom before the law by the
constitution.
Greeks settled in the southern tip of the
Italian Peninsula in the eighth and seventh
centuries B.C.; Etruscans, Romans, and others
inhabited the central and northern mainland. The
peninsula subsequently was unified under the
Roman Republic. The neighboring islands came
under Roman control by the third century B.C.;
by the first century A.D., the Roman Empire
effectively dominated the Mediterranean world.
After the collapse of the Roman Empire in the
West in the fifth century A.D., the peninsula
and islands were subjected to a series of
invasions, and political unity was lost. Italy
became an oft-changing succession of small
states, principalities, and kingdoms, which
fought among themselves and were subject to
ambitions of foreign powers. Popes of Rome ruled
central Italy; rivalries between the popes and
the Holy Roman Emperors, who claimed Italy as
their domain, often made the peninsula a
battleground.
The commercial prosperity of northern and
central Italian cities, beginning in the 11th
century, combined with the influence of the
Renaissance, mitigated somewhat the effects of
these medieval political rivalries. Although
Italy declined after the 16th century, the
Renaissance had strengthened the idea of a
single Italian nationality. By the early 19th
century, a nationalist movement developed and
led to the reunification of Italy--except for
Rome--in the 1860s. In 1861, Victor Emmanuel II
of the House of Savoy was proclaimed King of
Italy. Rome was incorporated in 1870. From 1870
until 1922, Italy was a constitutional monarchy
with a parliament elected under limited
suffrage.
20th-Century History
During World War I, Italy renounced its standing
alliance with Germany and Austria-Hungary and,
in 1915, entered the war on the side of the
Allies. Under the postwar settlement, Italy
received some former Austrian territory along
the northeast frontier. In 1922, Benito
Mussolini came to power and, over the next few
years, eliminated political parties, curtailed
personal liberties, and installed a fascist
dictatorship termed the Corporate State. The
king, with little or no effective power,
remained titular head of state.
Italy allied with Germany and declared war on
the United Kingdom and France in 1940. In 1941,
Italy--with the other Axis powers, Germany and
Japan--declared war on the United States and the
Soviet Union. Following the Allied invasion of
Sicily in 1943, the King dismissed Mussolini and
appointed Marshal Pietro Badoglio as Premier.
The Badoglio government declared war on Germany,
which quickly occupied most of the country and
freed Mussolini, who led a brief-lived regime in
the north. An anti-fascist popular resistance
movement grew during the last two years of the
war, harassing German forces before they were
driven out in April 1945. A 1946 plebiscite
ended the monarchy, and a constituent assembly
was elected to draw up plans for the republic.
Under the 1947 peace treaty, minor
adjustments were made in Italy's frontier with
France, the eastern border area was transferred
to Yugoslavia, and the area around the city of
Trieste was designated a free territory. In
1954, the free territory, which had remained
under the administration of U.S.-U.K. forces
(Zone A, including the city of Trieste) and
Yugoslav forces (Zone B), was divided between
Italy and Yugoslavia, principally along the
zonal boundary. This arrangement was made
permanent by the Italian-Yugoslav Treaty of
Osimo, ratified in 1977 (currently being
discussed by Italy, Slovenia, and Croatia).
Under the 1947 peace treaty, Italy relinquished
its overseas territories and certain
Mediterranean islands.
The Roman Catholic Church's status in Italy
has been determined, since its temporal powers
ended in 1870, by a series of accords with the
Italian Government. Under the Lateran Pacts of
1929, which were confirmed by the present
constitution, Vatican City is recognized by
Italy as an independent, sovereign entity. While
preserving that recognition, in 1984, Italy and
the Vatican updated several provisions of the
1929 accords. Included was the end of Roman
Catholicism as Italy's formal state religion.
Italy's Cultural Contributions
Europe's Renaissance period began in Italy
during the 14th and 15th centuries. Literary
achievements--such as the poetry of Petrarch,
Tasso, and Ariosto and the prose of Boccaccio,
Machiavelli, and Castiglione--exerted a
tremendous and lasting influence on the
subsequent development of Western civilization,
as did the painting, sculpture, and architecture
contributed by giants such as da Vinci, Raphael,
Botticelli, Fra Angelico, and Michelangelo.
The musical influence of Italian composers
Monteverdi, Palestrina, and Vivaldi proved
epochal; in the 19th century, Italian romantic
opera flourished under composers Gioacchino
Rossini, Giuseppe Verdi, and Giacomo Puccini.
Contemporary Italian artists, writers,
filmmakers, architects, composers, and designers
contribute significantly to Western culture.
GOVERNMENT
Italy has been a democratic republic since June
2, 1946, when the monarchy was abolished by
popular referendum. The constitution was
promulgated on January 1, 1948.
The Italian state is centralized. The prefect
of each of the provinces is appointed by and
answerable to the central government. In
addition to the provinces, the constitution
provides for 20 regions with limited governing
powers. Five regions--Sardinia, Sicily, Trentino-Alto
Adige, Valle d'Aosta, and Friuli-Venezia
Giulia--function with special autonomy statutes.
The other 15 regions were established in 1970
and vote for regional "councils." The
establishment of regional governments throughout
Italy has brought some decentralization to the
national governmental machinery, and recent
governments have devolved further powers to the
regions. Many regional governments, particularly
in the north of Italy, are seeking additional
powers.
The 1948 constitution established a bicameral
parliament (Chamber of Deputies and Senate), a
separate judiciary, and an executive branch
composed of a Council of Ministers (cabinet),
headed by the president of the council (prime
minister). The president of the republic is
elected for seven years by the parliament
sitting jointly with a small number of regional
delegates. The president nominates the prime
minister, who chooses the other ministers. The
Council of Ministers--in practice composed
mostly of members of parliament--must retain the
confidence of both houses.
The houses of parliament are popularly and
directly elected by a proportional
representation system. Under 2005 legislation,
the Chamber of Deputies has 630 members (12 of
which are elected by Italians abroad). In
addition to 315 elected members (six of which
are elected by Italians abroad), the Senate
includes former presidents and several other
persons appointed for life according to special
constitutional provisions. Both houses are
elected for a maximum of five years, but either
may be dissolved before the expiration of its
normal term. Legislative bills may originate in
either house and must be passed by a majority in
both.
The Italian judicial system is based on Roman
law modified by the Napoleonic code and
subsequent statutes. There is only partial
judicial review of legislation in the American
sense. A constitutional court, which passes on
the constitutionality of laws, is a post-World
War II innovation. Its powers, volume, and
frequency of decisions are not as extensive as
those of the U.S. Supreme Court.
Principal Government Officials
President--Giorgio Napolitano
Prime Minister--Romano Prodi
Foreign Minister--Massimo D’Alema
Minister of Defense--Arturo Parisi
Minister of Finance--Tommaso Padoa-Schioppa
Minister of Justice--Clemente Mastella
Minister of the Interior--Giuliano Amato
Ambassador to the United States--Giovanni
Castellaneta
Italy maintains an
embassy in the United States at 3000
Whitehaven Street, NW, Washington, DC 20008
(tel. 202-612-4400).
POLITICAL CONDITIONS
Until recently, there had been frequent
government turnovers since 1945. The dominance
of the Christian Democratic (DC) party during
much of the postwar period lent continuity and
comparative stability to Italy's political
situation.
From 1992 to 1997, Italy faced significant
challenges as voters--disenchanted with past
political paralysis, massive government debt,
extensive corruption, and organized crime's
considerable influence--demanded political,
economic, and ethical reforms. In 1993
referendums, voters approved substantial
changes, including moving from a proportional to
a largely majoritarian electoral system and the
abolishment of some ministries. However in 2005,
parliament passed a new electoral law based on
full proportional assignment of seats.
Major political parties, beset by scandal and
loss of voter confidence, underwent far-reaching
changes. New political forces and new alignments
of power emerged in March 1994 national
elections. The election saw a major turnover in
the new parliament, with 452 out of 630 deputies
and 213 out of 315 senators elected for the
first time. The 1994 elections also swept media
magnate Silvio Berlusconi--and his Freedom Pole
coalition--into office as Prime Minister.
Berlusconi, however, was forced to step down in
January 1995 when one member of his coalition
withdrew support. The Berlusconi government was
succeeded by a technical government headed by
Prime Minister Lamberto Dini, which fell in
early 1996. New elections in 1996 brought a
center-left coalition to government for the
first time after World War II.
A series of center-left coalitions dominated
Italy's political landscape between 1996 and
2001. In April 1996, national elections led to
the victory of a center-left coalition (the
Olive Tree) under the leadership of Romano Prodi.
Prodi's government became the second-longest to
stay in power before he narrowly lost a vote of
confidence (by three votes) in October 1998. A
new government was formed by Democratic Party of
the Left leader and former-communist Massimo
D'Alema. In April 2000, following a poor showing
by his coalition in regional elections, D'Alema
resigned. The succeeding center-left government,
including most of the same parties, was headed
by Giuliano Amato, who previously served as
Prime Minister in 1992-93.
National elections, held on May 13, 2001,
returned Berlusconi to power at the head of the
five-party center-right Freedom House coalition,
comprising the prime minister's own party, Forza
Italia, the National Alliance, the Northern
League, the Christian Democratic Center, and the
United Christian Democrats. In April 2005, a
poor showing in regional elections and
dissatisfaction with the focus of the
government’s program among center-right
coalition members forced Prime Minister
Berlusconi to resign and form a new government.
The 60th government since the liberation of
Italy was formed on April 23, 2005, with a new
program emphasizing economic concerns. The
previous Berlusconi government was the longest
serving in Italy’s post-war history.
In national elections held April 9-10, 2006,
Romano Prodi’s center-left Union coalition won a
narrow victory over Berlusconi’s Freedom House
coalition. The Union coalition includes the
Democratic Party of the Left, the Daisy Party,
Communist Refoundation, the Greens, the Social
Democrats, and six other parties.
In May 2006, the parliament selected Giorgio
Napolitano of the Democratic Party of the Left
as the Republic's President. President
Napolitano formerly served as a lifetime
senator, Minister of the Interior, and a Member
of the European Parliament. President
Napolitano's term ends in May 2013. The Senate,
lower house, and regional representatives will
vote to elect his successor.
Political Parties
Italy's dramatic self-renewal transformed the
political landscape between 1992 and 1997.
Scandal investigations touched thousands of
politicians, administrators, and businessmen;
the shift from a proportional to majoritarian
voting system--with the requirement to obtain a
minimum of 4% of the national vote to obtain
representation--also altered the political
landscape.
Party changes were sweeping. The Christian
Democratic party dissolved; the Italian People's
Party and the Christian Democratic Center
emerged. Other major parties, such as the
Socialists, saw support plummet. A new populist,
and free-market orientated movement, Forza
Italia, gained wide support among moderate
voters. The National Alliance broke from the
neofascist Italian Social Movement. A trend
toward two large coalitions--one on the
center-left and the other on the
center-right--emerged from the April 1995
regional elections. For the 1996 national
elections, the center-left parties created the
Olive Tree coalition while the center right
united again under the Freedom Pole. The May
2001 elections ushered into power a refashioned
center-right coalition dominated by Berlusconi's
party, Forza Italia. The April 2006 elections
returned the center-left to power under the
Union coalition, a successor to the Olive Tree.
Freedom House now sits in the opposition. This
emerging bipolarity represents a major break
from the fragmented, multi-party political
landscape of the postwar era, although it
appears to have reached a plateau, since efforts
via referendums to further curtail the influence
of small parties were defeated in 1999 and 2000.
The largest parties in the Chamber of
Deputies are Olive Tree (31.3%), now a party
within the broader Union coalition comprised of
the Democrats of the Left, the Daisy Party, and
the European Republican Movement; Forza Italia
(23.7%); the National Alliance (12.3%); the
Union of Christian and Center Democrats (6.8%);
and the Communist Refoundation Party (5.8%).
Similar rankings generally apply in the Senate,
in which the Olive Tree and Forza Italia are the
dominant parties.
ECONOMY
The Italian economy has changed dramatically
since the end of World War II. From an
agriculturally based economy, it has developed
into an industrial state ranked as the world's
sixth-largest market economy. Italy belongs to
the Group of Eight (G-8) industrialized nations;
it is a member of the European Union and the
Organization for Economic Cooperation and
Development (OECD).
Italy has few natural resources. With much
land unsuited for farming, Italy is a net food
importer. There are no substantial deposits of
iron, coal, or oil. Proven natural gas reserves,
mainly in the Po Valley and offshore Adriatic,
constitute the country's most important mineral
resource. Most raw materials needed for
manufacturing and more than 80% of the country's
energy sources are imported. Italy's economic
strength is in the processing and the
manufacturing of goods, primarily in small and
medium-sized family-owned firms. Its major
industries are precision machinery, motor
vehicles, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, electric
goods, and fashion and clothing.
Italy is in the midst of a slow economic
recovery from the aftermath of September 11,
2001, and the global economy's tailspin. While
Italy’s economic growth averaged only 0.66% for
the last five years, 2006 GDP growth should
reach 1.5%, largely due to growth in the Euro
zone area.
Italy continues to grapple with excessive
budget deficits and high public debt--4.3% and
108% of GDP expected in 2006, respectively.
Italy joined the European Monetary Union in 1998
by signing the Stability and Growth Pact, and as
a condition of this Euro Zone membership, Italy
must keep its budget deficit beneath a 3%
ceiling. In June 2006, the European Commission
warned Italy it must bring the deficit down to
that level by 2007. Italy must either cut its
spending dramatically and/or raise new revenue;
most such measures will require real political
will and buy-in from the Italian public. The
rise in public debt has also caused some credit
rating agencies to lower Italy's sovereign debt
rating.
Italy's closest trade ties are with the other
countries of the European Union, with whom it
conducts about 54.4% of its total trade (2002
data). Italy's largest EU trade partners, in
order of market share, are Germany (15.5%),
France (11.6%), and the United Kingdom (5.9%).
Italy continues to grapple with the effects of
globalization, where certain countries (notably
China) have eroded the Italian lower-end
industrial product sector.
The Italian economy is also affected by a
large underground economy--worth some 27% of
Italy’s GDP. This production is not subject, of
course, to taxation and thus remains a source of
lost revenue to the local and central
government.
U.S.-Italy Economic Relations
The United States and Italy cooperate closely on
major economic issues, including within the G-8.
With a large population and a high per capita
income, Italy was the United States'
eleventh-largest trading partner in 2005, with
total bilateral trade of $42.5 billion comprised
of exports to Italy totaling $11.5 billion and
imports from Italy worth $31.0 billion. The U.S.
ran a $19.5 billion deficit with Italy in 2005,
up from $17.4 billion in 2004. Part of this
imbalance has been due to a strong dollar.
Significant changes are occurring in the
composition of this trade. Value-added products
such as office machinery and aircraft are
becoming important U.S. exports to Italy. U.S.
foreign direct investment in Italy at the end of
2004 exceeded $33.3 billion.
Labor
Unemployment is a regional issue in Italy--low
in the north, high in the south. The overall
national rate is at its lowest level since 1992.
Chronic problems of inadequate infrastructure,
corruption, and organized crime act as
disincentives to investment and job creation in
the south. A significant underground economy
absorbs substantial numbers of people, but they
work for low wages and without standard social
benefits and protections. Women and youth have
significantly higher rates of unemployment than
do men.
Unions claim to represent 40% of the work
force. Most Italian unions are grouped in four
major confederations: the General Italian
Confederation of Labor (CGIL), the Italian
Confederation of Workers' Unions (CISL), the
Italian Union of Labor (UIL), and the General
Union of Labor (UGL), which together claim 35%
of the work force. These confederations formerly
were associated with important political parties
or currents, but they have evolved info fully
autonomous, professional bodies. The CGIL, CISL,
and UIL are affiliated with the International
Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU) and
customarily coordinate their positions before
confronting management or lobbying the
government. The confederations have had an
important consultative role on national social
and economic issues. Among their major
agreements are a 4-year wage moderation
agreement signed in 1993, a reform of the
pension system in 1995, and an employment pact,
introducing steps for labor market flexibility
in economically depressed areas, in 1996. In
April 2002, unions held a general strike to
protest against labor reforms proposed by Prime
Minister Berlusconi.
Agriculture
Italy's agriculture is typical of the division
between the agricultures of the northern and
southern countries of the European Union. The
northern part of Italy produces primarily
grains, sugarbeets, soybeans, meat, and dairy
products, while the south specializes in
producing fruits, vegetables, olive oil, wine,
and durum wheat. Even though much of its
mountainous terrain is unsuitable for farming,
Italy has a large work force (1.4 million)
employed in farming. Most farms are small, with
the average farm only seven hectares.
For further economic and commercial
information, please refer to the
Country Commercial Guide for Italy.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
Italy was a founding member of the European
Community--now the European Union (EU). Italy
was admitted to the United Nations in 1955 and
is a member and strong supporter of the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), the
Organization for Economic Cooperation and
Development (OECD), the General Agreement on
Tariffs and Trade/World Trade Organization
(GATT/WTO), the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), and the Council of
Europe. It chaired the CSCE (the forerunner of
the OSCE) in 1994, the EU in 1996, and the G-8
in 2001 and served as EU president from July to
December 2003.
Italy firmly supports the United Nations and
its international security activities. Italy
actively participated in and deployed troops in
support of UN peacekeeping missions in Somalia,
Mozambique, and East Timor and provides critical
support for NATO and UN operations in Bosnia,
Kosovo, and Albania. Italy deployed 1,000 Alpini
troops to Afghanistan in support of Operation
Enduring Freedom (OEF) in February 2003. Italy
also supports international efforts to
reconstruct and stabilize Iraq through its
military contingent of some 2,800 troops, as
well as humanitarian workers and other
officials. The troops remain in Iraq under UN
mandate and at the request of the sovereign
Iraqi Government.
The Italian Government seeks to obtain
consensus with other European countries on
various defense and security issues within the
EU as well as NATO. European integration and the
development of common defense and security
policies will continue to be of primary interest
to Italy.
U.S.-ITALY RELATIONS
The United States enjoys warm and friendly
relations with Italy. Italy is a leading partner
in the war against terrorism. The two are NATO
allies and cooperate in the United Nations, in
various regional organizations, and bilaterally
for peace, prosperity, and security. Italy has
worked closely with the United States and others
on such issues as NATO and UN operations as well
as with assistance to Russia and the New
Independent States; the Middle East peace
process; multilateral talks; Somalia and
Mozambique peacekeeping; and combating drug
trafficking, trafficking in women and children,
and terrorism.
Under longstanding bilateral agreements
flowing from NATO membership, Italy hosts
important U.S. military forces at Vicenza and
Livorno (army); Aviano (air force); and
Sigonella, Gaeta, and Naples--home port for the
U.S. Navy Sixth Fleet. The United States has
about 16,000 military personnel stationed in
Italy. Italy hosts the NATO War College in Rome.
Italy remains a strong and active
transatlantic partner which, along with the
United States, has sought to foster democratic
ideals and international cooperation in areas of
strife and civil conflict. Toward this end, the
Italian Government has cooperated with the
United States in the formulation of defense,
security, and peacekeeping policies.
Principal U.S. Officials
Ambassador--Ronald
P. Spogli
Deputy Chief of Mission--Anna Borg
Economic Affairs--Kathleen Reddy
Political Affairs--David Pearce
Consular Affairs--Barbara Cummings
Public Affairs--John P. Dwyer
Commercial Affairs--vacant
Regional Security Affairs--Nancy Rolph-O’Donnell
Agricultural Section--Geoffrey Wiggin
Defense Attache--Col. Rolf Yngve
Consular Posts
Consul General, Florence--Nora Dempsey
Consul General, Milan--Deborah Graze
Consul General, Naples--Suneta Halliburton
The
U.S. Embassy in Italy is located at Via
Veneto 119, Rome (tel. (39)(06) 46741.