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"Travelers to Italy this summer may find economic catastrophe as
omnipresent as monuments and sidewalk cafes, according to this former
editor-in-chief of the Economist. Emmottas breezy narrative provides a
quick overview of the beleaguered Italian economy and sketches some
background causes for its woes before offering glimpses of a brighter
future. He outlines how Italians would like to share the European belief
that public spending and taxation should be used to finance services
and redistribute after-tax incomes, but lack faith in governmentas
ability to do so aeffectively or equitably.a Traditionally, Italian
politicians have manipulated power for the protection and enrichment of
themselves and their friends, fulfilling a dual vision of government as
both provider and leech. Emmott also reflects upon the North-South
economic divide and the specter of Mafia power, suggesting that Italyas
strengths, paradoxically, largely mirror its defects; creative measures
are taken in defiance of prevailing conditions, like the aAddiopizzoa: a
youth movement challenging Mafia power. Little attention is paid to the
constraints of European Union membership or whether the much emphasized
Italian uniqueness truly exists. Regardless, Emmottas key insight may
be that the simplistic divide between aGood Italya and aBad Italya is
moral and philosophical, not economic, though failure to resolve the
conflict still threatens looming disaster." (Publishers Weekly)
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