CIPG_20180526_WSJ_GenDivide_M3_2418.jpg
NAPLES, ITALY - 26 MAY 2018: Giada Gramanzini, a 29-year-old unemployed university graduate who moved back in with her retired parents, poses for a portrait in her childhood bedroom in Naples, Italy, on May 26th 2018.
Credit: Gianni Cipriano for The Wall Street Journal
Slug: GENDIVIDE
Giada Gramanzini hasn’t found a job since deciding last year not to renew a three-month contract as a fulltime receptionist that paid her 400 euros a month, or about $2.80 an hour. She sent out about 70 resumes in the past six months in search of a job where she can put her degree in foreign languages to work.
The Italian economy last year grew at its fastest rate since 2010, but the improvement hasn’t trickled down to millions of people in their 20s and 30s, leaving a yawning generation gap with their baby boomer parents.
Giada Gramanzini hasn’t found a job since deciding last year not to renew a three-month contract as a fulltime receptionist that paid her 400 euros a month, or about $2.80 an hour. She sent out about 70 resumes in the past six months in search of a job where she can put her degree in foreign languages to work.
The Italian economy last year grew at its fastest rate since 2010, but the improvement hasn’t trickled down to millions of people in their 20s and 30s, leaving a yawning generation gap with their baby boomer parents.
- Copyright
- ©2018 Gianni Cipriano
- Image Size
- 5760x3840 / 11.9MB
- www.giannicipriano.com
- Keywords
-
divide, economy, generation, generational, generazionale, italia, italy, job, naples, napoli, unemployment, work, youth
- Contained in galleries
- 20180526_WSJ_GenDivide

