The comparison

Young people, more and more alone and less and less: over 2 million 25-34 year olds lost in 20 years

Institutions and the Third Sector join forces to combat isolation and educational poverty. On the occasion of the round table 'With young people, against violence. Preventing distress and defending relationships for a Zero NEET Lombardy", the Asilo Mariuccia Foundation turned the spotlight on a generation in distress

by School Editorial

6' min read

Translated by AI
Versione italiana

6' min read

Translated by AI
Versione italiana

There is a generation in danger of becoming the most fragile and numerically smallest in recent Italian history. A silent army of young people struggling to enter the world of work, to train and to build stable relationships. Their presence in society is thinning and with it the life force of an ageing country. According to the most recent ISTAT data, in the last twenty years the 25-34 age group has lost more than 2.3 million individuals: there were more than 8.6 million in 2004 and today there are about 6.3 million, or 10.6% of the Italian population. The Cnel Report 'Demography and the Labour Force' also points out that those employed in this bracket have fallen from over 6 million to around 4.2 million, reducing their weight among workers from 27.1% to 17.8%.

Generational imbalance

A decline that reflects a broader generational imbalance: in Italy, the under-15s are now less than half of the over-65s, and soon they will be less than one in three. This demographic fragility is compounded by an equally significant social fragility: according to Eurostat, Italy has one of the highest incidences of NEETs (young people who do not study, do not work) in Europe, second only to Romania (19.4%), with 15.2% of young people between the ages of 15 and 29 out of education or work, compared to an EU average of 11%. "The condition of NEETs represents one of the most worrying signs in our society. Its incidence measures the waste of human capital of the new generations. Italy, unfortunately, remains among the European countries with the highest levels: a paradox, considering that we are also among those with the fewest young people and with a more pronounced process of 'degrowth'. Strengthening training and the link between school and work is the decisive investment to ensure economic vitality, innovation and social sustainability,' says Alessandro Rosina, sociologist and lecturer at the Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore.

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Emergency scenario

It is precisely in the face of this generational emergency scenario that the Asilo Mariuccia Foundation, which for over a century has been a point of reference for the reception and training of young people in vulnerable situations, is relaunching its commitment. It does so by promoting, in collaboration with the Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore and ALTIS Graduate School of Sustainable Management, the round table "With young people, against violence. Preventing discomfort and defending relationships for a Zero NEET Lombardy'. The latter was sponsored by the Lombardy Region, the Municipality of Milan and UNEBA Lombardy. "The data on NEETs in Italy are alarming and cannot leave us indifferent. The Università Cattolica is therefore in the front line to take its share of responsibility and ensure that the situation improves. The heart of our educational mission is expressed in education power. The numbers I have mentioned will not improve if we do not start from education through targeted and synergetic projects. This is why the Athenaeum of Italian Catholics is committed, first and foremost, to partnerships such as this one with the Asilo Mariuccia Foundation, so that common action strategies can be outlined. I believe this is the real mission of a university, like ours, that wants to be in society and at the service of society,' adds Elena Beccalli, Rector of the Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore.

Reflection on a fragile picture

An opportunity to turn the spotlight on a picture of fragility that is not only measured in numbers, but also in the perception of well-being. Those with a low educational qualification tend to feel worse off, a sign of how education remains a decisive factor in emancipation. According to Fondazione Cariplo's Inequalities Report 2025, in fact, among people with lower levels of education the feeling of progress, especially economic progress, is much less widespread than the average. The relational dimension is also affected: only 57% of the population declares itself satisfied with its social life, in terms of relationships, friendships and integration in its community, a figure that falls further among those with less integration or educational opportunities. "One does not become NEET overnight. This is well told by the young people we met. At first something gets jammed, then that crack doesn't get repaired, it seems to stay there defenceless and instead it is generating a chasm, which then drags you down: failures, social isolation, lack of self-esteem and what seemed like a hill becomes a mountain to be overcome without any equipment among other things. Those who are close to young people must be able to pick up on the signals that arrive; that is why we say that the blossoming of a young person is a collective process. What gives us confidence are the stories of those young people who overcame difficulties, who did not drop out of school even when they were about to do so, or if they did, they had someone who helped them get back on the path,' says Giovanni Azzone, president of Fondazione Cariplo.

Fragility and Exclusion

Where fragility risks translating into exclusion, the Asilo Mariuccia Foundation intervenes with a daily commitment to help young people regain confidence, skills and autonomy. Among the most significant projects are Coltivare Inclusione, dedicated to floriculture for Italian and foreign youngsters in the area with scholastic or social difficulties, and IntegrAzione, boat carpentry workshops on Lake Maggiore where 30 unaccompanied foreign minors learned technical and relational skills.

To date, more than 500 young people have been trained through work education workshops. While the new and ambitious project 'Un Porto Nuovo' envisages the renovation of the educational centre in Porto Valtravaglia (Varese): thanks to a funding of 3 million euro (Cariplo Foundation and Lombardy Region, together with the Presidency of the Council of Ministers), it will be possible to triple the centre's receptive capacity with the opening of 2 new communities; 5 work education workshops (floriculture, ship carpentry, mechatronics, cooking, barber shop); a sports centre and a day centre, welcoming up to 90 young people every day in training and self-employment paths. "Accompanying a young person on his path to rebirth means offering him not only help, but a sense of belonging," emphasises Emanuela Baio, President of Asilo Mariuccia Foundation. We restore dignity, confidence and autonomy, starting with what is often lacking: respect for each person's identity. We are facing a challenge that is as much cultural as social: to show that no child is irredeemable, if they find adults capable of truly believing in them'.


"We are pleased with the partnership we have started with the Asilo Mariuccia Foundation, which will be developed on two fronts: on the one hand, the training of people working in the Third Sector, in order to contribute to the growth of increasingly competent and aware managerial figures; on the other hand, the fight against the NEET phenomenon, with the creation of an impact measurement system - in particular for the Porto Valtravaglia project - and with the elaboration of innovative models to support the development of the Third Sector, especially in the area of hybrid organisations with commercial purposes but oriented towards social value,' says Matteo Pedrini, director of ALTIS.

Institutions and Academia

A commitment also shared by the institutions and the academic world to reiterate the need for choral action to support the new generations in order to build a truly 'zero NEET' Lombardy. A region in which, as revealed by a recent study by Assolombarda, the share of NEETs is 8.9% in 2024. "The mission of the Asilo Mariuccia Foundation, a historic bastion of Milanese hospitality, takes on even greater value in the light of the fight against the NEET phenomenon. Conscious citizenship is the key: with training and work paths that not only respond to the social emergency, but also represent a real investment in the future, promoting autonomy and strengthening the sense of belonging to the community," declares Attilio Fontana, President of the Lombardy Region.

"Creating connections between NEETs and the world of the university is not an oxymoron but tells us what we have been doing in Caivano in recent months. Developing professional pathways that allow people to enter the world of work is not only an opportunity for NEETs, but also for our territories. Because upstream of these paths is the study of the social and cultural reality of communities. In Caivano, for example, given the long tradition of craftsmanship in that area, we have focused on the development of these profiles, but also on restoration, landscaping and food. We must continue to grow collaborations with the many important training centres that are present in our country, and in this key, the work carried out by the Asilo Mariuccia Foundation is very important," comments Fabio Ciciliano, extraordinary government commissioner for infrastructural and social redevelopment interventions functional to areas of high vulnerability

"Faced with a generation that, as these numbers show us plastically, risks feeling marginalised, society must be able to respond with concrete actions that allow young people to be protagonists of their future. It is a challenge that not only concerns the creation of opportunities, but also the construction of that social cohesion that is essential for everyone to feel an active part of a community. It is a challenge that concerns one and all: from the institutions to the educational world, from businesses to civil society to the Third Sector, in a synergy that leaves no one behind,' concludes Lamberto Bertolè, Councillor for Welfare and Health, Municipality of Milan.

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