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Italy invests big to bring life back to its dying villages

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Before World War I, Calascio, a stone and timber village high in Italy’s Apennine mountains, had a population of 2,500. That has now dwindled to less than 140.

But Calascio is one of 21 villages across Italy that are to receive €20 million ($21.7 million) each from the government in Rome. The funds are part of an unprecedented €200 billion in grants and low interest loans that the European Union is giving to Italy to help it recover from the post-pandemic economic slump.

Why We Wrote This

When trying to save dying villages, is it better to spread resources widely among all the needy communities, or to invest heavily in a select few? Italy is trying the latter.

About a quarter of the €20 million will be devoted to the Rocca Calascio castle, which sits atop a rocky outcrop above the village. There will be a school to teach the art of raising sheep – Calascio once grew rich on wool. Abandoned buildings will be turned into a space for new start-ups, with high hopes of attracting digital nomads who have the freedom to live where they want.

These projects should create around 100 jobs directly and indirectly, says the mayor.

But some have criticized the program, noting that it leaves many other villages wanting for aid. And Italy has an unhappy record of wasting public funds through red tape or corruption.

Calascio, Italy

On a blustery April morning, the winding cobbled streets are largely deserted in this stone and timber village high in Italy’s Apennine mountains.

A century ago, more than 100 children attended the local school. Now, the school is closed and just three children live in the village, one of them just a few months old – the first baby born in a decade. There were once four grocery shops; now there are none.

But all that may be about to change dramatically.

Why We Wrote This

When trying to save dying villages, is it better to spread resources widely among all the needy communities, or to invest heavily in a select few? Italy is trying the latter.

Calascio is one of 21 villages across Italy that are to receive €20 million ($21.7 million) each from the government in Rome. The money is intended to breathe new life into Italy’s abandoned and depopulated villages by restoring abandoned buildings, attracting new residents, and reversing decades of neglect.

The funds are part of an unprecedented €200 billion in grants and low interest loans that the European Union is giving to Italy to help it recover from the post-pandemic economic slump.

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