&w=3840&q=100)
Italy opens 500,000 jobs for foreigners by 2028: How Indians can benefit
The move comes amid a growing labour shortage in the eurozone's third-largest economy. The Italian government said the decision would facilitate 'the entry into Italy of essential labour that is indispensable to the national economic and production system and otherwise unavailable domestically'.
The decree sets an annual cap of 164,850 new entries in 2025, with a target of 497,550 over four years. It is the second such decision under Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, who has now authorised more than 950,000 legal entries since she took office in 2022.
Demand growing despite tough stance on migration
The policy comes despite the ruling coalition's tough rhetoric on migration. Meloni's government has repeatedly promised tighter border control and action against undocumented arrivals, but has also admitted that Italy's ageing population and shrinking workforce require foreign labour.
The latest decree will cover seasonal and non-seasonal workers, home carers, and highly skilled professionals.
'Our government—and many others in Europe—wants to ensure that migration is based on labour market needs. We do not want human traffickers determining who enters; we want democratic, fair systems that give migrants opportunities for integration and decent lives,' said Antonio Bartoli, Italian Ambassador to India.
Opportunity for Indian workers
Speaking at the launch of the Global Access to Talent from India (GATI) Foundation in New Delhi this May, Bartoli pointed to the demographic gap that links Italy and India.
'We (Italians) are getting older. Currently, 23% of Italy's population is over 65. By 2050, this will rise to 34%,' he said. 'At the same time, India's working-age population will grow by 63 million by 2030 and 120.8 million by 2040.'
'This ageing trend is creating labour market pressures across multiple key sectors, from healthcare to advanced manufacturing and digital services,' Bartoli said.
In 2024, around 70% of Italian companies reported difficulties recruiting. The government estimates a shortage of:
• 258,000 workers in services like trade, restaurants, and hotels
• 45,000 doctors and 65,000 nurses in healthcare
• 280,000 skilled workers in engineering and green economy sectors
• Specialists in AI, cybersecurity, and data science
The ambassador called this a 'natural structural synergy' between the two countries, noting that India could help meet Italy's labour demand if legal channels were strengthened.
Legal migration takes priority
Bartoli also flagged the importance of maintaining legal pathways and cracking down on irregular entries.
'We do not want to see migration flows controlled by traffickers or unsafe journeys,' he said. 'We want regular migration that meets our labour needs and allows for integration.'
Meloni has repeated similar concerns, insisting that while Italy needs some legal migrants, it will continue cracking down on undocumented arrivals.
The latest decree also includes incentives for countries that actively promote legal migration and public messaging against irregular routes.
As per India's external affairs ministry, 167,333 Indians are currently residing in Italy. With the new decree, this number is expected to grow steadily as more workers enter legally through job-linked permits.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Time of India
39 minutes ago
- Time of India
Indian envoy to Paraguay discusses biz opportunities with UP minister
Lucknow: Indian ambassador to the Republic of Paraguay, Piyush Singh, met Uttar Pradesh's minister of industrial development, Nand Gopal Gupta 'Nandi', on Wednesday to explore avenues for bilateral cooperation. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now During the meeting, the minister briefed the ambassador on the state's rapid industrial progress and its emergence as a key investment destination. The ambassador informed the minister that business community in Paraguay was particularly interested in India's agri-tech platforms. He also conveyed Paraguay's strong condemnation of the recent terrorist attack in Pahalgam, and reaffirmed its support for India in the global fight against terrorism. The two also discussed potential collaboration in sectors such as trade, agriculture, healthcare, and information technology. Nandi extended an invitation to Paraguayan investors, entrepreneurs, and traders to participate in the five-day International Trade Show scheduled to be held in Noida in Sept 2025, highlighting the event as a platform to connect with the state's economic, social, cultural, and developmental achievements. Invest UP CEO Vijay Kiran Anand, MD of Pickup, Piyush Verma, joint export commissioner Pawan Agarwal, and other officials were also present.


Time of India
44 minutes ago
- Time of India
Biased output, privacy violation, unauthorised data sharing due to AI can have serious ramifications for India Inc
Live Events (You can now subscribe to our (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel Mumbai: As India Inc rushes to adopt AI, internal auditors are sounding the alarm over a perceived lack of robust controls, ethical safeguards, and governance auditors are warning that many companies may be inadvertently exposing themselves to serious risks such as biased outputs, privacy violations, unauthorised data sharing, and opaque decision-making by AI models, potentially causing legal and financial liabilities, and operational are worried that boards and top management are largely unaware of the scale of AI experimentation taking place at the ground level in Indian companies.A Microsoft study showed that India's rapid adoption of Artificial Intelligence (AI), with 65% of surveyed Indians having used AI, is more than double the global average of 31%."Most organisations are using AI with the best intentions-whether for efficiency, productivity, faster time to market, staying ahead of the curve, or market defence. But, in their pursuit of these goals, governance may not have received as much attention," said Ritesh Tiwari, partner and national leader for governance, risk & compliance services at KPMG in said the biggest concern currently is the lack of adequate board-level engagement on the issue. "Ethical usage of AI has to be a boardroom topic. Without the top-down commitment, it's a ticking time bomb. One wrong deployment, one biased output-and the reputational damage could be massive," said Tiwari. "We do tests for bias where mandated, but in many companies, it's not yet part of their risk culture. That's something we're pushing to change."Globally, there have been several high-profile instances of AI failures, from Amazon's recruiting tool showing bias against women to Microsoft's Tay chatbot generating offensive content, Facebook's Cambridge Analytica data scandal, and McDonald's Drive-Thru AI Indian organisations become increasingly aware of the risks associated with AI deployments, they are also strengthening their oversight and governance mechanisms to manage these challenges."Organisations have now started to ask that internal audits specifically cover the AI adoption lifecycle, looking at everything from pre-development planning to post-deployment performance," said Sunil Bhadu, partner and India GRC leader at PwC India. "The focus is typically on the governance framework and policies, design compliance with industry standards, workflow integrity, and robust working processes to ensure that these models aren't hallucinating or generating misleading results."Internal auditors emphasise that Indian firms have to realise the value of building trustworthy AI by design. "With global incidents highlighting the risks, mature organisations are proactively seeking guidance on managing AI-related risks. They're turning to recent frameworks like the EU AI Act, the NIST AI Risk Management Framework, and Deloitte's own Trustworthy AI model, asking, can our systems be reviewed and benchmarked against these frameworks to ensure responsible development and deployment?" said Anthony Crasto, president, assurance at Deloitte South crucial factor in internal audits of AI models is cybersecurity and privacy, given AI systems often process sensitive personal and business data, using complex codebases, and can be vulnerable to adversarial attacks or prompt injection if not properly secured."From a security and privacy lens, we're also testing the algorithm logic, reviewing adherence to secure coding principles and business objectives, and data protection norms, and carrying out vulnerability assessments, etc. Data privacy is a growing area of concern," said Crasto. On their part, auditors are doing closer scrutiny of aspects like training, testing, and validation of these models, since flaws at the foundational stages could lead to biased, unreliable, or even unsafe outputs once deployed."We ask the companies: Is there a documented AI policy? Is it aligned with global frameworks? We assess the policy's treatment of privacy, security, responsibility, human-in-the-loop accountability, transparency, model bias and explainability," said Crasto.


India Today
an hour ago
- India Today
PM Modi receives grand welcome on historic visit to Ghana, meets President Mahama
Prime Minister Narendra Modi arrived in Ghana on Wednesday for a two-day visit, marking his first bilateral trip to the West African nation. His arrival at Kotoka International Airport in Accra was met with a ceremonial guard of honour, along with a 21-gun salute, and a warm reception by Ghanaian President John Dramani Mahama. advertisementPM Narendra Modi was also greeted with a traditional Ghanaian welcome that included music and dance, reflecting the deep cultural and historical ties between the two nations. This is the first visit by an Indian Prime Minister to Ghana in 30 years, and this shows India's commitment to strengthening its partnership with African countries. MEA Spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal shared the significance of the visit, calling it a historic moment and a symbol of the enduring bond between India and Ghana, forged during their shared struggles against colonialism. advertisement Upon his arrival at his hotel in Accra, PM Narendra Modi was greeted by a large number of members from the Indian community in Ghana, which is home to a diaspora of over 15,000 people. Later in the day, PM Narendra Modi held a delegation-level meeting with President Mahama at Jubilee House in Accra. The two leaders discussed ways to enhance bilateral cooperation and reviewed progress in various sectors of mutual interest. PM Modi also shared his thoughts on social media, tweeting, "Landed in Accra, Ghana. I'm honoured by the special gesture of President John Dramani Mahama for welcoming me at the airport. Our nations look forward to working together to strengthen our long-standing relationship and explore fresh avenues for collaboration." The visit to Ghana is the first leg of a broader diplomatic tour by PM Modi, which will next take him to Trinidad and Tobago from July 3 to 4. He will then visit Argentina on July 4 and 5. In the fourth leg of his journey, PM will attend the 17th BRICS Summit in Brazil and also participate in a state visit. The final leg of the tour will conclude in Namibia.- Ends