In a municipal building in the heart of the alpine city of Bolzano, Stefano Baldo clocked out of work early for his breastfeeding break.
“It’s clear I don’t breastfeed,” Mr. Baldo, a 38-year-old transportation administrator, said in his office decorated with pictures of his wife and six children.
But with his wife home with a newborn, one of the parents was entitled by law to take the time, and he needed to pick up the kids.
But the Alto Adige-South Tyrol area and its capital, Bolzano, more than any other part of the country, bucked the trend and emerged as a parallel procreation universe for Italy, with its birthrate holding steady over decades.
The reason, experts say, is that the provincial government has over time developed a thick network of family-friendly benefits, going far beyond the one-off bonuses for babies that the national government offers.
Persons:
Stefano Baldo, Mr, Baldo, “, Giorgia Meloni, Pope Francis
Locations:
Bolzano, Italy, Europe, South Tyrol