If you missed between staircases, steps and windows pension, if you hear talk of "survivors and survivors' you get scared thinking about the effects described in the warnings of unwanted medicines, if you believe that Bismarck and Beveridge have participated in European soccer, now is time, probably starting to inform you about your future retirement. There is no need to go comb through the various pieces of legislation, reforms, and counter-articulated at all. It is released in the last library book Giuliano Cazzola, elected to the House of the People in the ranks of freedom and social security law professor at the University of Bologna: "The pensions explained to my grandmother," published by Rubbettino. Imaginary interlocutor is the grandmother Virginia, but the author's attention is dedicated to beginners and the curious matter in general. Cazzola has produced a guide, the reading of which reveals itself accessible, straightforward and to allow everyone to get an idea not only their rights but also "how and why it is necessary to keep in mind the rights of others to claim their own, avoiding at the same time to kick us in the quagmire of clichés. But in fact his grandmother Virginia is only a pretext editorial, because the real intentions of the author are those aimed at young people, which become, in this way, recipients of a message, the issuer may be a grandfather expert, who teaches them how to defend themselves from the contrast of generations for which they are protagonists. The invitation to the younger generation is to find a "class consciousness", to face the modern class struggle belongs to our century, which sees expectations and needs of children in competition with the prerogatives of the fathers. Already in a previous essay four years ago, the author argued that in a society divided into castes and gerontocratic like ours, young people belong to a generation invisible, for all'infimo step. ("Work and welfare: young versus old. Conflict between generations or class struggle of the twenty-first century?" Rubbettino, 2004). But a generation prone to idolize San Precarious and convinced that the 'class enemy "staying in the economy moves away from the epicenter of the problem, as it is misguided to be too hasty canonization. A generation that has not been betrayed by the work or the laws that regulate it, but was penalized by the extravagance but that government without vision, they have made to the detriment of the generations that would come later, just think the introduction of so-called baby pensions (DPR 1092/73) which allowed civil servants to access pensions with twenty years of contributions (by a further five years in the case of married women with children). If, as claimed by the author at the beginning of the first chapter, the rules are not sufficient to produce the resources necessary to pay pensions, because "the balance of intergenerational pact underlying the large public systems is closely by parameters that laws can not be determined, "then the allocation of resources should be made according to criteria of fairness. But our country is often governed by the logic of opportunity, as happened at the time of signing the Protocol on welfare, is intended to revise the "staircase". The protocol allows approximately 150 000 workers to retire at age 58. Cost of the measure: 7.48 billion euro (in the decade between 2008 and 2017). To cover such an expense, the Prodi government turned to the "invisible generation" that has often paid a political and trade union representation at historic lows and is registered in to dominate, to separate management. In fact, the decision to fund (along with the retrieval of useful resources for the Fund strenuous work, which amounted to 2.52 billion, for a total expenditure of € 10 billion) was agreed to find the necessary funds by increasing the contribution rates for the separate management of quasi-employees. Concluding with a similarity Cazzola dear to the problem of security is like the environmental issue, "the resources available are limited and do not belong only to those who live in the present but also future generations." Alessio Maniscalco
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