VATICAN CITY – Europe appears to be losing faith in its own future, Pope Benedict XVI said Saturday, warning against “dangerous individualism” on a continent where many people are having fewer children.
“One must unfortunately note that Europe seems to be going down a road which could lead it to take its leave from history,” the pontiff told bishops in Rome for ceremonies to mark the 50th anniversary of the signing of the Treaty of Rome, a major step toward the creation of today’s European Union.
Benedict said he was concerned about Europe’s “demographic profile” – though he did not describe the trends that have alarmed the continent for decades.
In countries like Italy, where many married couples have one or no children, the population is expected to shrink dramatically in a generation or two unless fertility rates quickly increase.
Benedict expressed concern that Europe’s population trends, “besides putting economic growth at risk, can also cause enormous difficulties for social cohesion, and, above all, favor dangerous individualism, careless about the consequences for the future.”
“You could almost think that the European continent is in fact losing faith in its own future,” Benedict said.
A recent Eurostat survey showed Poland’s fertility rate to be the lowest in the EU, at 1.23 children per woman.
Sociologists and economists blame the economy, particularly the unemployment rate – at 14.9 percent the highest in the EU. Worried about losing their jobs, many women in Poland put off having children, often until it is too late.
Earlier this month, Polish Prime Minister Jaroslaw Kaczynski proposed a new program of tax exemptions and support for working mothers in the hope of encouraging births and ensuring that Poles “continue as a nation.”
Italian experts cite Italian’s desire for an easier lifestyle, but they also blame shortages of day care centers, expensive housing and a sluggish job market that sees many Italians living at home until well into their 30s as reasons for the country’s relatively few children.
Antonio Golini, an Italian demographer, said recently that unless the retirement age is raised, Italy will have more people drawing pensions than it will have workers in 2050.
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