What the Ice Cream Scooper Told Me in Venice
by Michael Lombardi
I’m blessed
to be able to travel to Europe once or twice a year. I use the trips as an
opportunity to see how the economies are faring over there. And I can tell you
this first-hand: the economic situation in Europe is much worse than what we’re
hearing from the mainstream media in the U.S. economy.
Here’s just
one small story that paints the picture…
A couple of
weeks back, while in Venice for four days, I walked into my favorite ice cream
store for my daily fix of Italian ice cream. I’m chatty wherever I travel, as I
want to get the locals talking so I learn what’s going on.
After
engaging the store’s only employee in conversation (I’m fluent in Italian), the
young man, who was between 25 and 30 years old and educated, told me how happy
he was to have his job as an ice cream scooper at this particular location of a
well-known chain of Italian ice cream stores. “Jobs in Italy are very hard to
come by,” he told me.
But what he
said next really got me thinking …
The ice
cream scooper said he travels 65 kilometers (that’s about 40 miles) each way to
and from work each day. He takes the train. Total travel time is four hours a
day; two hours in the morning to get to work, and two hours at night to get
home from work. Yes, four hours a day to travel to a job scooping ice cream for
tourists.
When I asked
him about getting a job closer to the town he lives in, he says there are no
jobs to be had. When I ask him about moving closer to his job to cut down on
the commute, he says he can’t afford the higher rent.
The
discussion had an impact on me. If you are a long-time reader of this column,
you have read how I believe the U.S. is headed for the same fate as most
eurozone countries: there is no middle class, only the very poor and the very
rich.
And it’s
already happening in the U.S. economy…