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Oct 25, 2025

Caritas unveils 26th Immigration Report at Festival Sabir, warns of labour-shortage ‘perfect storm’

Caritas unveils 26th Immigration Report at Festival Sabir, warns of labour-shortage ‘perfect storm’
At the closing day of Festival Sabir in Palermo on 25 October, Caritas Italiana released its XXVI Rapporto Immigrazione, a 280-page annual study that has become a reference for government and corporate HR teams alike. Drawing on labour-office data and 40,000 parish surveys, the 2025 edition shows foreign residents rising to 5.56 million—9.4 percent of Italy’s population—but a mismatch between available skills and employer demand that Caritas calls a “perfect storm.”

The report notes that vacancies in logistics, hospitality and elder-care have hit a record 320,000, even after the Meloni government raised non-EU work-permit quotas to 164,850 for 2026. Analysts warn that without faster permit processing and better integration policies, Italy could forfeit up to 1 percent of GDP by 2027.

Caritas urges three measures: digitising all ‘nulla osta’ work-permit applications by mid-2026; automatic recognition of certain non-EU qualifications; and tax incentives for companies that fund language training. Several proposals mirror recommendations from Confindustria’s recent Mobility Taskforce, signalling potential consensus.

Why it matters for global mobility teams: the Report’s dataset often guides Interior-Ministry quota decrees and regional labour inspections. Employers planning 2026 staffing should align projections with the sectors Caritas flags as shortages—particularly home health, agritech and advanced tourism services.

Festival Sabir, organised by ARCI and Legambiente, attracted 5,000 attendees this year and has become a policy marketplace where NGOs, mayors and business lobbies negotiate pilot integration projects. The public release of the Report there—rather than in Rome—symbolically underscores southern Italy’s frontline role in migration flows.
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