Aging population in Malta makes the government adapt.
Malta is a country listed on the ranks of the smaller places in the world but it hasn’t been an impediment to also gather an enormous population. The only problem is the numbers of young habitants have been decreasing in the passing years and this may be because of the constant number of Maltese that have left the island. Each census made every ten years shows that native Maltese are the majority on the island and that ageing population seems to have a non-stop growing in the years to come. This critical conclusion is making the government adapt policies that guard the citizens and improve their kind of life. The marrying legislations in Malta accepts both canonical marriages, civil and ecclesiastical and people can get married at the age of 16. There is also a census showing that the number of Maltese females that get married are usually and mostly under the age of 25, in contrast with the male that use to marry after. This struggle is generating a need for the government to make social inclusions that protects the ageing population and to grant them the access to all the services and keep them active in the network. There is also an empowering and supplying all the sources to the home carers to consolidate the quality of life of this dense group of Maltese that find themselves in the sunset of their ages.
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