Unemployed students, hard-up business owners and immigrants took to the streets in different protests in the city centre, as Italy struggles to recover from a painful recession -- its longest since World War II.
"What is the point of staying in Italy when there is so much unemployment?" asked Sebastiano Ferro, 29, an unemployed graduate and one of hundreds taking part in one of the demonstrations, called by the far-left.
At the Pitchforks protest, which included a group of far-right activists, the mood was similarly glum.
"People cannot even get to the third week of the month," said Adriano Sola, who works in his parents' bedroom furniture store in Caserta in southern Italy.
"And then there are some people whom we did not even vote for who make 20,000 or 30,000 euros ," he said.
Draped in an Italian flag, 51-year-old Massimo Colombani said he would be forced to shut down his restaurant business next month because of an unbearable tax burden of up to 80 percent.
A 41-year-old business owner who declined to give his name said the two biggest wrongs in Italy were "excessively high taxes" and "state inefficiency".
"This government has done nothing for small businesses, which are the engine of the country," he said, as protesters around him sang the national anthem.
The Italian economy ended two years of contraction in the third quarter with zero growth but unemployment levels are still at record highs and thousands of businesses have been forced to shut down.
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