Wednesday, 27 April 2022

Business over Tapas Nº 443

 

Business over Tapas

A digest of this week's Spanish financial, political and social news aimed primarily at Foreign Property Owners:

Prepared by Lenox Napier.  Consultant: José Antonio Sierra

For subscriptions and other information about this site, go to businessovertapas.com

email:  lenox@businessovertapas.com

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April 28 2022            Nº 443

 

 

 

 

 

 

Editorial:

We were looking at the number of foreign residents and their overall value to Spain.

Since last week, fresh totals have appeared, sometimes higher than the ones we produced. As always, they are painstakingly exact, and no doubt, utterly wrong.

A site from the Ministry of Labour and Social Inclusion gives the number of foreigners in Spain as at January 1st, at 6,007,553. So we know how we stand. Although the number is easier to appreciate if it is rounded out to six million foreigners.

Some of them retired, some of them living from income from abroad, some of them working and some of them studying. Some of them here illegally. Some without documents. Some of them sending their money home to their families, as they should.

Spain has a population of 47,440,000 they say, so foreigners make up 12.6% of the whole – that’s one in every eight people.

The Brits are counted in the above guaranteed government figures at 407,628 (as opposed to last week’s padrón figures found elsewhere at 282,124). The Schengen Visa Info – quoting something called Statista, gives us a completely different Brit total in Spain of 313,975.

The ABC meanwhile claims 290,372 Brits resident in Spain (the comments from this right-wing paper about Spain’s foreign population are, as always, a pleasure to read).

Then there’s the INE – the official bean-counter site – which doesn’t have a clue. The best we can find from them is July 2021 ‘non-EU Europeans’, which come to… 603,162 (you see: the Brits, post Brexit, aren’t worth a place of their own any more).

There are other official government sites available, but the browser found a ‘potential security threat and did not continue to www.mites.gob.es’. So, we shall remain blissfully ignorant of the information to be found on that no doubt highly useful page.

Then we have The Mirror headline from October last year which reads: ‘British expats are said to be leaving Spain "in droves"’; while, conversely: Idealista says the opposite: ‘The Brits bought 7,560 homes in the second half of 2021 – the largest group of foreign buyers’. In all, nearly 64,000 homes were bought by foreigners between July and December last year. And that’s good money brought here almost exclusively from outside Spain.  

With all the confusion, the authorities will understandably react according to the figures to hand (once they’ve successfully looked up the phrase ‘in droves’ in the dictionary), without worrying if they are correct; or maybe just go out for a coffee instead.

My estimate last week of the half a million wealthiest foreign residents, worth to Spain some 10,000 million euros each year (plus their 250,000€ homes and 20,000€ cars and so on), brings us back to the question: why chase after just the tourists while ignoring the foreigners who live here, or who potentially could?

The only time the subject of the foreigners come up – beyond of course at Vox rallies – is when it’s time to tax us.

But you won’t find any official agency or policy that promotes foreign home-buyers investing in Spain!

The tourists are counted in a similar exact but hopelessly wrong way as the foreigners. Someone is paid to provide the numbers (a bit like the new school they’re building near us budgeted at €724,027.27 – now fellers, hold on just a minute, does that include the chalk?). Perhaps, by not rounding them off, they show how hard they work at these sums.

Tourists, then, are described as anyone foreign who comes to Spain (even if they are taking an onwards flight to somewhere else and never even leave the airport), plus all the people on all the cruise ships – regardless of if they disembark for a two-hour stroll around Málaga harbour or not – plus all the people who hop over to Spain every weekend (add ’em all together José), plus those registered in a hotel, but not the ones who drove across the frontier or who slept in the spare room last night or on the sofa.

Then we have those non-EU citizens who own homes here are but aren’t allowed to stay for more than 90 in any 180 days. What are they exactly – residents, home-owners, tourists? No one knows or seems to care – except of course for the affronted local businesses.  

A few years ago, I went with a couple of senior local Brit spokesmen (if you see what I mean) to see the delegación provincial – the government representative for Almería and his team – to make the point that, with so many small and disappearing villages, a possible answer might be to turn one or more into an old-folks’ retirement centre for rich wealthy well-heeled foreigners. Do you see the idea? Bring along a few English-speaking nurses – after all, there are plenty of disillusioned Spanish professionals returning from London thanks to the Brexit fallout – to bring movement and life back to some moribund pueblo that has no earthly source of income. You could even sell the homes as lifetime leases.

Anyway, they said they’d get back to us.   

 

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Housing:

Demand is outstripping supply says The Olive Press, with a lower number of homes listed on the market, average prices rose in the final quarter of 2021 by over six per cent.

The 90 in 180 day rule for non-EU citizens without residency in Spain evidently is hard for both those concerned and for the local businesses who lose out on the trade from this large collective. Many of them are Brits, who suddenly – thanks to Brexit (a shot in the foot if ever there was one) can no longer enjoy the use of their holiday homes full-time as they used to. From Menorca here, we read of a ‘Campaign of British residents to be able to spend six months in Menorca at a time. The limitation of 90 days every half year to enjoy their second residences in Menorca, since Brexit became effective, is at the centre of the conversations of many British citizens’. But then, foreigners and their problems have never been of much concern to Spain’s politicians… There’s a Facebook page run by Andrew Hesselden called 180 Days in Spain which is very active here.

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Tourism:

Travel from the UK – the entry requirements for Spain for British passport holders. Here’s a useful brief from the GovUK.

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Finance:

‘The Social Security estimates that April will close with 36,000 more members and has already exceeded 20 million contributors so far this month, with a total of 20,057,588 members as of Thursday, 21 April…’ Item from The Corner here. The Social Security claimed 2,225,856 foreigners within the system by September last year including 37,272 Brits, 108,241 Italians and 26,674 Germans (See Excel archives here).

‘Spain breaks all forecasts: it is the European country that has most raised its income’ says El Confidencial here. ‘When the Government prepared the 2022 budgets, just half a year ago, it anticipated that public revenues would reach 41.3% of GDP in 2021 and the deficit would end the year at 8.4% of GDP. However, collections skyrocketed in the final stretch of the year thanks to both job growth and inflation. This unexpected collection raised public revenue to 43.7% of GDP, two and a half points above the Government forecast…’

Spain and Portugal have arrived at an agreement with the European Commission to limit electricity prices. From now, gas will have a limit of 40 rising during the year to50€Mw/h on the monthly bills for the next twelve months, bringing them down in price. The gas currently used to calculate the monthly energy bill is standing at present at 90€Mw/h.

Sur in English explains here what we know so far…  

From Spanish Property Insight here: ‘If I have a Spanish residence permit, am I automatically a tax resident in Spain?’

From El Salto Diario here: ‘The Government hands the Sareb (‘the bad bank’ - Wiki) over to two investment funds, Blackstone and Hipoges (KKR), both with a long history of real estate speculation and harassment. The two funds (unkindly known in Spain as Fondos Buitres – vulture funds) take over the management of the Sareb's assets, bypassing the pending Housing Law, which precisely prohibits the sale of publicly owned housing…’ The Sareb owns – at least – 55,000 homes plus a large number of builders’ credits.

The unions are not happy to meet with the proposal of ‘longer working days, up to 12 hours a day, at the company's discretion. This is what the Asociación de Empresas de Consultoría propose to include in the collective agreement that it is negotiating with the unions. The AEC include multinationals such as EY, Deloitte, KPMG or Accenture and technology giants such as IBM and NTT Data…’ The story is at elDiario.es here.

Madrid is now the fourth most important financial hub in Europe, standing only behind London, Paris and Frankfurt says LibreMercado here. 

In a gloomy report, we read that the Balearics are being sold, lock, stock and barrel, to foreign investors says La Vanguardia here.

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Politics:

Our weekly poll comes from LaSexta here. The PSOE returns to first place, with 27.6%, followed with the PP at 24.3%, Vox at 20.3% and UP at 11.%. Ciudadanos scores just 1.3%. 

The Andalusian regional elections will be held on Sunday June 19th says El Huff Post here. The most-voted party will almost certainly be the PP, but it will likely need to ally with Vox to govern. Says the PP spokesperson Elías Bendodo (A fellow to watch): 'if we have to pact with Vox, then so be it - they are just as democratic as anyone else'. The PP’s current partner in Andalucía is Ciudadanos, with their leader Juan Marín doing a good job at secretary for tourism. The PSOE-A is led by Juan Espadas (was mayor of Seville). Meanwhile, the coalition of left-wing parties, made up from Izquierda Unida, Podemos, Más País, Equo and a couple of others, will be allied in this election campaigning under the name ‘Por Andalucía’ as they continue to search for a candidate for this new confederacy. Four Ciudadanos deputies have quit the party since the elections were announced this past weekend.

20Minutos looks at the campaign strategy for the Andalusian PP’s president and candidate Juanma Moreno here.

Marine Le Pen evidently found much support from the unemployed and the agricultural sectors (both groups traditionally dislike or fear foreigners). At article at El Huff Post looks at how Vox is following Le Pen’s electioneering tactics with what looks like similar results.

Whether Podemos is a good idea or not – the certainty is that the Spanish Establishment went after it with a vengeance. There’s no proven corruption in the party, but it is a trifle unforgiving. Here at El Salto Diario, they look at the latest attempt to discredit the party. ‘…the judicial operation to harass and demolish Podemos, which began at the end of 2014, has had dozens of cases or lines of investigation that have fallen on deaf ears. These are 25 archived cases or investigations, including the ones that got the most media attention. Others are on the verge of being dropped by the courts, such as "el Caso Dina"’. The presentation of Pablo Iglesias’ book Verdades a la Cara in Madrid last week gave the author the chance to look at some of his unhappier experiences in politics, as he recalled Pedro Sánchez telling him years ago, ‘they are going to be coming after you’.  

‘The PNV spokesman in the Congress of Deputies Aitor Esteban on the Pegasus phone-spy system: "No one is certain that they will not be spied on by the intelligence services". Esteban says that he is "deeply concerned" by all the information about Pegasus and has shown his support for the president of the Generalitat, Pere Aragonès’. Contrainformación looks at the scandal here.

The Government has offered the two leading Catalonian parties – ERC and Junts – together with the Basque Bildu - to enter the Parliamentary Official Secrets Commission so that from there they can receive first-hand explanations about the hacking of their phones with the Pegasus Israeli software. It is the Government's way of trying to calm the waters, which are in turmoil to the point of endangering the necessary parliamentary support from several minor groups. It appears unlikely that the phones were tapped through specific judicial order, leaving the CNI national spy agency currently looking awkward…

Some 65 people have been spied on by the secret service apparently: not only politicians but also academics, family members and even lawyers. ‘Spain vows to be transparent in probe of Pegasus spyware use’, says The San Diego Union-Trib here. Unsurprisingly, the CNI are peeved by the Government allowing the independent groups into the official secrets commission says El Mundo (paywall) here. On Wednesday, the spokesperson for the ERC Gabriel Rufían speaking to President Sánchez in Parliament stated "The question is if you ordered it, and if you ordered it, then this is terribly serious and if not, it is even more terribly serious, because it means that you have not cleaned out your party sewers". The ECD reports that the Government is now prepared to fire the head of the Spanish secret service Paz Esteban to settle the troubled waters.  

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Catalonia:

According to El Independiente, the judge who authorises the secret listening-in on certain phones belonging to Catalonian politicians by the Spanish secret service is close to the ex-vice president (2018 – 2021) Carmen Calvo. From El Periodico, we read thatThe Washington Post describes 'Catalangate' (sic) as a "flagrant" violation of civil liberties: "It must be condemned" In the editorial the paper says that this software should be used "with responsibility" by governments. The Washington Post editorial here is titled ‘Democracies shouldn’t surrender to a future of limitless surveillance’. On Wednesday, the Catalonian parliament voted overwhelmingly to take the issue of the Pegasus program espionage to court. Only Vox, PP and C’s voted against.   

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Gibraltar:

From City AM here: ‘Brexit checks: Disbelief and confusion at Gibraltar border as Spain blocks British nationals from entering’. The item notes that ‘Gibraltar, a British overseas territory, has been caught between the EU and UK since Britain formally left the EU. Access to Gibraltar was excluded in the trade deal that the UK and EU agreed in 2020. Therefore, there are no set or agreed arrangements for Gibraltar post-Brexit’.

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Europe:

From Pedro Sánchez Facebook page (April 21) we read ‘Today we have travelled to Kyiv to transfer Spain's support, solidarity and commitment to The Ukraine. It is shocking to see the horror and atrocities of Putin's aggression on the streets of cities like Borodyanka. It is moving to see the strength of President Zelenskyy and, with him, that of the entire Ukrainian people. You are not alone. Europe is with you, the world is with you. We will not abandon you’. While he was in Kyiv, Sánchez promised to send to The Ukraine 200 tons of arms.  

From Spain in English here: ‘Of approximately 135,000 refugees who have arrived in Spain since the start of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, 74,965 have already been granted temporary protection, including residence and work permits…’  (!)

Spain has supported the World Tourism Organisation’s decision to eject Russia temporarily in a meeting held in Madrid on Wednesday for not upholding the values held by the WTO of peaceful travel abroad.   

Some 16,000 Brits took European nationality in 2020 (obviously no longer counted as foreign residents) says Schengen Visa Info here. The article doesn’t show how many got Spanish nationality, although it is generally known to be a difficult and a drawn-out process.

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Ecology:

‘The final destination of more than half of the domestic waste collected in the country continues to be the landfill. Moreover, 13% of the trash arrives without going through any sorting plant or undergoing any prior treatment. This means that it has travelled directly from the garbage truck to the landfill. This practice is not only a "total anomaly in Europe", according to Josep Maria Tost, former director of the Waste Agency of Catalonia, it’s also illegal, according to European waste-disposal directives…’. Item from elDiario.es here.

‘Heavy rains in Murcia leaves the Mar Menor on the verge of a new collapse’, says EPE here. ‘Local councils, the regional government and platforms in defence of the lagoon agree that the entry of fresh water and nutrients makes them fear the worst’. Another issue is the Balsa Jenny, a local mining operation in the past left a contaminated lake behind which bleeds into the Mar Menor. The ownership of the water is now in public hands, but no clean-up (after 20 years) has been forthcoming.  

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Various:

On the subject of demographics: ‘Romanians and Chinese are leaving Spain, but more Colombians and Italians are arriving’ says the ABC here. Among other figures, exquisitely counted to the last person, the newspaper claims 110,977 Ukrainian residents in Spain (with another 134,000 Ukrainian refugees being offered shelter says the RTVE here).

There was once an American plan to invade and annex the Canary Islands, says the ABC here. The plan was hatched by Theodore Roosevelt in the last years of the XIX Century. The plan was finally put into the trunk in the White House attic.

From El País (paywall removed) here: ‘The president of Algeria blames Pedro Sánchez for the diplomatic rupture with Spain. Abdelmayid Tebún says in an interview with the Algerian media that his country will never fail to fulfil his responsibilities to provide gas to Spain’. In short, gas supplies will continue from Algeria, although Tebún wasn’t clear over what future prices might be for the product. Tebún insisted that he was angry with Sánchez (over the Western Sahara), but not with ‘his Spanish friends’.  

Geologists and geophysicists claim that the huge deposits of oil found by the Moroccans near the Canary Islands is a hoax – merely a ploy to please their investors says Público here.

ABC has a report on the dying pueblos of Spain (as people move away in search of a better life). It says that almost 40% of all municipalities in Spain have lost more than a fifth of their population since the year 2000. The article also goes by province – showing that 96% of the municipalities in Zamora have lost population in the last 20 years. The Balearics, at the other end of the scale, report just 3% of parishes suffering shrinkage.

For one reason or another, says Cinco Días here, people are buying more 15-yr-old cars (or older) than they are brand new ones. 

From The Local here: ‘Why is everything in Spain closed on Sundays?’ It says in part, ‘…many countries across Europe, like Portugal, Italy, and the U.K, have more liberal trading hours legislation. In fact, the European Commission ranked Spain as the country with the second highest number of restrictions on commercial trade in the EU…’ It’s evidently down to petty laws, which appear to little more than dampen commerce. How is it, we wonder respectfully, that the Chinese bazaars are always open, even on Christmas Day?

Just to remind readers – FACUA is a useful consumers’ organisation that is worth knowing. Here they are in English.

A report that beer and wine are to be removed from the Menú del Día is a bulo says the Ministry of Health as reported at Infosalus here.  

Business Insider brings us 37 Spanish inventions (from the humble mop to the can-opener, the stapler and, our favourite, table football – el futbolín).

For reasons of both state and politics, the King of Spain Felipe VI has released figures regarding his personal wealth: including the paintings and jewellery, he’s got 2,573,392.80€ He doesn’t own any property – understandably – and he pays his taxes says elDiario.es here. Indeed, the Government and the Royal Palace have now come to an agreement to audit and control the Monarchy says El Huff Post here.  

Think Spain looks at the (Costa Blanca) expat-volunteers, who open charity shops, join associations to help care for people or animals, or give their time to worthy causes.

Those residents with US passports, by the way, come to 30,946 according to an official list found here.

‘The padrón grows once again in Spain in 2022, but not at pre-pandemic levels. Spain adds 50,000 people in its 2022 census and is the second largest in the historical series’.

Nutela, the delicious nut-spread (or is it chocolate?), has chosen fifteen of Spain’s most ‘extraordinary places’ to feature on its jars. Such is life. One of them, says Sur in English proudly – is in Andalucía: Mijas here takes the cake. The others, as chosen by the Italian confection, are El Teide (Tenerife), Cala Macarelleta (Balearics), Montserrat (Barcelona), El Templo de Debod (Madrid), Haro (La Rioja), Consuegra (Toledo), Picos de Europa (Asturias, Cantabria, Castilla y León), Playa de las Catedrales (Lugo), Selva de Irati (Navarra), Cieza (Murcia), Hondarribia (Guipúzcoa), La Albufera (Valencia), La rambla de Barrachina (Teruel) and Meandro de Melero (Cáceres).

Público, on the other hand, brings us ten examples in images of the various ills connected with greed or stupidity in ‘Ugly Spain’ here.

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See Spain:

A peculiar and beautiful village ‘without even a bakery’ has made the pages of The New York Times, says El Huff Post here, not for its beauty or its tiny population of not much more than a 100 souls, but because of its libraries. Urueña (Valladolid) has eleven of them!

An interesting town in Asturias called Cangas de Onís is worth a visit. It’s both pretty and, being the first capital of Spain (thanks to Don Pelayo the Visigoth - Wiki), highly historic.   

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Letters:

Morning Lenox,

The question you ask in your editorial this week is one I've asked myself for many years. I think it's partly due to the fact that foreign residents are not organised in any way and have no lobby. Nobody hears their voice, and the government just takes them for granted. The Modelo 720 shows how happy the Spanish government is to make life difficult for foreign residents.

Best regards,

Mark Stücklin

 

What you stated about the foreign residents is very true! So I thought I’d give you some feedback. We are retired Americans in Benalmádena—not wealthy, but have enough pension and savings to leave the US which is a mess.

We definitely feel ‘under-appreciated’ by the government. We love Spain, but have considered moving to Portugal, Italy or France for several reasons. We don’t even mind the famous Spanish bureaucracy—it is other issues.

1. Taxes are through the roof on our pensions, while we owe very little in tax to the USA. Portugal, France & Italy all have better tax schemes for retirees. In addition, it is extremely frustrating that Spain is issuing a Digital Nomad visa & giving these young salaried employees a tax break by allowing them to pay non-resident tax, which is much lower than resident taxation. Apparently, the government feels the Digital Nomads will spend more money on restaurants & bars! Retirees also spend a lot on going out—we rarely eat in, and try to always buy local products & use local businesses to inject money into the local economy. The government logic makes no sense & I’ll bet retirees spend more than younger digital nomads.

2. Driver’s licenses are a big problem here. When you’ve had a driver’s license for 50 years, it is a major pain & expense to be forced to take tests and pay for required lessons to drive. Have heard the exams in Málaga are backed up for 6 months! It has affected our whole life here. We had intended to buy a car, but now walk or use the bus. This is fine, but it totally affects where we can live as we must be near a bus route & grocery store, so are very limited in choice of areas. But the hassle of getting a driver’s license is a really big obstruction. The other countries I’ve mentioned have a driver’s license exchange program which makes a huge difference in quality of life.

3. Holiday rentals are out of control. Living by the coast is a goal & dream for many who come here. We are on our second coastal rental, but now realize it is all pretty much the same. Both buildings we’ve lived in are full of holiday rentals, with the associated noise & inconsideration of holiday makers. When the buildings aren’t full of vacationers, the apartments are being renovated to accommodate more guests and higher fees. It’s like living in a continuous construction site. We would move up the hill and away from the tourists, but then there is the problem of not having a car! The holiday rentals that many Northern Europeans are buying here are hugely driving up the cost of living on the coast. We’ve only been here a year, but the rents have gone way up in a place that only a year ago had a number of affordable rentals (we do not want to own).

I do keep up with the expat forum groups & of course, the Brits look at things different than Americans, but many Americans are deciding on Portugal or France over Spain due to the high taxation in Spain. For the wealthier retiring American baby boomers (which we aren’t), taxation is a huge part of their choice. They hate the wealth tax & a 35% - 45% tax bracket on income just does not work for them, as Americans are used to lower taxes in general. If you read the expat forums, this is a recurring theme (along with the driver’s license issue). But even for those of us in the lower income brackets—taxes are a big problem. We moved here from Florida, which is expensive, but in the end, being retired in Spain is not much cheaper, all things considered, though we prefer Spaniards and the Spanish lifestyle over Floridians! At least the currency exchange is much better than when we arrived, which helps.

We really enjoy your newsletters as they are very informative and concise regarding business & government news. We’ve been thinking of moving from Benalmádena into Málaga city as there is a lot more to do & you don’t need a car. We just renewed our non-lucrative visa for 2 years. Have not seen our tax bill yet, but if it is as high as I am expecting, we may not actually be able to afford to stay in Spain in the future, as it will end up depleting our savings.

Keep up the good work!

Suzanne

 

Public policy in Spain is drafted with a mixture of the four Is: Ideology, Ignorance, Indifference, and Indolence.

(Name withheld).

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Finally:

The Revolution of the Carnations, the non-violent fall of fascism in Portugal on April 25th 1974, is remembered with this song: Grândola Vila Morena from Jose (Zeca) Afonso (Wiki) on YouTube. Bloody thing, I can’t stop humming it.

Wednesday, 20 April 2022

Business over Tapas Nº 442

 

Business over Tapas

A digest of this week's Spanish financial, political and social news aimed primarily at Foreign Property Owners:

Prepared by Lenox Napier.  Consultant: José Antonio Sierra

For subscriptions and other information about this site, go to businessovertapas.com

email:  lenox@businessovertapas.com

***Now with Facebook Page (Like!)***

Note: Underlined words or phrases are links to the Internet.

Business over Tapas and its writers are not responsible for unauthorised copying or other improper use of this material.

Subscription and e-mail information in our archives is never released to third parties.

 

 

April 21 2022            Nº 442


 

Editorial:

Over here at Business over Tapas, we have often pointed out the difference (and benefit) to Spanish society between foreign tourists and foreign settlers. Most notably – the former receives enormous media attention, massive investment, endless promotions both at home and abroad, heavy institutional advertising and even a dedicated government ministry along with its regional equivalents. In several communities and resorts, the councillor for tourism is the second most visible politician in the government.

On the other hand, foreign settlers can fend for themselves.

But then, as Spain basks in the huge amount of money brought here by tourism (forgetting that a sizable chunk of this stays in the country of origin to pay agencies, airlines, insurers and so on), along comes something to put the cork in – maybe a pandemic like the one that has assailed the industry for the last two years.

If tourism dropped by 75% in 2021 over 2019 (the last halcyon year for tourism) then foreign residents either stayed the same (they couldn’t sell-up and leave, what with one thing or another) or even rose in numbers.

That’s of course not including those who took out Spanish nationality.

There are over six million foreigners resident in Spain at the present time – up from 4,850,000 at the beginning of 2019. That’s ten per cent of everyone. Some/many of those are immigrant workers, since the largest collectives are Romanian, Moroccan and Colombian, yet the fourth largest group of foreigners currently living in Spain are the British at 282,000 souls. Rather than try and figure out the number of foreign residents who are retired or live from funds from abroad (including a clutch of wealthy Americans, some rich Venezuelans, a few idle Chinese and a sprinkle of superannuated New Zealanders), but not Tommy who works at the campsite, we can only choose a wildly inaccurate number – say 500,000 – to contrast with the tourists, whose statistics thanks to the enormous machine dedicated to surveying them we know down to the last digit.

Figures suggest that the average age of this sub-group of half a million – that’s to say, those who live comfortably in Spain without employment – is around 61 years old, against tourists who are (I’m diving through the INE records) maybe 20 years younger.

Then of course, residents often take trips within Spain – not to all-inclusive hotels on the beach, full of fellow-Brits or Europeans, but to more expensive destinations, such as the Parador hotel chain or to fancy restaurants, or to areas away from the sol y playa; which makes them, in the eyes of the Spanish authorities (if only briefly), tourists.

So, if the money spent by the wealthier foreign settlers – let’s say 500,000 multiplied by a year’s worth of living – is contrasted by the amount spent by the tourists, then the residents are clearly a group to treasure. At 20,000€ a year (my guess, and we shall ignore the major investment of buying both a house and a car) that’s 10,000,000,000€ per year spent by the higher end of the resident foreigners in Spain. The average visitor, here for five days rather than 365, is going to be worth a lot less.

The official estimate of this once-in-a-lifetime pandemic on the shortfall of tourist money lost to Spain is 160,000 million euros. Last year’s tourist income – 31.1 million foreigners visited – is figured at 34,800 million: nice money if you can get it.

But then, right after the Covid, along comes a war. The fourth wealthiest tourist to Spain per capita is the Russian one, and in 2019, 1.3 million of them came to visit, spending 2,000 million euros. How many Russians will be coming to visit this year? There are some estimates to suggest that the overall tourist numbers this year could be even lower than the last two years due to the war in the Ukraine.

Maybe next up, there’ll be a tourist bombing, or an earthquake, or something poisonous in the water. Maybe Portugal will drop its prices or Greece will give free ouzo to visitors. Tourists are just fine, they leave money and go away with a sunburn and a hangover. But they are finicky, and without any obligation or an emotional link to return.

But the residents will stay. They have an investment in Spain: their property.

Why can’t the authorities see this? There is so much more opportunity in this field.

(More on this next week)

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Housing:

‘Is Spain’s relative attractiveness on the up?’ Mark Stücklin of Spanish Property Insight shares his thoughts here.

‘Foreigners snapping up property in Mallorca. Most of the foreign property buyers are British’. The Mallorca Daily Bulletin says that figures across Spain have returned to pre-pandemic levels of property sales to foreign buyers: ‘…transactions carried out by foreigners accounted for 18.6% of all national sales, which is in line with the 2012-2019 average of 18.7%’. Almost 64,000 homes were bought by foreigners in 2021.

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Tourism:

‘The BOE of October 27, 2021 establishes the obligations of documentary registration and information of natural or legal persons who carry out lodging and vehicle rental activities. This rule, which will come into force on April 27, substantially modifies the information that tourist companies have to register when they formalize a contract with a client...’ From this date, fresh and more invasive information will become necessary for renters, hotel customers and other temporary (or tourist) activities. El Español says that, beyond the full name, passport number or DNI – the stuff that is routinely handed in to the police – now one needs to reveal full name, sex, type of identity document and number, nationality, date of birth, place of habitual residence, full address, landline and mobile phone, email, number of travellers and the relationship between them. Furthermore, the contract details will be necessary: contract data, reference number and signatures; the contract particulars such as dates of entry and exit, details of the property and its address, number of rooms and if it has an internet connection; also the type of payment (cash, credit card, payment platform, transfer...), identification of the means of payment (type of card and number, IBAN bank account, mobile payment solution...), the owner and the card expiration date. There will be fines of up to 30,000€ for ignoring the new rules!

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Seniors:

From La Vanguardia here (paywall removed): ‘Year after year, Spain is among the countries with the highest life expectancy: 79.59 years for men and 85.06 for women according to the latest data from the INE, corresponding to 2020. And it is also listed as one of the most aged in the world: one in five inhabitants is at least 65 years old. But is it a good country to grow old…?’ The answer, according to a study from Barcelona University, is that the standards of treatment and quality of life for seniors (over 65) in Spain comes in as 12th out of 28 European countries analysed. The best is Sweden, the worst is Croatia.

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Finance:

The Olive Press considers the loss in tourist revenue during the pandemic. Beyond this, there were also Brexit-related issues. The only bright spot for Spain was the lower but still providential income from national tourism over the last two miserable years. Tourist numbers are bound to return to 2019 levels by 2023 says the article.

From The Government website La Moncloa here: ‘The Social Security adds 6,788 foreign affiliates in March. In total, there are now 2,342,004 foreign workers registered, representing 11.73% of all Social Security affiliates. This is of the tenth consecutive month with an increase in the employment of this group. In the first quarter, 35,340 foreign affiliates have joined’ (Thanks to Antonio).

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Politics:

Poll: ‘Feijóo's PP grows, overtaking the PSOE that’s down over three points. The arrival of the new leader of the Partido Popular relegates the socialists to second position and reduces Vox's vote expectations despite the agreement in Castilla y León, while Unidas Podemos grows by one point’. The details at elDiario.es are here. (PP: 27.9%; PSOE: 27.2%; Vox: 17.6% and UP: 11.4%).

Yolanda Díaz (Wiki) is the Minister of Labour and Second Vice-President of Spain. She always comes up in the polls as the most popular party leader – despite leading the Izquierda Unida faction within Unidas Podemos. The reason for her popularity is that she has brought employment figures down and has largely eradicated trash work-contracts. The question is – what are her plans for the future and will she stay within – probably to lead – the UP candidature (perhaps under another name) in next year’s general elections. 

The leader of the PP Alberto Núñez Feijóo didn’t come along to the opening of the new government in Castilla y León on Tuesday to lend his seal of approval on the new regional alliance between the PP and Vox. Also absent was the Andalucía leader Moreno Bonilla. Those present included Isabel Díaz Ayuso and Santiago Abascal. El Huff Post has the story here. As local Populares say (according to El Español here) ‘those who can’t see the synergy are probably in the wrong party’. We remember that the slightly ill-advised election merely replaced the PP’s junior partner, which had been Ciudadanos, with Vox.

The new president of Galicia – as Feijóo moves to Madrid – will be his second in command Alfonso Rueda says 20Minutos here, to follow a regional party congress in late May.

The journalist Miquel Ramos, an expert in far-right politics, is interviewed in El Huff Post here. The item is titled: ‘It’s a major and common mistake to think of the far-right and their supporters as simply stupid’. 

elDiario.es looks at Ceuta politics here: ‘The great cohabitation of Ceuta, where the PP and PSOE work together to put an end to the extreme right. Populares and socialistas try for the second time in the autonomous city to lay a democratic cordon to isolate the "colonial" policies of Vox that pursue the "civil elimination" of part of the population’.

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Catalonia:

‘Catalan politicians denounce espionage as ‘a serious attack on democracy and fundamental rights'. Over 60 pro-independence leaders have been victims of (Israeli spy) Pegasus’ software allowing full access to messages and cameras remotely’ says Catalan News here. From The New Yorker here: ‘…Catalan MEP Jordi Solé’s phone had been infected with Pegasus, a spyware technology designed by NSO Group, an Israeli firm, which can extract the contents of a phone, giving access to its texts and photographs, or activate its camera and microphone to provide real-time surveillance—exposing, say, confidential meetings…’. CitizenLab raises the game with: ‘Extensive Mercenary Spyware Operation against Catalans Using Pegasus and Candiru’. The Minister of the Interior Fernando Grande-Marlaska denies any relation whatsoever with the Israeli spy-firm says Europa Press here, although the CNI (Spanish secret service) may use systems to eavesdrop with the appropriate judge’s signature says EuropaPress here.  Público says the Spanish government bought the Pegasus program back in 2014 to spy on the Catalan Independent movement. ‘A democratic state does not spy on its citizens’ says a reporter in English here.

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Gibraltar:

The Guardian reports on a ‘Mountain of trash: how Gibraltar was almost buried under a post-Brexit rubbish pile. As the territory grappled with post-EU paperwork, 6,000 tonnes of waste were left with nowhere else to go’. Previously, they had sent their trash to a sorting facility in Cádiz… Finally, we read, a short-term agreement has been reached with Madrid.

‘Heads up, Policia Nacional are challenging UK passport holders, crossing the frontier from Gibraltar, for proof of hotel/accommodation booking in Spain. Gibraltar residents, not holding the red ID card, are being refused entry into Spain’. (Found on Facebook)

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Europe:

Sánchez will travel to Kyiv in the coming days to meet with Zelenskyy says EFE here.

(Thursday): Sánchez arrived in Kyev and met with both Zelenskyy (to whom he promised more armaments) and with Chef José Andres (here)

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Morocco:

‘The British Europa Oil & Gas has just announced one of the largest oil discoveries in recent years. And it has done so very close to Spain, off the coast of Morocco, a hundred kilometres from the Canary Islands. The company has identified a significant volume of more than 1,000 million barrels of oil equivalent in the Agadir basin, in the Inzegane Permit’. An item from El Periódico de la Energía here.

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Health:

‘The European network of corona-deniers: their modus operandi and links between Spain and Germany’. An article from Maldita here, in English. They are going to be casting about soon for a new conspiracy to get their teeth into…

We now don’t have to wear face-masks inside any more (but are welcome to continue to do so). Exceptions remain in public transport and health centres / hospitals and – as decided by management – in certain jobs. Sur in English notes that it’s been around 700 days of citizens being obliged to wear masks…

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Corruption:

From elDiario.es daily email bulletin. ‘Remember: we are talking about the fact that the Madrid City Council spent 11 million, and 6 remained in the pockets of two "young but well-prepared" businessmen from the Madrid jet set’.

From El Huff Post here: Pedro Sánchez – ‘The most expensive tax is corruption’ he says, asking the new leader of the PP what he plans to do with the ongoing scandals in Madrid.

The Mayor of Madrid Martízez-Almeida on the mask scandal: ‘There is no doubt that the PSOE and Sánchez are behind this issue’.

‘Audios stolen from the Spanish soccer federation by hackers revealed Barcelona defender Gerard Piqué helped to negotiate a 24 million euros ($25.9 million) commission to take the Spanish Super Cup to Saudi Arabia. The federation changed the format of the Super Cup in 2020, creating a “Final Four” and moving the competition to Saudi Arabia as part of a deal that was reportedly worth 40 million euros per tournament for the federation…’ Story here at The San Diego Union-Tribune (they often carry items about Spain for some reason).

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Media:

From the far right El Confidencial Digital (ECD) the interesting question: ‘What do you think of the fact that the majority of Spaniards have called for a change of government and early elections?’ This specious poll gets a 93% ‘yes please’ vote from its readers.

The European Press Prize nominations for 2022 include a couple of items from Spain:

  ‘The Age of the Wolf’ (here) – in English.

  ‘Woman’s body, man’s medicine’ (here).

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Ecology:

‘An Asian algae has occupied the Straits of Gibraltar and the blame is down to inept bureaucracy’ says El Confidencial here. The invasive brown Rugulopteryx okamurae (Wiki) has colonized the coasts of the Campo de Gibraltar, part of Málaga and threatens the entire Mediterranean. There are initiatives to collect and market it (it can be used as an ingredient in a picante sauce), but so far no permits have been issued and no official controls have as yet been sanctioned. In the waters off Barbate, says the article, the whole sea-floor is like a carpet. The article includes videos and photos of this plague.

The small virgin island of Alegranza lies north of Lanzarote in the Canary Isles. It’s around 10kms2 and is covered with garbage washed up from the ocean. Almost 98% of the rubbish found there is used plastic bottles which have floated over from North America.

Down at the stables in Almería, we have plenty of sparrows; however, this ubiquitous birdie is on the decline in Spanish cities says Muy Interesante here. Apart from the feral cats and the urban contamination, another threat comes from the invasive – and competitive – green South American parrot called la cotorra verde (we have some of those too, they screech a lot). As for the feral cats, some biologists are now recommending creating a number of cat-free areas in the major cities says 20Minutos, which sounds like a good idea. Madrid, for example, has 1,171 catalogued sites of feral cats. All eating the birdies and lizards that they find. The suggestion is to keep the felines out of the parks and areas near open water.

The animalist political group PACMA (Rover for President) has understandably denounced a recent hunting party where 450 animals were killed – including over 300 deer and boar – in a ‘macromonteria’ in a private estate in Córdoba, involving 73 hunters – who paid up to 1,000€ each for the adventure. The animals were previously bred by the estate. The story (and video) is at El Observador. 

‘Wednesday: the price of electricity in Spain falls to its lowest in six months, thanks to renewable energies’. The story at Sur in English here. Well, there’s plenty of both wind and sun at the present time… 

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Various:

The Mijas (Málaga) donkey taxis are a regular subject in the English expat newspapers, and here the theme appears in Público: ‘The "chronic mistreatment" of the 'burrotaxis' of Mijas: with hardly any time to rest, exhausted and unable to lie down; with ulcers and erosions in the skin, injuries and permanent deformations in their noses or vision problems being just some of the consequences of the exploitation of these animals for the tourists to enjoy’.

‘A Spanish company will build 1,300 electric vehicles in 2023 says Noticias de Navarra here. The company in question, NTDEnergy from Tudela, Navarra, will employ 90 people within the Lakota project, an electric car that folds for easy parking’. The eccentric vehicle is a bit like a La-Z-Boy couch that tips vertically. Very odd. They also make a small truck with wheels that can turn 90º on their axis for easy parking. With some videos.

Ctxt takes a look at political parties further to the right than Vox with Pablo Iglesias: ‘The extreme right is not a partisan phenomenon that begins and ends with Vox’, he writes. ‘Abascal's party, which is basically a split from the PP, is just one piece of a much broader reactionary movement, well established in the leading countries of the world. The Spanish extreme right is not a party, it is an ideological movement with enormous weight in sectors of economic power, media power, the judiciary, the army, the police, the civil guard and amongst high officials. With these bases, no one can be surprised that it also has notable popular support…’

An Almería agriculture firm of fruit and veg has been denounced for improper treatment of its workers by several foreign unions, including the Landworkers Alliance, Uniterre, Interbrigadas and others. The details are at Público here.

Spare a thought for the ordinary Russians who live here in Spain. Not the oligarchs with their yachts but the ordinary ones, maybe retired or on a pension. There are 79,500 Russians living in Spain. In response to the invasion of the Ukraine, the banks in Spain have frozen their accounts - so their electric bills and other utilities get bounced says El Huff Post here.

Which is unfair and wrong.

During the Civil War, regions and even town halls had to print and deploy their own currency. A sort of credit slip perhaps. Some were printed on paper, or cardboard – or even on occasion on leather. The Basques made their own coins and banknotes here. From Navona Numismatics comes ‘Spanish Emergency Money issued during the Civil War’ (in English) here with lots of photos of unfamiliar-looking banknotes.

‘This Thing about Learning Spanish’. An article at Spanish Shilling here.

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See Spain:

From Idealista News here: ‘The top 10 tourist mistakes in Spain. How do I not look like a tourist in Spain? This is our guide to the most common mistakes tourists make when visiting Spain so you can avoid them’. (Don’t wanna look like no tourist, me).

Bike-tourism: ‘The cycling route that has revived the 'Spanish Lapland': "There are towns where they had never seen a tourist". The 'Empty Mountains' project, without public or private support, brings a thousand visitors a year to almost abandoned towns in Cuenca, Teruel and Guadalajara’. A report at El Mundo here.

Spanish Lapland – La Laponia Española – is explained in English at Montañas Vacias here: ‘There is a place in Spain with an area twice the size of Belgium, with a population density similar to Lapland or the Scottish Highlands, of only 7 inhabitants/km². It is the Spanish Lapland. This is how the Serranía Celtibérica is known, embracing territories belonging to 10 Spanish provinces (Teruel, Guadalajara, Cuenca, Soria, Zaragoza, Burgos, La Rioja, Segovia, Castellón and Valencia), and representing 13% of the total area of Spain…’

Molly at Piccavey brings us the story of how Columbus signed a deal with ‘the Catholic Kings’ Isabel y Fernando (wiki). He would receive royal support for his explorations across the Atlantic, and keep 10% of the value of his discoveries. The deal, known to History as ‘The Capitulations’, was signed in Santa Fé just outside Granada in 1492. But since we are talking about Santa Fé, let’s go and visit the town, and try its piononos (local sticky cakes).

From The Guardian here, a story of La España Fea: ‘For nearly two decades Andrés Rubio pored over photos of Spain’s magnificent cathedrals, delicate Moorish architecture and quaint cobblestone streets. But as the editor of newspaper El País’ travel supplement, what often caught his eye was what was hovering in the background: glimpses of towering mega-hotels, skeletal remains of half-built buildings or jarring blocks of apartment buildings. To him, the conclusion was inescapable – even if it clashed with the Spain that draws millions of tourists a year and is home to one of the world’s biggest collection of Unesco world heritage sites. “Spain is ugly,” he said. “It is very hard to say, but that’s how it is.” His controversial view is the backbone of a new book, España Fea, or Ugly Spain, that takes readers on a romp through what Rubio describes as an “unprecedented cultural catastrophe”…’

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Finally:

A jolly song from Luis Fonsi with Daddy Yankee called Despacito. Almost 8,000 million people have listed to this version on YouTube here! By the way – Adblocker (find it on Google or in your ‘apps’) gets rid of the adverts.