BoT 574
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
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March 13 2025 Nº 574
Editorial:
The Partido Popular is in some choppy waters right now, with some issues floating up to the surface that they would rather see staying down there with the fishies.
Carlos Mazón, for example,
over in Valencia, whose actions during the late October flood – known as the DANA
– have yet to be explained. Short of airing the details on that fateful day (we
suppose that he had his attention on some other subject) he is under greater
pressure than ever to resign.
Another ‘baron’ – as the regional presidents are often called, is a baroness. This Thursday March 13th, a documentary on her mishandling of the covid crisis in 2019 will be shown on national TV. It’s called the 7291 and refers to the number of elderly people who expired in the residencias after medical aid was refused them. ‘They would have died anyway’, Isabel Díaz Ayuso said on occasion in the Madrid parliament. Between the show on the TV (the PP was fruitlessly trying to have it pulled), and the problem with the boyfriend and his tax position, Ayuso is becoming a trifle toxic. Hitherto, she had been doing so well and was tipped as Feijóo’s successor.
Another potential replacement for Feijóo (when he goes) is Juanma Moreno, still popular but with a few underreported issues – mainly his privatisations, some cavalier dealings and the issue of refusing – in solidarity with his jefe, mind – to take a 50% discount off the large Andalusian state-debt. We are talking of 18,791 million euros, and the corresponding drop in interest payments (money that, evidently, could be spent elsewhere).
While Feijoo is what he is – a second-rater who, like Mariano Rajoy, doesn’t speak a word of English – his business-woman wife has recently been attracting unwelcome attention in Galicia over a property with exclusive beach access.
In an attempt to deflect attention towards the manifold crimes of the PSOE, last week a short video was made, using artificial intelligence, to show (a very muscly looking) Pedro Sánchez and his six-pack abdomen, together with his wife and some other senior figures in the socialist hierarchy, enjoying a jolly day bathing in the warm seas of the Dominican Republic, under the title: ‘The Island of Corruption’. The pot calling the kettle black.
Understandably, the President of the island didn’t appreciate the joke and the Partido Popular had to quickly pull the offending vid from their website, as Pedro Sánchez was obliged to apologise in the name of the Spanish people for the upset.
The International Women’s Day was last Saturday, and while the womenfolk hit the streets (despite the rain), Feijóo was telling reporters in a folksy way that his mum and granny were both women, you know, and they enjoyed all sorts of freedom (in, er, Franco’s Spain). Vox meanwhile came out with a jolly feminist video to mark the occasion, warning that you girls will all be wearing a hijab by 2030. If not sooner, hey?
Perhaps the answer is to just
let Sánchez get on with things – after all, he’s doing pretty well, considering…
…...
Housing:
From Property News from Spain (blog) here: ‘Property Law in Spain - Changes for 2025. The Spanish property market in 2025 presents a dynamic mix of opportunities and challenges, marked by significant legal updates affecting rentals, evictions, taxes, and purchases. This article provides a comprehensive overview of these changes, empowering landlords, tenants, and buyers to make informed decisions...’
From 20Minutos here: ‘The purchase of new homes grows
by 23%’. We read: ‘2024 was a year of great activity in the real estate market.
Almost 642,000 home sales were made, 10% more than in 2023 and the second
largest annual volume of transactions since 2007, only surpassed by the 650,000
in 2022. The increase was particularly reflected in transactions on new-build
homes, which shot up by 23.4%...’ However, there is still an estimated
shortfall of half a million homes.
These are the three cheapest cities to live in (and why) says El
Confidencial here: Jaén, Cáceres and Huelva.
Of course, the available homes aren’t always where one needs them to be. Take
the modest village of Santiago de Calatrava in Jaén. There are many places for
sale (the town has shrunk from 3,000 to 600 in 25 years), and there are even
rentals available for those with a job for as little as 50€ a month says El
País here.
Some homes are under-used, says El Blog Salmón here: ‘Another push to raise housing
prices. In Spain, more and more people are living alone or demanding their own
homes’.
From Canarian Weekly here: ‘The Bank of Spain is concerned
that foreign buyers purchase 20% of properties in the Canary Islands. Accessing
affordable housing in the Canary Islands, particularly for young people, has
become an increasingly challenging issue. While potential solutions such as
building more public housing or market intervention are often suggested, there
are significant obstacles, including the growing trend of foreign buyers
purchasing properties for use as holiday rentals’.
The issue of people camping within the Madrid airport. From 20Minutos
here: ‘AENA threatens to evict
400 homeless people and asylum seekers sleeping in Barajas Airport, and the
City Council urges people to avoid "hasty" solutions’. A journalist
spends a night with them here: ‘There’s nowhere else to go’.
…...
Tourism:
To make things easier… or more
trying… or to justify a number of extra clerical jobs… perhaps to protect us
from terrorists, Bible salesmen and itinerant accordion players… Whatever the
reason, the UK is calling for an Electronic Travel Authorization (ETA) from
April 2 for all foreigners. Much like the yet to be fired up European Travel
Information and Authorisation (ETIAS) put in to bother visitors to the EU. Spanish
News Today has the story here.
…...
Finance:
From Spanish Property Insight here: ‘A recent report from the Tax
Foundation (Wiki) highlights how Spain’s tax system
is becoming increasingly uncompetitive, particularly for property owners. With
one of the highest property tax burdens in the OECD, Spain is driving away
investment and stifling economic growth’.
Sur in English brings us ‘Pensioners in Spain are increasingly receiving more money than they have contributed, except for a couple of groups. Experts have warned that, without reform, the typical retiree could eventually receive more than double what they have contributed during their working life’. The exceptions are those workers with a short working life and those who choose to take early retirement. (Thanks David).
Well, and then there’s me. I live off a pensión no-contributiva – although I paid in around eleven years (plus the stamps for all those who worked for my newspaper, The Entertainer). Business over Tapas: no billionaire owner!
…...
Politics:
From
elDiario.es here:
‘The housing plan, the reduction of working hours (to 37.5 hours per week) and
judicial reform: everything is at a standstill without a majority in Congress.
Most strategic measures have not even begun their process through Parliament’.
Junts per Catalunya is the problem – they won’t support the Government without
fresh favours.
From
The
Guardian,
an interview with Yolanda Díaz here:
‘If you fall into the dialogue of the far right, the far-right wins’: Spain’s
deputy PM on the need for workers’ rights’. The article notes that ‘…she argues
that boosting workers’ rights, and their living standards, has been positive
for growth and productivity – and that raising living standards is the key to
combating the growing threat from the far right. “I believe that we have to go
on the offensive with a clearly differentiated model,” she says. “We have to
give hope to working people, who are the majority of society.”
Pedro Sánchez is talking to all the parliamentary groups – except Vox – about the current issue of European rearmament. Says LaSexta here: ‘The President of the Government has responded to Alberto Núñez Feijóo's criticism for leaving the far-right party out of the meetings that Sánchez will hold with the parliamentary groups to discuss the security of Europe and the war in Ukraine. Sánchez explains: "We are concerned about the security of Europe, not with the solitude of the far right", adding, "The more isolated the far right is, the safer Europe is"’.
From
an editorial at elDiario.es (link here):
‘…The unreliability of the US, the constant threat from Russia, and the moral
pressure (and blame) over Ukraine are pushing the EU to open complex, and very
uncomfortable, talks on military spending with the left. Pedro Sánchez has
pledged to achieve 2% of GDP for defence spending, but he wants cybersecurity
or border protection to count toward softening the demands for purely military
investment, for several reasons: he knows it could cause a schism with Sumar or
even within Sumar itself; he knows he won't have the support of several
left-wing groups he needs in Congress; and, furthermore, it's not clear that
Spain will be able to pass a new budget…’
From
Emprendedores
here: ‘The
so-called DOGE Movement in Spain focuses on the creation of an
open-source platform called Auditoría Ciudadana, which allows citizens
to access detailed information on public spending and participate in debates
and proposals to improve efficiency and transparency in the management of
public funds…’ The mastermind behind this is Martín Varsavsky (Jazztel and
other telecommunication companies, Wiki) and
evident admirer of the likes of Javier Milei and Elon Musk. There’s an
interview with him from The Objective (a conservative Spanish portal) here:
‘Martín Varsavsky: If Sánchez is elected again in 2027, I will leave Spain’.
Ayuso
is sometimes known as ‘La Fruta’. This is because when
she whispered Hijo de Puta during a Pedro Sanchez speech in 2023,
she explained that she had said ‘Me gusta la fruta’.
Opinion
from the conservative ABC: ‘Mazón must go now’.
…...
Europe:
Whatever
happened to our relationship with Washington? From The Guardian here:
‘Watershed moment: EU leaders agree plan for huge rise in defence spending. Leaders
endorse Ursula von der Leyen proposal as French president calls Vladimir Putin
‘an imperialist who seeks to rewrite history’’. El Mundo has:
‘Sánchez's promise to speed up spending to reach 2% in Defence is not enough
for Von der Leyen: she is already aiming for a national investment "beyond
3%"’. The BBC says (en
castellano): "Most European countries believe that the security of the
whole of Europe is at stake, not just the sovereignty of Ukraine".
From
elDiario.es here:
‘The EU reintroduces trade tariffs on the US starting April 1 in response to
Trump's trade war. The US tariffs on steel and aluminium went into effect this
Wednesday. The European Commission will reapply the tariffs it imposed in
response to Trump in 2018 on products such as Levi's, Bourbon, and Harley-Davidson
motorcycles. It will expand the list in mid-April’. Europe’s new tariffs are worth 26,000 million euros. Canada says it is liaising with the European Commission over their tariff response.
‘Portugal in trouble again: Prime Minister Luis Montenegro loses a vote of confidence. The country is heading for new early elections due to the scandal associated with an alleged conflict of interest with a family business belonging to the Portuguese leader’. The story is at El Huff Post here.
A
‘Stronger Europe, Buy European’ page is examined by El Periódico here.
…...
Corruption:
From Público here: ‘Anti-corruption opens an investigation into Vox for irregular financing. The socialist party accuses the party led by Santiago Abascal of using opaque methods to raise funds, as well as receiving illegal contributions from foreign sources’. We read elsewhere that the party has received 4.6 million euros ‘in opaque donations’ and could face economic and political sanctions, and even the partial suspension of their activities.
The autónomos, the
self-employed, have their very own syndicate, known as ATA. It’s been
run by the same fellow for twenty years. Now, in the union’s elections, the
same Lorenzo Amor has once again come out on top; however, as elDiario.es
points
out, ‘The self-employed employers' association ATA bused in dozens
of employees and their families to vote in the re-election of Lorenzo Amor. Amor
says that it is “normal” for the staff to vote, which he estimates at around
sixty people between employees and companions, many of them brought by the
Andalusian association, chaired (as it happens) by his brother’. Turns out, the
Asociación de Trabajadores Autónomos was founded in 1995, by Lorenzo’s dad…
…...
Courts:
‘A judge condemns Alvise
Pérez (Se Acabó la Fiesta) to pay 60,000 euros in compensation to Ábalos for
defaming him. Judge Martín Vallejo affirms that the current MEP published
intimate photos of the former minister in his house and implied that he had
mental health problems: “He has no license to insult or belittle his political
rival”’. Item
from elDiario.es.
…...
Media:
‘Ciudad Clickbait’ (Barlin Libros, 2025) here, described by Revista AD as, ‘The book that explains (finally) the great housing crisis: “Town councils have stopped having their citizens at the centre; their aim is to be fashionable”. It seems that behind the high price of housing are tourist accommodations, but what is behind their enormous proliferation? Vicent Molins in an interview puts the spotlight on town councils and their efforts to ‘please’ everyone - except their residents...’ The priority of City Hall is to look out for its residents, not its visitors or its businessmen.
A recent comment from a resident in Barcelona was striking – ‘in the old days, you walked to where you wanted to go. Now you have to zigzag and shuffle past hoardes of visitors to get there...’ Probably taking care not to walk into someone taking a selfie.
From Público here: ‘The Government will soon give the green light to the Spanish AI law, based on applying the one approved in the European Parliament last year. The legislation will require, as the EU already does, to clearly identify images created by AI, something that the PP did not do in one of its latest videos released to attack the Government’. There could be fines of up to 35 million euros for this kind of manipulation.
Mind you (says a Facebook post) it’s very easy to make an
Artificial Intelligence video about how awful one’s political enemies are...
…...
Ecology:
Climate Change, Global Warming, even forecasts for heavy rain or extended
drought can raise the ire against the meteorologists in the breasts of the more
deluded conspiracy theorists and chem-trail warriors who will either write some
threatening drivel on their preferred social media or, as elDiario.es
says, will make threats against the climate scientists themselves. The article is titled: “I'm scared, in the end
people know where I’m working and even what my name is.”
From Diario de Almería here: ‘The recovery of medieval
irrigation ditches in Almería, a "brake on desertification". Around a
hundred volunteers were participating this past weekend in the recovery of
these hydraulic works that supply two ponds in Los Cerricos, in Oria’. Small
beans maybe, but the old Moorish system of acequias is now being
re-examined. From Wiki here: ‘An acequia (from the
Spanish Arabic assáqya, and this from the classical Arabic الساقية
"al-sāqiyah", irrigator) is an open ditch or canal built to carry
irrigation water for supplying populations or similar purposes. The hydrology
of the ditches benefits ecological health, agricultural production and the
maintenance of groundwater levels. The acequia is a resource that is
easily controllable and extremely resistant to constant climatic changes...’
…...
Various:
Besides reading Business over Tapas for your current affairs, you may need other information about Spain to pass an immigration test says Diario As, with ‘These are the answers to four of the questions that will appear in the exams to obtain Spanish nationality’. It seems there are 25 questions, and you’ll need to get at least 15 right.
An anti-Trump demonstration has been called by Democrats Abroad
for March 29th in the Plaza de Féliz Sáenz in Málaga 12.00h to 13.30h (all
welcome!). The Olive Press has ‘US expats to hold anti-Trump
rallies across Spain, citing ‘horror, disgust and deep sadness’.
El Plural brings us ‘Women against Francoism:
repression, resistance and memory. It has largely been forgotten that the
plight of women, beginning with the Civil War and then during the Franco period,
went from resistance to repression’. We read under: ‘Punishment for female
dissidents’ that ‘Exile, prison and social banishment were the price to pay for
having challenged the patriarchal structure of Franco's regime. Thousands of
women were arrested and sentenced by military courts on charges of aiding
rebellion, freemasonry or communism, with sentences ranging from prison to
execution...’
‘A PP senator accumulates hundreds of donations for those affected by the DANA
in Valencia in a basement. Mayor Emilio Navarro attributes the accumulation of
these products donated for those affected by the DANA in Valencia, which
have been spoiling for four months, to “logistical problems”’. A story from Cadena Ser.
A few Spaniards have appeared in ‘the Jeffrey Epstein List’ says El
Plural here.
It’s not just El Algarrobico. There have been (and still are) lots of illegal buildings, demolished,
under threat or planned along the Andalusian coast says Diario de Sevilla.
‘The first details of Comic-Con in Malaga revealed: these are the dates and venues. The European offshoot of this emblematic American geek fair will see at least three editions staged on the Costa del Sol’ says Sur in English here. From In Spain News here: ‘Game changer for pop culture fans: Málaga to host Europe’s first San Diego Comic-Con, turning it into a must-visit destination for fans of comics, video games, and science fiction’.
Where’s Sheldon when you need him?
‘Hammam حمّام Andalucía’s Arabic Spa Tradition’ from Karethe Linaae here.
Some tricks to generate tips from La Verdad here and others from Javea Connect
here.
‘Censorship, the Opus Dei and a brand-new SEAT’ – a story from the end of
Franco’s times, at Eye on Spain here.
…...
See Spain:
‘Benidorm as a base on your Costa Blanca vacation’, with Mapping Spain here.
…...
Finally:
Carlos Santana and Juanes with La Flaca live version. YouTube here.
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