From the DW:
“Spain's
overcrowding exacerbates pandemic”
Many are asking
what Spain's government has done so wrong in its handling of the coronavirus
crisis. But overcrowded cities and expensive living conditions have not helped
to slow down the spread of the virus. When the filmmaker Pablo Cerda came to
the Spanish capital, Madrid, from Santiago de Chile to study, he was a little
amazed at how small the apartments were in which people there lived. But when
he started looking for an apartment himself, he realized that one of the
reasons for this was that the rents were so high. Another problem was the
buildings themselves, which tended to contain lots of small rooms, some of them
without windows, spread over many stories. On top of this, as he gradually
found out, many people have precarious working arrangements, and there are
considerable numbers of non-Spaniards who do not have residency permits. The
annual income for a Spanish family with two children after tax is more than
€20,000 ($23,460) less than that for an equivalent German family, according to
Eurostat, the EU's statistics agency — this, despite the fact that, according
to a study by the lifestyle magazine Magazyne, the average rent for an adequate
apartment in Spain is not much lower than that in Germany. When Cerda came to
Madrid in September 2019, a one-room studio in the center of the Spanish
capital cost between €650 and €900 per month, and this has not changed much
amid the current economic situation. He initially landed in the working-class
district of Vallecas, where the rents have also risen by 21% in the past four
years, according to the real estate website Fotocasa. "I was still
interested in the atmosphere," said Cerda. He spent the entire lockdown
from March to May in his 6-meter-square (64.6-feet-square) room there, which
still cost €350 per month. "Living like this changes people, especially in
times of a pandemic," he said.
Increased
risk In Spain, the restrictions put
in place back then to curb the coronavirus pandemic — which have now been
reimposed — were particularly strict. But the number of infections has remained
high throughout, with poorer, crowded urban districts proving to be veritable
viral hotbeds. In such districts, most people are forced to go out to work in
hospitals, care homes or restaurants and cannot work from home at a laptop.
Many people in Spain's poorer areas are also working illegally. They cannot
afford to take time off if they test positive for COVID-19, and often they
cannot isolate themselves in their crowded accommodation.
The region of
Catalonia has now introduced a new measure to address the issue. A few years
ago, Barcelona, which saw about 30 million foreign visitors last year, put a
cap on the number of apartments used for tourism, just as Berlin did, in order
to free up housing. Now, the region has also put a cap on rent hikes. Private
and institutional investors are not subject to the same regulations, however,
and the rent cap is not applied in all cities. However, it is particularly
important in Barcelona where the lack of housing has been a major factor in the
spread of the pandemic, in the opinion of Jasper van Dorrestein, who lives
there. "It's not only the relatively high rents but also the conditions
often imposed on tenants, such as having to pay a deposit worth several months'
rent that you don't get back when you want to move out," said van
Dorrestein, who is originally from the Netherlands. The government in Madrid
also changed this in the past year as well and reduced the financial burden on
renters. But there are still a lot of illegal rental agreements where different
rules apply.
Hotels, bars
and restaurants closed But none of this is helping to combat the spread of
the novel coronavirus at the moment. On Wednesday (14.10), Catalonia introduced
new measures. Hotels can no longer receive guests, and bars and restaurants
have been closed down for 15 days. "The problem is our whole
system," says Pedro Abella, a real estate expert at Madrid's IE
University. He said that urban properties had simply become too expensive in
recent decades. "More social housing needs to be built on publicly owned
land, of which there is a lot outside the city" he maintains. But
in addition to these, some estimates say there are several million apartments
in Spain that are simply empty or not for sale. Many of them belong to banks
that repossessed them during the financial crisis several years back, and their
number is likely to increase in the coming months. These apartments are
increasingly being occupied by squatters, because people, whether foreigners
without a contract, or Spaniards with low incomes, see no other way to obtain
housing. There are also hundreds of thousands of foreigners in Spain who
do not have residence permits. "Someone who has a work contract is always
needed to rent a place, and that person has to make sure they get the rent from
the others," says Bulgarian Ivanka Ivanova, who speaks from her own
experience. Read more: Spain's tourism industry is in deep trouble.
Antiquated
zoning plans On top of this comes the fact that the cost of living is not
much lower than in Germany, for instance. Particularly in the cities, wages
often aren't enough to make ends meet. "Madrid is expensive compared to
cities such as Paris or Moscow," says Cerda, but he says Spain is safe
compared to many of the places in the world that he has worked and lived in.
Nonetheless, there are many homeless people and beggars, he says, and many
close-packed rows of ugly high-rise buildings and huge hospitals that make the city
less attractive. This is despite the fact that Spain has one of the lowest
population densities in Europe. One solution would be to build
horizontally rather than up, says Abella. "Especially seeing as there is a
decline in population in rural areas." The Spanish film composer
Manuel Villalta says that there is a cultural reason why people are packed
together in high-rises and businesses in commercial districts. "We like
concentrating everything and we love gatherings. It's not that common for
Spaniards to own a house as I do. But during the pandemic, I am pleased to be
living alone in the country," he says. But most of the 300 hospital beds
per 100,000 inhabitants that Spain has (compared to 800 in Germany) are in
Madrid, Barcelona, Bilbao, Valencia and Seville, and not the rural area where
Villalta lives. "That's at least one advantage that we have here in
Madrid," jokes Cerda. On the other hand, there is also more chance of
getting infected there. A vicious circle.
^ Covid-19 is
exposing a lot of major issues around the world hopefully people will see these
problems and will work to change them for the better. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/spains-overcrowding-exacerbates-pandemic/a-55301037
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