SHARE
COPY LINK
For members

INSIDE SPAIN

Inside Spain: Stage fright at your butcher’s and why Spanish workers aren’t lazy 

In this week’s Inside Spain we look at how young Spaniards are too scared to order food at their local butcher’s, and how despite the clichés about them not liking work there’s plenty of evidence they work long hours, and 1 in 10 are workaholics. 

Inside Spain: Stage fright at your butcher’s and why Spanish workers aren’t lazy 
Are you scared of ordering meat at your neighbourhood butcher's in Spain?(Photo by Gabriel BOUYS / AFP)

Spain is still very much a country of neighbourhood shops, although unfortunately these local businesses are becoming few and far between as supermarkets have become the one-stop-shop for most Spaniards.

In fact, some young Spaniards have never even stepped into their local pescadería (fishmonger’s) or carnicecería (butcher’s), seeing it as stores for the older generations.

So it makes sense that a young woman recently went viral on TikTok after posting a video in which she spoke out about her “biggest fear as a semi-adult: not knowing how to shop at the butcher’s”.

Thousands of other young and not-so young Spaniards owned up to their own ‘stage fright’ when it comes to recognising and buying food in these neighbourhood stores, especially when it isn’t labelled or prepackaged.

“At the fishmonger’s I didn’t know that salmon was sold whole. I asked for a salmon thinking it was a kilo, but he gave me the whole salmon (€64). I was embarrassed so I didn’t say anything and took it away,” one user responded.

It’s a fear that many foreigners in Spain also have to overcome, although in the case of young Spaniards it has more to do with their lack of face-to-face contact than not knowing how to get out the words.

Butchers from every corner in Spain have responded by joining together through the association that represents them, CEDECARNE, to launch a video on social media to encourage millennials and Gen Z to interact with their shop owners in their barrios (neighbourhoods) and understand how weight, prices and cuts work.

READ ALSO: How to order your steak in Spain

“It’s hard to see anyone under 30 at Spain’s markets,” butcher Manuel Medina told national broadcaster RTVE.

“If parents don’t teach their children how to shop at these kinds of stores, the habits are lost,” fishmonger José Luis Alonso told the channel.

Although the viral video and its response is not headline news in Spain, it does serve as evidence of how el comercio de barrio (neighbourhood shopping) – part of the fabric of Spanish society – is dying.

Rents are going up whilst sales are going down, so it’s no surprise that in the last eight years 75,000 self-employed workers running small businesses have shut up shop for good.

In Madrid alone, 6,000 neighbourhood shops have closed in the past year, in many cases replaced by international franchises that don’t represent what makes this country and its people so great.

READ ALSO: ‘Gentrified out of existence’ – Madrid protest adds weight to Spain’s anti-tourism wave

In other matters, one of the most unfair stereotypes about Spaniards is that they’re lazy and don’t work hard enough, a theory that’s been disproven by studies that show they grind just as much as their EU counterparts (between 40.3 and 40.4 hours a week). 

Poor work conditions and low pay does mean that many Spaniards prioritise time with family and friends over extra hours at work as a means of staying happy.

READ ALSO: Does Spain really have a good-work life balance?

However, a 2015 study by the universities of Valencia, Castellón and the Basque Country argued that 11 percent of Spain’s working population would consider themselves workaholics by 2015. 

That is unfortunately the latest data available for Spain, and the truth is that workaholism remains an unrecognised and unreported illness internationally.   

Other research by German market research company Gfk found that it’s millennials, those born between 1981 and 1996, who tend to be the most addicted to work, representing 43 percent of those admitting to spending too much time behind the desk. 

According to Eurostat, 38 percent of self-employed workers with employees in Spain work on average  49 hours or more a week, a figure actually below that of Western European nations. 

It still passes the threshold of 45 hours a week, one of the ‘symptoms’ of being a workaholic according to experts.

Nevertheless, 2024 EU data shows that Spain is the second EU country that’s managed to reduce the average work week the most since 2008.

All in all, it’s difficult to conclude whether Spaniards are working more, if the rate of workaholics is still growing, but what’s clear is that the cliché that Spanish people don’t work enough is certainly not true.

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.
For members

INSIDE SPAIN

Inside Spain: New tourist taxes and the problem of depopulation

In this week's Inside Spain we look at the situation of tourist taxes and the problem of depopulation in the country.

Inside Spain: New tourist taxes and the problem of depopulation

So-called overtourism has caused a lot of anger in Spain this year with protests in the Balearic Islands, Canaries, Barcelona and Málaga. While there have been many ideas to try and curb the amount of visitors to the country and benefit more from the ever-increasing  numbers, one of the least popular has been the introduction of tourist taxes. 

Currently, tourist taxes have only been introduced in Spain in Catalonia and the Balearic Islands. They were also introduced and then scrapped in the Valencia Community. 

Last week Asturias’ left-wing regional government, formed by the PSOE and IU, announced that it intends to impose a tourist tax on visitors too.

Asturias received a record 2.7 million visitors in 2023 and experts believe it will be even higher in 2024.

It aims to offset the increased costs of running public services in places with more visitors, but crucially it will be up to each individual town hall in Asturias to decide whether to charge tourists the tax or not.

Popular towns in Asturias such as Cudillero, Cangas de Onís and Valdés have already shown interest in introducing the tax, although authorities in the region’s two main cities, Oviedo and Gijón, are against it.

There will also be an increase in tourist taxes in Barcelona. Currently, tourists to the Catalan capital pay two types of taxes – one to the region and one to the city. 

City tax, which is charged for up to seven nights stands at €3.25 per night, but from October 2024, this will go up to €4 per night, which is an increase of €0.75. They will pay this municipal tourist tax regardless of whether they stay in a bed and breakfast, on a cruise ship or in five-star hotel.

On top of this visitors will also have to pay tax on stays in tourist establishments of the Generalitat. This ranges from €1 per person per night for stays in hotels with less than four stars and up to €3.50 per night for 5-star establishments.

This means that from this autumn, tourists to Barcelona will end up pay between €5 and €7.50 per night.

There has been so much talk of overtourism in Spain lately that many forget the other side of the story – the parts of the country that are empty. 

Recently, one of the most underpopulated regions in Spain, Extremadura, made headlines when it said it would pay digital nomads to move there, helping to increase the population and jump-start local economies. 

The rural depopulation of Spain’s ‘interior’ has long been a socioeconomic and demographic problem

According to Spain’s National Institute of Statistics (INE), approximately 22 million Spaniards live in the 100 most populated municipalities in Spain. This means that around half of the total Spanish population is concentrated in four percent of the national territory.

Over the last decade, 6,232 municipalities have seen their population decline. This equals three out of every four municipal areas.

Castilla-La Mancha, Castilla y León, Extremadura and Aragón are the parts of Spain where this depopulation is felt the most. Here, many people move away from the countryside and smaller towns in search of employment, better paid jobs and where they can find more opportunities. 

Depopulation affects everything from the lack of banking and healthcare services to local economies and the social fabric of these rural societies. 

In another news story that caught our eye, the Balearic Island of Formentera will be hosting what it calls “the only Zero Wastefestival in the world” from October 4th to 6th. 

While other festivals also claim to sustainable, the SON Estrella Galicia Posidonia event was recently awarded TRUE Zero Waste Platinum certification. Working with local partners, it is open to only 350 people and offers its guests a chance to discover the island through activities and guided walks – committed to a zero waste policy with a focus on reduction and reuse.

The event offers a programme of musical performances, a tasting menu curated by a Michelin Star chef and activities across different parts of the island, which will remain secret until October 4th. Tickets can be bought here.

The festival aims to raise awareness of the protection of Posidonia meadows around the island.

SHOW COMMENTS