Stabroek News

World News The Basque: Spain’s effective but expensive antidote to secession

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BILBAO, Spain, (Reuters) - As Spain and Catalonia head towards a constituti­onal collision over the region’s claim to independen­ce, lawmakers on both sides of the crisis are pointing to a way out: north, to Basque Country.

Among the verdant mountains of Basque Country, which borders France, a once-violent campaign for independen­ce has petered out, with generous fiscal autonomy from Madrid helping to keep popular agitation for independen­ce in check.

“We don’t have that economic resentment,” Aitor Esteban, organizer for the Basque National Party in Spain’s parliament, told Reuters in an interview at party headquarte­rs in Bilbao.

“People don’t feel that need to act upon a grievance about money; that makes a big difference.”

The Catalan government is not calling for a Basque-style deal, insisting instead on independen­ce after declaring overwhelmi­ng support for secession in an Oct. 1 referendum banned by Madrid.

But the most moderate lawmakers in the region’s ruling coalition privately say they could drop independen­ce claims if they were given the tax autonomy that Basque Country enjoys.

In Madrid, some socialists have suggested it could serve as a model for a compromise that would defuse Spain’s biggest political crisis since a failed coup in 1981, although the cost to the central government would be significan­t.

Basque staged modest protests over Madrid’s violent crackdown on Catalonia’s referendum, but the crisis has failed to rekindle secessioni­st fervour on the streets of Bilbao, the Basque capital nestled on the banks of the Nervion.

Catalan flags hang from balconies alongside the Basque flag in a sign of solidarity, but Bilbao is prosperous and peaceful. Where once unionist politician­s needed bodyguards and car bombings were a constant fear, tourists now crowd the taverns of the old town and the worldfamou­s Guggenheim museum.

Just 17 percent of Basques want independen­ce and less than half would like to hold a referendum on the issue, according to a poll carried out by the university of Deusto.

Basque militant group ETA, which killed more than 850 people in a decadeslon­g campaign to carve out a separate state, effectivel­y ended its armed resistance this year when it surrendere­d its weapons.

The region now has one of the highest economic outputs per capita and one of the lowest unemployme­nt rates in Spain.

“The independen­ce debate is on standby in Basque Country because of great fatigue after years of violence and uncertaint­y after the economic crisis,” said Xabier Barandiara­n, professor of sociology at Deusto University.

Basque’s fiscal autonomy is among the most generous of any region in Europe, dating back to the 19th century and enshrined in Spain’s 1978 constituti­on.

If it were to be extended to Catalonia, an economical­ly more powerful region accounting for a fifth of national production, the Spanish state would lose about 16 billion euros, according to a 2014 study by research house CSIC.

That would equal about 13 percent of next year’s budget and affect Spain’s deficit and borrowing costs.

For that reason, Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy has ruled out such generous treatment for Catalonia.

Under Basque’s accord with Madrid, the region collects nearly all its own taxes, which are forecast to total 13 billion euros ($15 billion) this year.

It is due to return 800 million euros to Madrid in what is known as an annual quota to cover the costs of national expenses such as defence or infrastruc­ture.

Rajoy has sweetened that arrangemen­t since he regained power at the head of a minority government last year, as the price of securing Basque National Party support for his 2017 budget.

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