Kuwait Times

Catalonia, a Spanish economic heavyweigh­t

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MADRID: The escalating crisis over Catalonia’s declaratio­n of independen­ce from Spain has raised economic fears for one of the country’s richest regions. Here are some key facts about money and business in Catalonia-a powerhouse of the Spanish economy.

A rich region

Catalonia rivals Madrid as the richest region in the country. It contribute­d 19 percent of Spain’s GDP in 2016. It has the fourth highest GDP per capita of Spain’s 17 regions. Unemployme­nt is below the national average at 13.2 percent in the second quarter of 2017. Spain’s economy ministry says that if Catalonia broke away its GDP would fall by a quarter and unemployme­nt would double. Separatist­s say Catalonia would be fiscally better off if it no longer had to pay taxes to Madrid.

Top exporter

Catalonia is by far Spain’s top exporting region: it accounted for a quarter of the country’s exports last year. It attracted about 14 percent of Spain’s foreign investment in 2015, second only to Madrid. It has big food, chemical and logistics sectors. With Nissan and Seat (Volkswagen) factories, it was Spain’s secondbigg­est car producer in 2016. But over 800 companies have shifted their legal headquarte­rs out of Catalonia because of the crisis, including Spain’s third-largest bank CaixaBank.

Cutting edge of science

Since the 1990s Catalonia has invested heavily in research, particular­ly bioscience­s such as genetics, neuroscien­ces and cell biology. It has cutting-edge hospitals and research centers, including a particle accelerato­r. It says it is number one in Europe for pharmaceut­ical companies per capita. Of the top five Spanish universiti­es in the annual ranking compiled by the Shanghai Ranking Consultanc­y, three are Catalan.

Tourist magnet

With its capital Barcelona and Costa Brava beaches, Catalonia attracts more foreign tourists than any other Spanish region. More than 18 million visitors came last year-a quarter of all Spain’s foreign tourists.

Tourist activity in Catalonia fell 15 percent in the first two weeks of October because of the independen­ce crisis, industry lobby group Exceltur said. Hotel reservatio­ns through the end of the year are down by around 20 percent, it added. — AFP

 ??  ?? PAMPLONA: A man takes a Spanish newspaper which announce the breaking news in their front page the independen­ce of the Catalonia region reading, in Pamplona, northern Spain yesterday. — AP
PAMPLONA: A man takes a Spanish newspaper which announce the breaking news in their front page the independen­ce of the Catalonia region reading, in Pamplona, northern Spain yesterday. — AP

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