The article itself claimed a lack of new housing being built...
I know the Spanish economy is weak, but it's concerning when a working family cannot afford rent and clearly changes need to be made to ensure that they can.
Not exactly. It says lack of social housing. In other words, housing for the poor. In the meantime, there is an estimated 10,000 housing units sitting empty in Barcelona.
The problem is that the working class has grown increasingly poorer because of the terrible economy. Fix the economy to fix housing. Something needs to pay for the housing. Trying to fix housing without fixing the economy is a fool's errand.
"Lucía Martín cut her political teeth in the PAH, the housing pressure group. She believes Catalonia - and Spain more widely - is dealing with the fall-out from decades of failing to invest in social housing."
"In Barcelona alone there are an estimated 10,000 empty flats or homes. After the crash of 2008, property prices plummeted and speculation soared. With homelessness still a big problem, unoccupied real estate is a source of grievance, especially as most of it is owned by large firms."
"That is what happened to Mariana Stirbu who moved into a flat in the La Sagrera district of Barcelona with her partner and two children three years ago.
"The two men who rented us the flat seemed like the owners - they were wearing suits and we went to sign the contract. We were paying 750 euros a month, so everything seemed fine," she says."
750 euros is not that much for a family of 4. More detail on flat size would have been helpful. It is roughly 25% less than I paid (together with a roommate) for a 2 bedroom apartment over 25 years ago. That was the US, but this means that Spain is probably at least 25% poorer than the US was 25 years ago.
Is it because the owner/speculators don’t want to rent them out because the laws allow squatting? There are articles that say that rental prices have increased (I think I read somewhere between 7 and 15%) but given how much that person was paying (even to a pretend owner), people just can’t afford to pay much. It may not be worthwhile to the owners to rent them out for so little. The hassle of bad tenants and having to refurbish after tenants may mean that you end up losing money. Also, increase in rental prices should be expected given the worldwide money pumping. The exception will be areas like SF with the move to WFH.
Here is more information. The family highlighted has a couple of disabled and someone who lost their job due to COVID-19. They have an income of 1000 euro per month and offered their landlord 250 euro per month for rent. From 2013 to 2019, rents increased 50% (I think another timeframe should be used since the property market deflated a few years before that) but salaries went down 8%. The Spanish economy decreased by 11% in 2020.
You really can't compare the American and Spanish economies on cost of living alone because American incomes are also much higher. For instance, developer jobs here in the UK that aren't leadership roles top out around 60k outside London. So yes you could probably say that Spain is poorer than the US 25 years ago if you only count individual income.
I agree that you can't directly compare but there are some aspects that you can: cost to travel, cost of common goods, etc... Another two aspects that can be compared are the absolute amount of investable income after cost of living and the taxation rate on that.
The rough measure is that you really want those Silicon Valley tech incomes because the investable income is so great. You can value that just via the market actions (how many people are willing to move if given the chance to).
I know the Spanish economy is weak, but it's concerning when a working family cannot afford rent and clearly changes need to be made to ensure that they can.