Spain extends measures to help with living costs into 2024

By Belén Carreño

MADRID (Reuters) -Spain on Wednesday extended a raft of measures designed to help people cope with high costs of living into 2024, even as the rate of inflation slows.

Like other European countries, Spain has grappled with a cost-of-living crisis in the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic, exacerbated by the impact of the war in Ukraine on energy prices.

“This new phase will serve to consolidate the progress achieved over the past five years,” Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, who won another term as premier in November, told a news conference after the cabinet approved the new package.

Sanchez said the country’s gross domestic product was set to have grown by almost 2.5% this year. The Bank of Spain’s previous GDP growth forecast was for 2.4%.

Pensions will be raised by 3.8% in 2024 to match average inflation over the past year, Sanchez added. According to a statement by the Social Security ministry, this increase will carry an estimated cost of 7.3 billion euros ($8.08 billion).

Among the measures were a broadening of subsidies for minors and young people on public transport to all regular users and an extension of the reduction of VAT for essential items such as fruit and vegetables, pasta and cooking oils.

Tickets on inter-city bus lines will continue to be subsidised by 50%, with the central government paying 30% and the regions contributing the remaining 20%.

A controversial so-called windfall tax on energy companies, which brought in around 3 billion euros in 2023, has been tweaked to allow companies to partially offset the 1.2% levy if they invest in renewable energy projects.

A similar levy for banks will be unchanged for 2024 following an agreement between Sanchez´s Socialists and his junior coalition partners, the hard-left Sumar party.

Some measures will be phased out.

A VAT tax cut on energy bills, which reduced the rate to 5% during 2023 will slowly return to 21%, Sanchez said. The 21% VAT rate on gas bills will be reinstated in April, according to a Budget Ministry source.

The tax rate on electricity will rise to 10% for 2024, the government said in a statement.

A ban on evictions of vulnerable families will be extended for another year after a deal between the ruling coalition and Basque left-wing party EH Bildu, as will a ban on utility companies cutting off basic services such as water.

Inflation in Spain slowed to 1.9% in June, a pace not seen since April 2021, after reaching an average 8.4% in 2022.

($1 = 0.9031 euros)

(Reporting by Belén Carreño, Inti Landauro, David Latona and Pietro Lombardi; Writing by David Latona and Charie Devereux; Editing by Alison Williams, Tomasz Janowski and Kirsten Donovan)