The average salary in Spain has grown up to 1,987 euros on average. Inflation leaves us 578 euros a year in the pocket

The average salary in Spain maintains Your upward trend of 2021, managing to link fifteen consecutive quarters of interannual ascent in the State as a whole. This climb leaves the average salary in its historical maximum, according to The semiannual report points ‘Adecco of opportunities and employment satisfaction’ monitor ‘that has been monitoring wages and the Workers’ satisfaction. Best average salary for all. The average salary in Spain has received A remarkable improvement Since 2022.al and as indicated by the authors of the Adecco Group report, this recovery is due to a 3.8% increase in nominal wages during 2024. Despite the good data, the authors of the study remember that this increase is the second lowest of the last fifteen quarters, only ahead of the 3.4% increase recorded in 2021. With this increase, the average salary in Spain is located in the historical maximum of the 1,987 euros per month on average and, for the first time in the series, no autonomous community has an average salary of less than 1,600 euros per month. Rich autonomy, poor autonomy. Despite this generalized improvement, there is still a large salary difference depending on the community in which it is resided. The best average remuneration is given in the community of Madrid and the Basque Country, with average salaries of 2,384 euros and 2,248 euros respectively, followed by Navarra and Catalonia that close the group with salaries above 2,000 euros. At the tail in salaries we find Andalusia, with an average salary of 1,750 euros, the Canary Islands, with 1,668 euros and closes the Extremadura list with 1,641 euros on average. However, despite registering the lowest average salary in Spain, Extremadura is the one that has received the greatest interannual increase, with 7.4%, which has allowed it to cut distances with the Canary Islands. The purchasing power is improved. Although the salary increases They are always good news, the inflation can dilute them cutting the purchasing power of those salaries. By putting salaries in relation to prices, Adecco Group Institute has observed an improvement in the average purchasing power of salaries, encrypting the increase in 578 euros per year for the whole of Spain, which implies an improvement of 2.5% average in its purchasing power. “Even so, the purchase capacity of the current average salary is 7.9 % lower than the largest purchasing power of the historical series, reached in 2009,” the authors of the report point out. Inflation ballast. Again, the autonomous fluctuation of inflation has made differences in this data. The ones who have seen their purchasing power most have been the workers of Balearic Islands and Madrid, with 1,351 euros and 1,213 euros per year of improvement respectively, followed by the Region of Murcia and Extremadura with 871 euros and 757 euros a year. However, despite generalized improvements, two communities They have lost purchasing power In the last year. The salary increase in Cantabria could not cushion inflation and its workers lost 72 euros of purchasing power per year. Worst are the data of the Canary Islands, whose salaries lost 209 euros a year in purchasing capacity. In Xataka | How much is really charged in Spanish technology: of the 27,000 euros as Junior at 170,000 euros Image | Unspash (Sam Moghadam)

They are 25.5 hours on average

Labor productivity has become In a topic of debate before the imminence of the arrival of the reduction of the working day at 37.5 hours per week. However, much more important than the legal amount of hours that form the working day, it is What are those hours used. A recent study of the Ringover Business Software Platform has discovered that employees are only really productive for an average of five hours and six minutes of their day. Being at work is not working. He study It was made on a sample of 1,063 Spanish adults between 18 and 70 years. Their conclusions suggest that the Spaniards only take advantage of 63.75% of a 40 -hour workday, with an average of five hours and six minutes dedicated exclusively to productive tasks related to their work. Among employee groups, women are more productive than men with an average of 36 minutes of daily work. By age range, employees between 44 and 59 are the ones who waste less time during their working days, reaching days with a real productivity time above six hours a day. The least productive is the range between 28 and 43, with four hours and 58 minutes of effective work. Not remote or face -to -face. The study highlights that employees with Hybrid working days They are the ones who claimed to take advantage of their day, with an average productivity of five hours and 36 minutes. Against all forecast, face -to -face employees did not exceed that time, registering an average of five hours and 12 minutes of real work, while workers with 100% remote days They recognized being the most inefficient With an average of four hours and 36 minutes. Again, the veteran factor also has influence on the best use of time. The most committed to their workday are the owners of the businesses or high -ranking managers, with six hours and 12 minutes of real work daily, followed by Senior employees and Junior with just under five hours and 28 minutes. The least productive proved to be intermediate controlswith only 4 hours and 48 minutes daily used in their respective works. Most common distractions. According to the responses obtained, navigating the Internet doing personal searches is the activity that occupies the most real work time. Employees dedicate 56 minutes a day in it, followed by talking to family and friends (55 minutes) or chatting with other colleagues not related to work (52 minutes). Review social networks during the working day consumes 50 minutes of time, while look at the vacuum dreaming It occupies an average of 46 minutes a day among the respondents. Paradoxically, many employees use an average of 43 minutes a day looking for another job, instead of doing their job. What motivates this low productivity? 46% of the employees surveyed claimed that this low productivity was due to the end of their work With enough timeand used excess time to carry out personal or unrelated activities to their employment. 76.8% of respondents claimed to have had Problems to concentrate At work, and 28.8% say they often suffer or always these concentration problems During your workday. 62% ensure that sometimes or often they feel concerned about their work performance. At the opposite end, 25.7% say they do not feel guilty at all with personal activities during their workday. In Xataka | ANDl 80% of online purchases are made during working hours and the data point to a suspect: the gene generation Image | Unspash (Studio Republic)

€8,000 average debt for each tenant

In Spain, becoming a homeowner is not simple task. Neither is being a tenant. After years getting more expensive almost uninterruptedly, rental prices have reached their highest level since at least 2006. And that, among other things, has led to a very significant percentage of Spanish households (higher than the rest of the European Union) are squeezing more than advisable their wallets to meet their landlords every month. Now we know a fact: to what extent this perfect storm, a mixture of skyrocketing rents, loss of purchasing power and homes overloaded of expenses, is increasing defaults among tenants. The big question is… Is late payment the canary in the mine of the housing crisis facing the country? Although the situation today is different from that of 20 years ago, in the run-up to the real estate crisis of 2008 it was certainly a clear ‘red flag’. One piece of information: 7,957 euros. Studies are just that: studies. With its biases and limitations. a few days ago Rental Observatorya platform powered by Rental Insurance and in which the King Juan Carlos University, threw one with an interesting approach: its authors analyzed the levels of late payments that the Spanish residential rental market endured over the past year and discovered that the level of non-payments has grown significantly. As a summary, they leave out a figure: 7,957.6 euros. And what does it mean? That is the average delinquency that, according to the calculations Rental Observatory, was recorded last year among urban rentals in Spain: 7,957 euros. The data is interesting for several reasons. The first is its amount, which is equivalent to seven months of income. The second is that it shows that the problem of non-payments is getting worse in Spain. Those almost 8,000 euros represent a 4.23% increase with respect to the previous year. Curious yes, surprising no. The percentage is interesting, but probably surprises few in the sector. After all, it arrives in a context marked by the increase in price of rents after years of increases and the high overexertion rate that weighs down the pockets of Spanish tenants. “The debt increases continuously year after year, in the same way as prices and the financial effort that landlords dedicate to paying the rent,” add the report. Its authors recall in fact that the average rental price stood at 1,117 euros last year in Spain and, on average, tenants dedicated 34% of their income to paying their landlords. What’s more, the 4.23% increase in delinquencies between 2023 and 2024 shows a certain slowdown in the expansion of delinquencies; but the observatory doesn’t think that’s a good sign. If in 2024 defaults have grown at a slower rate than other years in Spain, it is due, their technicians clarifybecause fewer houses have simply been rented. “In any case, it represents a considerable amount of debt.” Three facts to reflect on. Rental Insurance is dedicated to the management of leases, making it an involved party in the market; But there are other observatories that help to understand to what extent things have become complicated for tenants. The first is the drift of rents. Idealistic calculate that in Spain, at a general level, the m2 of rental housing costs 13.5 euros, 11.5% more than a year before and almost double the €7.2 that was charged in 2014. This evolution has little to do with that recorded in salaries. The INE tables show that in 2022 the average income per inhabitant was at 14,082 euros facing the 9,098 of 2012. In general and taking into account the CPI drift, BBVA Research estimated Recently, since 2020, we Spaniards have suffered a loss of purchasing power of around 20%. In short: much more expensive housing and households with less economic muscle to pay for it. The tenants, suffocated. The third key has a lot to do with the previous two and is the “overexertion rate.” A few months ago, CaixaBank Research calculated it taking into account the percentage of households that are forced to allocate more than 40% of their income to pay for their homes, both bills and rent to their landlords or mortgages, depending on whether they live on rent or own. It turned out that in the specific case of the tenants that indicator was 30.6%. Why is it important? Because it is well above the EU average, where the rate of overexertion among tenants is of 20.3%, and of course that of homeowners who pay mortgages (4.4%). The data reflects that it is common for tenants to spend more money on their home than they should taking into account their income level. In general, the Bank of Spain advises That this economic effort does not exceed 35% of the salary. In 2020, an average Spaniard booked 41% of your gross salary to meet their landlords. “A close relationship”. These data are not trivial. The observatory appreciate “a very close relationship between average late payment and the financial effort” that tenants make to pay their rents. “Generally, those areas where tenants dedicate most of their income to rent coincide with those with the highest level of debt,” they clarify. And for example, a fact: in the 10 provinces where tenants dedicate more than 35% of their earnings to rent, late payments far exceed or are close to 6,000 euros on average. Question of how much… and where. The Rental Observatory study raises another interesting idea: late payment in the rental market is increasing in Spain, but not in all regions equally. The greater increases They have been recorded in the Valencian Community (7.21%) and the Balearic Islands (6.8%) and the Canary Islands (6.79%), while in Extremadura the increase was noticeably smaller, 1.76%. The photo also changes considerably if we look at the amount of the average debt. In Catalonia it stands at 10,996 euros, in the Balearic Islands at 10,233 and in Madrid at 9,812, three figures significantly higher than the national average (7,957) and that far exceed the data for … Read more

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