If you want bricklayers you have to pay them and give them vacations.

Despite the growing demand for renovations and new homesthe construction sector suffers from a serious labor shortage. The current situation is not just a question of numbers, but a structural problem that is related to the aging of staff, the absence of generational replacement and difficult working conditions that fail to attract young people. The sector is experiencing a moment of “discovery”: if you want trained bricklayers, it is It is essential to improve their salaries and conditions, including vacation days and a work day that allows for reconciliation. That is the main drawback for an industrial fabric made up mainly of self-employed workers. A labor market under pressure. In Spain, the construction sector is going through one of its worst labor crises. According to the National Construction Confederation (CNC) it is estimated that currently some 700,000 workers are needed to cover the demand for works and renovations. Data from the BBVA Research Real Estate Observatory for June 2025 show that vacancies in the sector have multiplied by four since 2016, reflecting an upward trend that does not seem to stop. The employment figures collected in the BBVA report reveal that only 6.8% of those employed in Spain work in the construction sector, far from the 14% that was registered before the 2008 crisis. Aging without replacement. This situation is further aggravated by the difficulty in attracting new workers, especially due to the harsh legacy left by the 2008 crisis in which thousands of professionals left the sector or changed jobs. The BBVA report reveals that more than 55% of construction employees in Spain are over 45 years old and only 9% are under 30 years old, a clear indication of the lack of a generational change cash. Only the arrival of immigrants has allowed a slight rejuvenation between 2022 and 2024. Pascual, bricklayer and construction businessman, assured on Adrián G. Martín’s channel: “I have four projects underway and I need people who know how to manage them, but… I find few prepared people. I need young people who want to learn, but you can’t find them.” A demanding and… poorly paid job? The labor shortage is putting upward pressure on wages. According what was published by The Confidentialthe base salary for a construction worker is around 1,300 euros per month in 14 payments, which amounts to about 18,457 euros per year. according to the sectoral agreement valid until December 2026, but can be reached between 1,384 and 1,500 euros per month depending on the complements and the autonomous community. In regions such as the Valencian Community, the average salary amounts to 23,541 euros per year, while in other communities it exceeds 20,000 euros per year. The EPA data (Active Population Survey) by sectors indicate that, in recent years, salaries have been improving (forced by the increase in the SMI) in the lowest deciles, and due to the pressure of labor shortage in the case of those who have better training or first-class officers. Salary increase in construction Masons without school. Another key factor in the labor crisis is the lack of training for young people seeking to join this sector. The BBVA Research report indicates that Spain has a less qualified construction workforce than the European average, which negatively impacts productivity and limits the adoption of new technologies and efficient methods. The report confirms itAdjustment of employment supply and demand 2025‘ prepared by the Ministry of Labor, which indicates that there is a real and persistent imbalance in construction: there are positions that are difficult to fill, not so much because of lack of demand, but because the supply of qualified labor does not fit the profile demanded. That is, companies do not want to hire profiles to train them internally, so potential candidates to occupy that position in the future are rejected. Jobs without relief. The problem of talent shortage in construction does not only affect bricklayers. Traditional construction-related trades (such as carpenters, electricians, plumbers, painters, etc.) have shared the same construction practices. salary denigrationharsh working conditions and outsourcing of training. However, the attractiveness of employment remains low among young people because it is a “very hard job” and physically demanding, with long hours and little work-life balance. The construction employers have been very belligerent with both the working hours reduction measuresas time controlwhich does not contribute to making the sector attractive to young people. They are not getting rich. Given the shortage of personnel, it is natural to think that the available professionals are getting rich. However, this assumption, which would perhaps be fulfilled in a scenario of large companies where they bid for the best professionals, does not occur in an industrial fabric made up of 92.93% of self-employed people with SMEs without employees or micro-businesses with between 1 and 9 employees. As and how does it count electrician and TikTok influencer Ricardo Abellán (@dombydomotica), the problem of talent shortage is not so much due to staff training, but rather due to the inability of SMEs and self-employed workers to assume the salaries of their new employees. Before that financial inabilityprofessionals choose to generate increasingly longer waiting lists that would be weighing down the sector growth. In Xataka | Europe warns of labor shortage in the technology sector: the worst is yet to come Image | Unsplash (Emma Houghton)

We choose our vacations in the series. That is why 44% of our tourists have discovered us on the screen

Spain has a significant history as a movie settingsometimes with more glamorous glitz than our own national cinematography. The natural landscapes and the diversity of ecosystems create a western desert in Almería that, in the north, approaches the Nordic air landscapes (but without bad weather) of a sword and sorcery production. But with the arrival of streaming (and the international reach of the Spanish series), Spain is beginning to shape itself as a perfect destination for travelers with audiovisual culture. Booming phenomenon. 44% of foreign visitors discover and choose destinations in the country after seeing them in audiovisual productions. It is data provided by The Screen Tourism Observatorywhich speaks of this type of travel as one of the tourism segments with the greatest projection in 2025. This type of tourism moves 40 million international travelers each year worldwide, and Spain is benefiting from it. How it works. According to comments Carlos Rosado, president of the Spain Film Commission, where the public filming offices in Spain are grouped, a film or series acts on the viewer like a virtual brochure, with different advantages over traditional tourist advertising: it is longer in time, reaches more people and creates emotional ties. Spectators become potential tourists thanks to the places in the north of the peninsula that, for example, are seen in ‘Game of Thrones’. Perfect scenario. Spain became a relevant Hollywood set in the 1950s, when the major studios discovered its advantages for filming: diverse landscapes and costs up to 50% cheaper than in the United States. From that time come films such as ‘El Cid’, ‘Lawrence of Arabia’ and, without leaving Europe, the more than 300 films that the Eurowestern factotums filmed in the desert of Tabernasin Almeria. The difference with the present is that those super-productions did not generate tourist flows. But now yes: for example, from the fifth season of ‘Game of Thrones‘, when HBO filmed in the Alcázar of Seville, Girona and other Spanish locationstourism in Seville increased by 25% and in Osuna by 75%. And San Juan de Gaztelugatxe became the second tourist focus in the Basque Country after the Guggenheim. By countries. In the aforementioned study by the Screen Tourism Observatory, carried out with thousands of surveys and an exhaustive compilation of online opinions, we discovered that Germans lead this type of tourism, with 53% having visited Spain after seeing it in audiovisual productions. Italy follows with 46% and the United States with 45%. Among them, half opt for self-guided routes and not organized trips. He is “an autonomous, curious and digitally informed screen tourist, who prefers to design his own experience rather than contracting closed products.” Go to more. Along these lines, the Spain Film Commission itself has launched the Experiences programa project financed by the Secretary of State for Tourism, which wants to transform Spanish audiovisual heritage into sustainable tourist experiences. The proposal will have pilot experiences in Formentera, Seville, Galicia and Burgos that will serve as a model to develop a methodology that will be repeated in other areas of Spain. On the horizon, phenomena such as New Zealand, a benchmark after ‘The Lord of the Rings‘, and who experienced a 40% increase in tourism between 2000 and 2004. Very attractive figures that we will try to replicate with all these proposals. Header | Clementp.fr In Xataka | The reduction of the working day to 37.5 hours was going to sink the hospitality industry: a hotel chain in the Balearic Islands has proven the opposite

Spain has become so expensive that the British are starting to choose another place for their vacations: Morocco

When years ago a British family began to plan their summer vacation could doubt with the dates, the accommodation, with which airline flying or what clothes to put in The suitcase; But in many (many) cases what had no discussion was destiny: They were traveling to Spain. Especially to the Mediterranean coast, Balearic Islands or Canary Islands, where they were looking for sun, heat, beach, good landscapes and better food. Now that decision is no longer so clear and increasingly British choose to fly to somewhat more southern latitudes, to North Africa. The reason is simple: the price increase is leading them to change Catalonia and the Balearic Islands for Tunisia or Morocco. Issue of expenses. British tourists like Spain. A lot. And that is easy to check. He arrives with a walk through the Canary Islands, Catalonia, Balearic Islands or the Costa Blanca (to name a few destinations) or take a look at the INE data: in 2024 the flow of tourists from the United Kingdom grew 6.6% until adding 18.4 million travelers, which allowed Spain to close the year with A record of almost 94 million foreign visitors. The influx of tourists is nevertheless the only thing that grows in the sector. They also do the rates. Latest National Price Index It shows that so far this year, hostels, pensions and accommodation services have become sensitive to each other until they are placed almost 7% above a year ago. If we look back the increase is even more pronounced. RTVE Calculate that from the pandemic the hotels have increased more than 50%. Looking north of Africa. With that price increase as a backdrop and despite the considerable pull of Spain in the British market, more and more families in the United Kingdom opt for alternative destinations (and cheaper) in which to spend your vacation. And in that search they end up looking north of Africa, places like Egypt, Tunisia or Morocco. The trend was verified A few days ago The newspaper Daily Mail, although it is not really new. The sector It has been verifying how English tourists are responding to the rise in prices of Spain or Portugal Looking for more southern alternatives, in North Africa. At the end of 2024 Mirror I already reported that there were British families who were changing the Canary Islands to Egypt to enjoy their winter vacations. A percentage: 39%. Beyond the statements of the agencies and tour operators, there are a series of data that help to understand the growing interest arouses North Africa among British travelers. For example, Booking has proven that between January and May searches related to Tunisia on their platform have fired 68% compared to the same months of 2024. In the case of Egypt they have grown 64% and in that of Morocco 39%. And it is not only about plans, desires or forecasts in the medium or long term. The change is already underway. This same summer the tui uk platform has registered 30% more reservations for Egypt that a year ago. In the case of Tunisia, growth also reaches double digit and the company also recognizes a strong demand for Morocco. More interest, more flights. British airlines have quickly captured that interest and have not taken long to act accordingly, reinforcing their connections with the continent. This year it is expected that the United Kingdom airports take off 19,847 flights destined to North Africa, more than double the 8,653 registered operations before the pandemic. The connections with Spain and Portugal will also grow, but to a much lesser extent: just 10 and 9%. In that new context Morocco also plays with an extra advantage: proximity. A British who wants to fly to Alicante must invest about two and a half hours on the flight. If you want to go to Cairo the trip will last much more (almost double), but if you choose to move between London and Marrakech the journey will not reach four hours. Is there so much price difference? Yes. For a British traveling to Tunisia or Morocco translates into more flight hours, but in his favor he has the cost of accommodation. EUROWEEKLY has made calculations and assures That a seven night stay in Agadir, to the south of the country, costs about 889 pounds per person while other similar packages to stay in Mediterranean destinations in Europe, such as Marbella, Santorini or Mykonos, requires Between 1,000 and 2,700 pounds. “There is a trend, especially in the family segment, towards cheaper destinations,” explained In December a Mirror Sebastien Ebel, executive director of Tui Group, after checking how more and more people were choosing to spend their winter vacations in Egypt instead of the Canary Islands. Already by then Easyjet Holidays found an increase in demand in other African destinations, including Morocco. Prices … and something else. That more and more British imagine spending their vacations in Tunisia or Morocco instead of in the Balearic Islands or Canary Islands not only explains by the price difference. In play more factors enter. For example, the ‘democratization’ of the tourism market, with a growing group of travelers who do not give up their country despite having adjusted budgets. “We frequently see new customers with less income, but still want to travel with budgets of 800 pounds. If they do not find it in Spain, they look for alternatives,” Ebel points out. Another key is what tourists are in Tunisia, Morocco or Egyptwarm destinations, with a rich heritage, beaches, landscapes and a hotel sector that has been put the batteries In recent years and offers options that are not far from which British can be found in Spain or Portugal. The new trend also coincides with protestsIn certain points of the country, such as Balearics either Cataloniaof residents tired of the impact of mass tourism. Images | Heidi Kaden (UNSPLASH) and Calin Stan (UNSPLASH) In Xataka | The north of Spain has been complaining about mass tourism for years. Asturias has discovered … Read more

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