© 2024 KENW
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

In Spain, Low Wages Become Increasingly Common

People line up outside an unemployment office in Madrid in February. The country has the eurozone's highest unemployment rate at more than 21 percent.
Arturo Rodriguez
/
AP
People line up outside an unemployment office in Madrid in February. The country has the eurozone's highest unemployment rate at more than 21 percent.

David Horcajada fishes a beer can out of his backpack at a Madrid square.

"Five years ago, believe me, there were really few people drinking on the streets," he says. "Right now, everybody is drinking on the street because people cannot afford to pay for drinks at bars. So since we're Spanish and we do drink, we party a lot, so it doesn't matter if we don't have money. We'll keep doing it."

Many in the crowd are what locals call mileuristas — workers on temporary contracts that pay 1 mil (1,000) euros a month, barely $1,400. That's considered below the poverty line for a family in Spain, and just above it for a single adult. The word used to have a negative connotation. But not in this economy, Horcajada says.

When somebody talks about labor-market reform, they think they want to turn the market into something like the U.S. market. But what they don't realize is that they've got 30 percent of their workers with no job security whatsoever, in really inferior conditions, so that the others can enjoy the kind of job security that they have.

"When Spain was booming, like five years ago, just really young people, normally uneducated, were mileuristas," he says. "The thing is that right now, a lot of people are becoming mileuristas, and a lot of people would like to become mileuristas, if they could."

Ester Sanz would love to join the ranks of mileuristas. She's a certified teacher but can't find a full-time job.

"I finished my degree in June last year, and I have a job, but it's only for one hour a day, so it's only 200 euros, but nothing else," she says.

On 200 euros a month, less than $300, she has to live with her parents and clip coupons.

"You try to go with the offers, 'One Euro Wednesday' and things like that, and try to save money, as much as you can," she says.

A Scarcity of Jobs

More than one in five lives below the poverty line in Spain, which has the eurozone's highest unemployment rate at more than 21 percent. For young people, the rate is more than double that. Even for those who have jobs, a third are on temporary contracts, with low pay and no benefits.

"This is what young people do. And they're lucky; they've got a job," says Gayle Allard, an economist at Madrid's IE Business School. "Because the unemployment rate for young people is 46 percent. So, they're the outsiders in the labor market."

Spain has a two-tiered labor system. Workers have either temporary contracts or jobs for life. It's a key issue in national elections Nov. 20. But it's also the third rail of Spanish politics, where unions are powerful, Allard says.

"When somebody talks about labor-market reform, they think they want to turn the market into something like the U.S. market," she says. "But what they don't realize is that they've got 30 percent of their workers with no job security whatsoever, in really inferior conditions, so that the others can enjoy the kind of job security that they have."

In the plaza, Horcajada describes how his generation increasingly makes do on 1,000 euros a month.

"Either you live with your parents, or you share an apartment. The problem is, if you're a mileurista and you're, for example, 30 years old, you're not going to be sharing an apartment when you're 30 years old," he says. "You want your own apartment and your own life. If you're earning 1,000 euros, there's no way you're going to be able to do that in Spain. It's not a cheap country."

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Lauren Frayer covers India for NPR News. In June 2018, she opened a new NPR bureau in India's biggest city, its financial center, and the heart of Bollywood—Mumbai.