Is this a soap opera? Four Spanish EU
parliamentarians send a letter to the EU Commissioner Viviane Reding
asking for protection by the European Union against the Spanish
government – their own government! We Europeans know about the
claims to independence of Basques and Catalans. These are claims of
considerable minorities in the Basque Country and even of a majority in Catalonia, if we discount the wide split between Catalan parties of the left and parties of the right.(*) These
claims have been heard for decades, nay for centuries. Their fate has
been like that of any other political demands that keep being
repeated, but are ultimately not acted upon. Such claims may be (as
in these cases they are) respected as legitimate, but in the end not
taken seriously; they are filed away as curiosities. This is how
Europe has dealt with the aspirations of the Basque Country and
Catalonia whenever they have turned up.
So what is different this time? How can
an admittedly major region of a major European country suddenly raise
such a ruckus about its autonomy that threats of countermeasures of
all kinds – bar none, even military intervention - begin to fly?
The notice of Catalan President Artur
Mas of an advance election to the Catalan legislature, el Parlament,
on November 25 has injected additional nervousness into Spanish
politics at a time when there already existed intense pressure from
street protests and the hardship of the economic crisis in the
country at large. The jittery state of the reactions has to do with
the election being a step in the reassertion of the old Catalan claim
to independence, previously never taken completely seriously. This
time, however, it appears to be different, not least due to Spain's
exposed situation in the euro crisis.
The background is the fact that the
Spanish system for collecting taxes and dividing authority between
the central government in Madrid and the regional governments in the
19 autonomous communities was only sketchily designed from the start
(in the 1978 constitution). The legislation and executive provisions
of the financial authorities seem at a glance to be adequate, but
have obviously not been followed up in practice. This gap in
executive follow-up has allowed the regions and their underlying
governing levels – the provinces and the municipalities - to amass
debt, way beyond what they should have. As long as the economy was
booming there was no visible problem, but after the turn of the tide
that is all different. The fiscal system has been put to an extreme
test in the current hardship and appears not to be able to survive it
without major revision. And coping with crisis and revising the
system at the same time is not a good approach.
Most of the autonomous communities
(regions) of Spain are currently unable to service their debt. Madrid
this year set up a sizable relief fund to help them out. Catalonia
and most other regions have requested a share of that fund, which
they will probably receive. However, Catalonia has later come back
and asked for as much more, which would, if granted, leave them in
possession of more than half of the entire fund. That second request
has (understandably) been denied. Then Catalonia asked for – and
was denied – the same fiscal status as two other autonomous
communities, Pais Vasco (the Basque Country) and Navarra, who for
historical reasons have a so called “fiscal pact” with Madrid.
This is where Spain is most at fault at
the central level, and where the constitutional system fails.
Catalonia claims to be a victim of an unjust system because they pay
much more to the central government than they get back. But for
starters, this is a much used system in developed industrialized
countries. Among countries with a similarly decentralized structure
as Spain, Germany has it, Switzerland has it, Canada and Australia
have it. Moreover, in more simply structured, smaller centralized
countries like Norway, Sweden and others, rich municipalities pay
into a redistribution system that benefits the poorest
municipalities. In all of these countries, the richer communities pay
more into the country's governmental system than they receive back.
Mind you, many of them don't think it is fair, and they all grumble.
But it is standard governmental practice within the OECD. Moreover,
studies of well-being in the Spanish autonomous communities show that
Catalonia's living conditions place it among the four best endowed
regions in Spain (figures for 2000 and 2006, Jurado & Perez-Mayo,
Social Indicators Research, 2012). It is thus not surprising
that they are asked to contribute more to their less favored
compatriots.
A cross-national comparison of five
countries with similar systems of redistribution (Australia, Canada,
Germany, Spain and Switzerland) shows Spain to be quite ordinary
among the rest, and indeed less harsh than other systems. In fact,
Spain has the second softest of the tax transfer arrangements among
these five countries. On the other hand, the monetary effects of
these transfers are also less than in the four other countries except
Switzerland. In other words, Spain has a fairly benign system with
comparatively less impressive transfer results. (See the study by
Hierro et al, Revista de Economía Aplicada, 2010.)
What is the problem then? Is Catalonia
complaining without reason? Not as I see it. The complaints are just
aimed at the wrong target. Where the Spanish system has gone wrong –
in addition to not overseeing the communities' observance of the
rules in force - is in allowing some of the regions, for historical
reasons, to have a more advantageous organization than the others. The foral system has left Pais Vasco and Navarra in
what one study has characterized as a “scandalously favorable” situation (Ángel de la Fuente, “Sobre el Pacto Fiscal y el sistema de
Concierto.” Fundacion SEPI, 2012).
Although Angel seems to be speaking
Catalonia's case, he is actually giving a quite even-handed
evaluation in which his first judgment is that no government in a
similar situation has allowed its subordinate regions to decide on their tax collection system by themselves. All other Spanish regions have
offices of the central tax ministry (Hacienda) located throughout
their territories. Not Pais Vasco and Navarra. Their agencies collect
the taxes on behalf of the central government. The central government, therefore, is not participating in these communities' tax collection process. Hacienda are just handed over the money bags
“at the border”, as it were.
My conclusion is therefore that
Catalonia has a point, but the resolution is not to give them the
same exceptional system. Rather, the solution must be to remove the
foral system in Navarra and Pais Vasco and instate instead the
one in force in the rest of Spain. That, of course, would be to
challenge all the forces of nationalism in these regions and unleash
a new battle of the regions.
Poor Spain.
(* Correction here of previous text. Catalan opinion favoring independence according to polls in November 2012 is 57%, similar results found in election of November 25, 2012, though people holding this view were split between four parties of both left and right.)
(* Correction here of previous text. Catalan opinion favoring independence according to polls in November 2012 is 57%, similar results found in election of November 25, 2012, though people holding this view were split between four parties of both left and right.)