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CATALONIA

Why do Catalans have a reputation for being stingy?

Catalans have a reputation throughout Spain for being tight-fisted and miserly, particularly when it comes to money. Is there any truth to this stereotype and how did it come about?

Why do Catalans have a reputation for being stingy?
Photo: LLUIS GENE / AFP

In Spain, the word tacaño (stingy) is often thrown together with the word catalán when it comes to describing the people from the north-eastern region, but is this a fair assessment of their character? 

How did the stereotype come about?

According to Spanish national newspaper ABC, this stereotype dates all the way back to before the 14th century, and it was in fact Italians, not Spaniards, who started it all.

The Italian poet Dante Alighieri contributed to the stereotype of Catalans being miserly. Photo: Wikipedia

In his book Divine Comedy, published in 1320, Dante Alighieri (pictured above) wrote “If my brother could foresee this, he would avoid the greedy poverty of the Catalans, so as not to receive any harm”.

As seen from the quote by the Florentine poet, even back in medieval times, the best way to insult a Catalan was to talk about the fact that he kept his wallet firmly in his pocket.

This prejudice soon spread throughout Italy, particularly when Catalan merchants and soldiers came to rule over Sardinia in the 1400s.  

However, it wasn’t until the 18th century that this stereotype arrived in Spain. Because of its strategic position, on the coast and close to the rest of Europe, Catalonia became a very wealthy region and was home to many merchants. It was customary that the second son of well-off Catalan families would dedicate himself to commerce and trade. 

READ ALSO: The good, the bad and the ugly – What are the regional stereotypes across Spain?

“The people of Spain knew the Catalans for their commercial activity, in the same way that the Castilians were identified as civil servants and lawyers”, explains Ángel Puertas, author of the book Cataluña vista por un madrileño (“Catalonia as seen by a person from Madrid”), which seeks to dispel some of the common clichés about the Catalans.

As a result, they were often seen as being rich, and to rub them up the wrong way during arguments, the Spanish would call them stingy and compare them to Europe’s Jewish moneylenders, who suffered the same stigma at the time for being miserly.  

Photo: Constituciones catalanas, Barcelona. Artists: Pedro Michel and Diego de Gumiel, 1495.

Is there any truth to the stereotype?

So, is this just an unfair prejudice that dates back over the centuries or does it have any truth in modern society?

A study by Spain’s Sociological Research Centre (CIS) stated in 1995 that 35 percent of Spaniards from outside Catalonia considered Catalans “stingy”, while only 15 percent of them applied that character trait to themselves. Needless to say, there’s no evidence CIS has carried out any similar studies since, perhaps because they don’t exactly help to debunk stereotypes or lessen animosity between regions.

It’s probably true that even in 2021 the catalán tacaño cliché is mainly perpetuated by Spaniards from other regions, but what do Catalonia’s foreign residents think? Do they agree with the label?

Venezuelan Barcelona resident Karina Cova told The Local Spain that she agrees that the stereotype sometimes rings true. “Even amongst my Catalan friends, whenever we talk about money or try to split the bill and I tell someone, now you owe me or I owe you, they tell me that I sound like a Catalan,” she says.

“I am also currently planning my wedding and many of my friends are asking me if I’m going to do it the Catalan way, where each guest pays for their own meal,” Cova told The Local.

Another foreign Barcelona resident who preferred to remain anonymous told The Local Spain that she can attest to this after she attended a wedding of a local Catalan friend and was expected to pay for the €150 menu on the big day. 

Catalonia resident Marco, who’s originally from the Canary Islands, also believes that the saying is true. “I have a Catalan friend who keeps an Excel spreadsheet, detailing every single euro he is owed or owes to others,” he says.

Barcelona Chamber of Commerce President Miquel Valls thinks that the Catalans are not stingy at all, and are actually very generous.

“This is constantly seen through our solidarity campaigns,” Valls is quoted as saying in local news site Catalan News, noting that Catalonia is one of the European regions that gives the most through NGO aid to third world countries.

“Catalans are also hard-working and thrifty,” he says, adding that the stereotype is just the root of a historical myth.

Catalonia is Spain’s second economic region, just slightly behind Madrid, making up 19 percent of the GDP. Because of this, Catalonia reportedly pays a higher level of tax than other poorer Spanish regions. Many Catalans cite this as an example of why they are in fact generous and not miserly at all, including Valls.

But could this same fact, be one of the reasons why the rest of Spain might still see them as stingy today?

What does The Local Spain’s Catalonia reporter think?

“Catalans generally think they pay more taxes than the rest of Spain and I do think there’s plenty of truth to it,” Barcelona-based journalist Esme Fox writes.

“But it’s also true that this is one of the reasons (among many other complicated ones) that many want Catalonia to become an independent nation. Some Catalans feel that Spain is robbing Catalonia of its wealth and that they would be better off managing their own finances and their own country. 

Image: kirillslov / Pixabay

“As a foreigner living in Catalonia myself, I haven’t noticed Catalans being particularly stingy at all, in fact, there have been many times when they have been overly generous to me. A Catalan client I worked for would always give me gifts when it was a special occasion, and invite me round for dinner.

“Another Catalan offered to give me an additional service for free when she knew I couldn’t decide because of the extra expense involved.  

“Of course, we can find many examples of both stingy and generous Catalans, just like we can find many examples of this from people all over the world, so could it just simply be the historical context that gives the Catalans this bad name?”.

Next time you’re in Catalonia, try being extra generous to someone and see what happens, most likely you’ll find that it’s reciprocated. 

Member comments

  1. I have been living in Catalonia now for 15 years, through relatively economically sound times and through financially hard times. My Catalan friends (around 50% of my social circle) have been nothing but extremely generous, not only with money but with their time, their love and their concern. If I have come across the so-called “stingy” Catalan it is in commerce and business/client relations. It has only happened occasionally. I would dispute the notion that the Catalans are stingy: careful perhaps but not stingy.

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CLIMATE CRISIS

Will there still be drought restrictions in Spain after all the rain that’s fallen?

After an incredibly rainy Easter helped to refill Spain's dwindling reservoirs, some have started to wonder if drought restrictions planned or already implemented in certain parts of the country will be lifted.

Will there still be drought restrictions in Spain after all the rain that's fallen?

If you were in Spain over Easter, you might’ve noticed that it was a pretty wet one. In fact, the rain was so bad in some parts of the country that many Holy Week processions had to be cancelled.

For many drought threatened parts of the country, however, notably Andalusia and Catalonia, though this was disappointing from a cultural point of view, it was welcome relief for the parched land and reservoirs.

Around areas of Cádiz, Granada and Málaga, some towns saw over 100 litres of rainfall per square metre in a single day.

In fact, rainfall during Semana Santa this year was more than three times the usual levels around most of the country, according to data from the State Meteorological Agency (Aemet).

READ ALSO: Tenerife to call drought emergency as Spain struggles with water shortages

Water reserve levels in Spanish reservoirs have risen to 63.1 percent of their capacity, 5.3 percent more than the week before. As such, many might now assume that the heavy rain over Easter has alleviated these drought problems, and there’s now no need for the restrictions implemented in some parts of Spain.

Is that the case – or will there still be drought restrictions in Spain such as lowering the water pressure from taps, a ban on filling swimming pools and watering gardens?

Andalusia

Known for its scorching summer temperatures, it had been many years since Andalusia had a wet Semana Santa. Though it will take the Andaluces a while to recover from their cancelled processions, many hope that the abnormal rainfall could ease potential water restrictions, at least for a while. In the southern region these have included water pressure restrictions and even overnight cut-offs in some towns.

La Junta de Andalucia has pledged to study its water saving measures once the runoff from the Easter rains is over and the authorities have a better idea of the picture moving forward. The signs seem positive, however: according to data from the Guadalquivir’s Automatic Hydrological Information System (SAIH), on 25th March capacity was at 14 percent — a week later it has exceeded 70 percent thanks to the rain.

However, La Junta had previously announced that, however heavy the rain, restrictions in some parts of the region, as well as works on the water system, would go ahead because the lack of water is “a structural problem.” One positive impact of the rains is that Andalusia now seems unlikely to need to ship in (literally) water from elsewhere because the reservoirs could, if managed properly, serve local areas for several years.

The rains have brought “relief” from the serious drought situation in Andalusia, said regional President Juanma Moreno, so that “it will not be necessary to bring in ships loaded with water” this summer. However, he also urged Andalusians to continue to be responsible “in the use and consumption of water.”

Catalonia

The other region at major risk of drought is Catalonia, where large swathes of the region had gone as long as three years without significant rainfall and the authorities have already introduced more extensive water saving measures.

Pere Aragonès, head of the Catalan regional government, recently declared a drought emergency after reservoirs in the northeastern region fell below 16 percent of their capacity, the benchmark set by authorities for the implementation of water-saving measures. Restrictions in Barcelona and 201 other municipalities are currently in place, affecting over 6 million people and almost 80 percent of the Catalan population.

READ ALSO: Barcelona to send letters to 24,000 residents who use too much water

Reservoir capacity levels improved somewhat following the Easter washout, but will likely do little to combat the long-term structural drought problems in the region.

The Easter rain helped, but not to the extent it did in Andalusia. According to data from the Catalan Water Agency, on Monday 1st April the reserves in internal basins were at 16.35 percent of their capacity.

Reservoirs in the Ter-Llobregat system now have a total of 103.59 cubic hectometres, pushing it over the lower threshold outlined in the region’s Special Drought Plan, which sets the state of emergency at 100 hectometres and below. This does not seem like a significant enough improvement for the government to change course on restrictions.

Is the drought over?

It’s true that the Easter downpours in Spain will go some of the way to refilling its dwindling reservoirs and perhaps, in some parts of the country, reduce the need for water restrictions. But this will only be for a short period of time – whether months or years.

Summer will soon be on the way, and if recent summers are anything to go by, they will be scorching hot. So hot, in fact, that they could likely undo some of the welcome relief over Easter with temperatures in the high-40s and likely weeks or months without any rainfall at all.

If anything, the short-term relief of this year’s rainy Easter points to the longer term structural problems that demonstrate the need for water restrictions in some regions. Such strong and sudden downpours (the storms killed four people in northern Spain) are symptoms of climate change and more extreme weather — of all types, whether rain, wildfires or gale force winds — that will likely worsen the drought conditions over time.

That’s why so many local and regional governments have been trying to implement restrictions, or at least get their residents to think about moderating their consumption. Following the Easter downpours, it seems some restrictions could be relaxed in Andalusia, if anywhere, but is less likely in Catalonia. In recent weeks, the government of Tenerife also declared a “hydraulic emergency” on the island amid the threat of extreme and long-lasting drought in the midland areas of Tenerife and a critical risk of water shortages in the coming months and years. 

The fact that the drought situation around Spain now seems to depend on abnormally heavy rain (described as ‘a miracle’ in the Spanish press) speaks volumes about its severity in the medium to long-term.

READ ALSO: Spain on track for warmest first quarter on record despite Easter downpour

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