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ECONOMY

Spain extends scheme to ease soaring costs caused by Ukraine war

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez on Wednesday announced the extension of a package of financial measures to ease the effect ofsoaring prices driven up by Russia's invasion of Ukraine and other factors.

Spain extends scheme to ease soaring costs caused by Ukraine war
Sánchez did not say how much the extension would cost the public purse. Photo by Pierre-Philippe MARCOU / AFP

“The government will extend the war response plan for another three months,” he said while meeting lawmakers from his Socialist party.

The measures, which came into force on April 1 and will remain in place until June 30th, include €6billion ($6.4 billion) in direct aid for
companies and households hit by the impact of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Among the measures was a discount of 20 cents per litre of fuel, with the government paying 15 cents and fuel providers the rest, and an extension of the reduction in VAT on energy costs.

Sánchez did not say how much the extension would cost the public purse.

“With these measures, we have been able to lower by 60 percent the taxes on light… we have broadened the extent of the social aid package to two million homes and we’ve protected the most vulnerable,” he said, referring to a measure to reduce consumers’ electricity bills.

For months Spain, like many other countries, has been battling soaring inflation as a result of the tension between the post-pandemic economic recovery and the impact of the war in Ukraine.

According to figures released on Monday by the National Institute of Statistics (INE), inflation rose again in May reaching 8.7 percent, an 0.4 percent rise on the figure for April.

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ECONOMY

Madrid approves sale of Vodafone’s Spanish unit

Spain's government has approved the sale of British mobile phone giant Vodafone's Spanish division to investment fund Zegona for up to €5.0 billion.

Madrid approves sale of Vodafone's Spanish unit

Digital Transformation Minister José Luis Escrivá said Madrid had given the green light because the London-based fund has committed to “a very substantial investment plan in the telecommunications sector over the medium term, in both fixed and mobile telephony”.

Vodafone announced in October that it had reached a deal to sell its Spanish business to Zegona, which was founded by two former Virgin Media executives, as part of its efforts to streamline its European operations under pressure from shareholders.

Under the terms of the deal the investment fund will pay Vodafone €4.1 billion ($4.4 billion) in cash, and up to 900 million shares in Zegona, which is listed in London.

The deal is expected to be completed at the end of May, Vodafone said in a statement.

The company said it now plants to start a €500-million share buyback programme on May 15th as part of its plans to return €2.0 billion to shareholders over 12 months.

In a further streamlining, Vodafone in June agreed to merge its British operations with Three UK, owned by Hong Kong-based CK Hutchison, to create Britain’s biggest operator with 27 million customers and accelerate rollout of faster 5G connectivity.

The group, which has more than 300 million mobile customers in Europe and Africa, is heavily focused on accelerating rollout of 5G in the UK.

At the end of 2022, Vodafone unveiled a huge deal with investment firms GIP and KKR to form a joint venture that would maintain its majority stake in European masts division Vantage Towers.

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