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BANKING

Spain aims to force banks to install ATMs in every village

Spain's Parliament has given the initial green light to a law that seeks to guarantee that every municipality or neighbourhood of 5,000 people has access to an ATM or in-person banking services, a serious problem in rural communities.

ATM village spain
A man withdraws money at a cashpoint (ATM) set up in a library bus (Bibliobus) in the village of Anover de Tormes, in the northern Spanish province of Salamanca. (Photo by CESAR MANSO / AFP)

On Tuesday February 6th Spain’s Parliament voted in favour on processing a draft bill which aims to guarantee ATM services in towns and neighbourhoods considered at risk of ‘financial exclusion’.

Bank branch closures and a lack of ATMs have become a problem in rural Spain in recent years. Between 2008 and 2019, Spain had the highest number of branch closures and job cuts in Europe, with 48 percent of its branches closing compared with an average of 31 percent across the continent.

As banking increasingly becomes online and digital, the lack of access to bank branches and cash has a disproportionate impact on older and more rural Spaniards.

In 2021, the Bank of Spain warned that almost three percent of the Spanish population, around 1.3 million people, find it difficult to get their hands on legal tender.

READ ALSO: ‘I’m old, not stupid’ – How one Spanish senior is demanding face-to-face bank service

The draft legislation, first proposed by the Catalan Parliament, aims to alleviate these issues and denounces the “constant and persistent closure of bank branches and ATMs over the last decade.”

“It has become an unavoidable reality, especially affecting vulnerable groups,” the text states.

The law essentially aims to guarantee access to basic banking services through local ATMs in these ‘at risk’ areas.

The initiative states that municipalities and neighbourhoods at risk of financial exclusion must have “at least” one ATM, and in the case of local authorities that are smaller than a municipality, the right of access to banking services should be guaranteed by the ATMs of the municipality to which the town or village belongs.

It defines a municipality at risk of financial exclusion as one that does not have an ATM in its municipal area, and a neighbourhood at risk of exclusion is considered part of a city, town or village with at least 5,000 inhabitants and without banking services.

As such, the proposals include plans to force banks to install ATMs in at risk municipalities, as well as paying for their installation.

In fact, the bill states that installation and maintenance costs “may not be passed on to the users of the service.”

READ ALSO: How rural Spain is rebelling against rampant bank closures

If the bill is passed, ATMs must be accessible and provide banking services 24 hours a day, all year round. They must also offer services in the co-official languages of the region, such as Basque in Basque Country and Valenciano in Valencia, for example.

The text also asks the Bank of Spain to draft and send the Ministry of Economy a preliminary list of municipalities at risk of financial exclusion within three months of the law entering into force. Once a list of municipalities has been drawn up, the banks will have one month to propose installation plans of one (or more) ATMs in the areas listed.

The problem of financial exclusion has been particularly felt in rural areas in the Spanish regions of Castilla y León, Galicia, Aragón and Andalusia, where people, especially the older population, are finding it difficult to access their pensions and deal with online banking systems. This problem, among many others, is pushing people out of rural areas in Spain, making the depopulation in these areas even worse.

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But it is not only politicians seeking a solution to this problem. In October 2022, the Spanish banking sector signed an agreement to make banking services more inclusive across the country.

However, while welcome, the plans were only subject to oversight by the banks themselves and did not legally oblige them to do anything. As a result, in some small towns bank branches and ATMs continued to close down.

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HEALTH

EXPLAINED: Spain’s plan to stop the privatisation of public healthcare

Spain’s Health Ministry has announced a new plan aimed at protecting the country's much-loved public healthcare system from its increasing privatisation.

EXPLAINED: Spain's plan to stop the privatisation of public healthcare

In 1997, at the time when former Popular Party leader José María Aznar was Prime Minister of Spain, a law was introduced allowing public health – la sanidad pública in Spanish – to be managed privately.

According to the Health Ministry, this opened the door to a model that has caused “undesirable” consequences in the healthcare system for the past 25 years.

Critics of the privatisation of Spain’s public healthcare argue that it leads to worse quality care for patients, more avoidable deaths, diminished rights for health staff and an overall attitude of putting profits before people, negative consequences that have occurred in the UK since the increased privatisation of the NHS, a 2022 study found

Companies such as Grupo Quirón, Hospiten, HM Hospitales, Ribera Salud and Vithas Sanidad have made millions if not billions by winning government tenders that outsourced healthcare to them.

On May 13th 2024, Spanish Health Minister Mónica García took the first steps to try and rectify this by approving a new law on public management and integrity of the National Health System, which was published for public consultation.

The document sets out the ministry’s intentions to limit “the management of public health services by private for-profit entities” and facilitate “the reversal” of the privatisations that are underway.

It also aims to improve the “transparency, auditing and accountability” in the system that already exists.

The Ministry believes that this model “has not led to an improvement in the health of the population, but rather to the obscene profits of some companies”. 

For this reason, the left-wing Sumar politician wants to “shelve the 1997 law” and “put a stop to the incessant profit” private companies are making from the public health system. 

The Federation of Associations in Defence of Public Health welcomed the news, although they remained sceptical about the way in which the measures would be carried out and how successful they would be.

According to its president, Marciano Sánchez-Bayle, they had already been disappointed with the health law from the previous Ministry under Carolina Darias.

President of the Health Economics Association Anna García-Altés explained: “It is complex to make certain changes to a law. The situation differs quite a bit depending on the region.” She warned, however, that the law change could get quite “messy”.

The Institute for the Development and Integration of Health (IDIS), which brings together private sector companies, had several reservations about the new plan arguing that it would cause “problems for accessibility and care for users of the National Health System who already endure obscene waiting times”.

READ MORE: Waiting lists in Spanish healthcare system hit record levels

“Limiting public-private collaboration in healthcare for ideological reasons, would only generate an increase in health problems for patients,” they concluded.

The way the current model works is that the government pays private healthcare for the referral of surgeries, tests and consultations with specialists. Of the 438 private hospitals operating in Spain, there are more who negotiate with the public system than those that do not (172 compared with 162).

On average, one out of every ten euros of public health spending goes to the private sector, according to the latest data available for 2022. This amount has grown by 17 percent since 2018.

However, the situation is different in different regions across Spain. In Catalonia for example, this figure now exceeds 22 percent, while in Madrid, it’s just 12 percent, according to the Private Health Sector Observatory 2024 published by IDIS.

Between 2021 and 2022, Madrid was the region that increased spending on private healthcare the most (0.7 percent), coinciding with the governance of right-wing leader Isabel Díaz Ayuso, followed by Andalusia (0.6 percent).  

READ MORE: Mass protest demands better healthcare in Madrid

Two years ago, Andalusia signed a new agreement with a chain of private clinics that would help out the public system over the next five years.

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