Spain dancing on a volcano as summer openings cause infections spike | DW | 19.08.2021

In the course of this summer, the rich and beautiful from across the world have been flocking back to Marbella, filling the bars and street cafes of the Spanish luxury resort with people in pin-stripe shirts and posh evening gowns. The weather is as pleasant as always, and the well-heeled tourists are as detached from ordinary Spaniards as they’ve ever been.

Only via television is Spain’s worsening COVID-19 pandemic creeping back into people’s minds, but reports of rising infections, even among those inoculated, scare no one anymore. Official figures for Marbella show that about 470 people have got infected with the coronavirus over the past tweeks.

As a fifth wave of infections hits Marbella right during the holiday season, the influx of sunseekers mainly from France, the UK and Germany is compounding the problem of careless young Spaniards reveling in the resort’s famous party culture after being locked down for months. It’s here, along the Costa del Sol in Spain’s Andalusia province, where you probably find the highest number of luxury cars in Europe this summer.

Scenes of public life in the streets of Marbella, Spain

After a long lockdown winter, life has returned to the street and plazas of Marbella

Hotspot of the superrich

Driving down Marbella’s Autovia del Mediterraneo highway toward the Puerto Banus marina is a time-consuming adventure these days. The celebrity port is full of yachts again — owned mainly by Russians and Arabs —  swelling car traffic and causing long tailbacks. “No one fully understands why, but after the horrors of last year Spain is booming again,” said Tim Wirth, a German lawyer living in the country.

Spain’s commercial bank BBVA has estimated that the Spanish economy could grow about 6.5% in 2021 — a growth comeback that was partly fueled by rising sales of holiday homes. As soon as last year, foreign buyers, notably from Norway and Sweden, were tentatively coming back to the Spanish market, but it wasn’t before the first half of 2021 that sales really took off, rising 30% in the market for high-end homes.

While unemployment across Spain has also been falling in the wake of rebounding economic activity, the government is hoping to accelerate the upswing with €69.5 billion ($81.3 billion) it will receive from the EU’s Recovery and Resilience Facility over the next five years. With the funding, the socialist government of Pedro Sanchez is planning to make the Spanish economy more innovative.

The stage of the Starlite Festival in Marbella

Costa del Sol resort towns like Marbella are renowned for their colorful festivals

Property and partying boom

For the time being, though, Spain’s primary revenue spinners will remain tourism and cultural events, including sprawling party and nightlife events.

Surprisingly though, the government in Madrid decided to reopen the economy in the face of an ongoing coronavirus crisis that has led to the highest number of COVID-related deaths in Europe.

Infographic on virus infections in Spain

Manuel Villalta, a music composer, believes that Spain is “playing a dangerous game.” Living largely isolated in the hills outside of Madrid, he told DW that Germans were in a much better position because they would have “a leader for whom public health is more important than money.” He and most of his friends got vaccinated, he said, but some of them caught the virus nevertheless, which he found unsettling. “We need to remain cautious,” he added.

In Madrid, surgeon Angela Hernandez Puente, is eager to dispel her patients’ fears of a new surge in COVID cases. A momentary shortage of staff at Spanish hospitals, she told DW, was due to the holiday season in August when facilities were “always short of personnel.”

Lawyer Tim Wirth thinks that if Germany had Spanish infection numbers, Angela Merkel “would have locked down Germany immediatly.” Instead, he told DW, realtors across Spain would enjoy a massive rebound in sales, chasing away all the gloom and doom in the business that had prevailed at the beginning of the year.

Populist pressure

The reinstalled freedoms for Spaniards didn’t come out of the blue, however. After the central government in Madrid lifted a nationwide state of emergency in May, Spain’s 17 autonomous regions and cities are fully in charge of coronavirus policy now.

The landslide election victory of conservative lawmaker Isabel Ayuso has marked a watershed in the country’s fight against the pandemic, making a return to sweeping restrictions seemingly impossible. Ayuso won the race for governor of Madrid on the promise of a full reopening of the economy, vowing that with her, “businesses will never be suffering again.”

In view of the Spanish vaccination rate of 60%, Ayuso also said she thinks introducing vaccination passport requirements for hospitality businesses are unnecessary before the autumn, if at all.

An aerial view of a restaurant in the Puente Romano leisure complex

Puente Romano is a popular beach resort offering elevated catering

In Marbella, mayor Angeles Munoz won her term in office on a similarly populist ticket. Like Ayuso a member of the conservative Partido Popular (PP), Munoz said she wasn’t concerned about rising infections in Spain. At the opening of two new restaurants in Marbella’s Puente Romano beach resort, she praised the investor, Spanish star chef Dani Garcia, for continuing to pump money into the high-end gastronomy complex despite the pandemic.  

The two PP politicians are clearly riding on a public mood in Spain that doesn’t want to see sweeping lockdown measures reintroduced, no matter how high infection rates will be during the current fifth wave in the pandemic. Prime Minister Pedro Sanches, meanwhile, seems forced to play along in the Spanish infections gamble, as the two female politicians’ anti-lockdown campaigns have boosted PP’s political fortunes. According to the latest polls, the party is more popular than Sanchez’ leftist PSOE.

This article has been adapted from German.

For all the latest business News Click Here 

Read original article here

Denial of responsibility! TechAI is an automatic aggregator around the global media. All the content are available free on Internet. We have just arranged it in one platform for educational purpose only. In each content, the hyperlink to the primary source is specified. All trademarks belong to their rightful owners, all materials to their authors. If you are the owner of the content and do not want us to publish your materials on our website, please contact us by email – [email protected]. The content will be deleted within 24 hours.