The PSOE-UP government will be the first coalition government of Spain’s recent history, against the backdrop of a highly fragmented political landscape. It is likely that the the government will have to make concessions to regionalist parties, and that policymaking will be frustrated by the remaining disagreements between the PSOE and UP. But political instability is not a new feature of Spanish politics. And most importantly, markets remain driven by the ECB monetary easing rather than fully pricing endogenous risks. Indeed the ECB will step up its easing this year with an additional cut of the deposit rate to -0.6% and continued monthly asset purchases. Ten-year bond yields slightly declined today from 0.40% to 0.38% - and IBEX 35 equities were barely down -0.3%. The markets had priced in a government on January 2 when ERC officialized it would abstain, and there was no sizable movement at that moment either. In addition, social spending will mean Spain does not comply with Brussel’s goals of deficit reduction, but will not exceed the 3% of GDP cap on the fiscal deficit. Indeed, the PSOE is pro-European and as the economy minister, former Director-General of the European Commission for Budget (2014-2018) is expected to remain in place. However, policymaking will not be a walk in the park and the coalition will be fragile, which could slow the implementation of reforms. We expect moderate risk of early elections in the next year.
The coalition’s policies will create winners and losers among corporates: The winning sectors will be the most consumer-oriented sectors in the short-term, healthcare and renewable energy in the medium term, given investment plans. Smaller companies as a whole could also benefit from a proposed reduction in their corporate tax rate. In the longer term, we expect productivity gains given the coalition’s plan to invest more on education, vocational training, active labor market policies and boosting female workers participation in the labor market. Lastly, the more conciling tone of the coalition and its apparent constructive approach on Catalonia’s political crisis could reduce political uncertainty.
However, competitiveness will be reduced in the short term, indenting profit margins, and some sectors should be more vulnerable to the higher minimum wage. During the coalition’s mandate, we expect corporate profit margins overall to continue declining, at a faster rate than in the Eurozone, and eventually drop below 40% of gross value added for the first time since 2008. We identify the losing sectors: construction, real estate, tourism, professional and entertainment services will be negatively impacted by the higher minimum wage – and rent controls for real estate; the banking and energy sector will be subject to higher taxes. Highly processed food could also be taxed more, which could redirect consumer demand.
ECONOMIC POLICY PROPOSALS AND IMPACT ON CORPORATES
Category
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Measures
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Potential impact on corporates
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Fiscal policy – taxes
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Corporate taxes will rise with new minimum of 15%, 18% for banks and energy companies
Taxes on companies with less than 1 million euros in revenue fall to 23% from 25%
Income tax rate will rise 2pps for incomes above EUR130,000, 4pps for those above EUR300,000
Tax on capital gains above EUR140,000 would be increased by 4pps to 27%
Digital tax, following EU recommendations
Tax on financial transactions: 0.2% on purchase of shares in listed Spanish companies with a capitalization of EUR850mn
The text also includes a review of the valuation of "ultra-processed or high-fat and high-sugar foods".
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The banking and energy sectors are also set to lose more as they will be taxed more (18% vs. 15% for other corporates).
However first estimates point out that this would affect 0.4% of taxpayers and 0.7% of companies.
Taxing highly processed foods could redirect consumer demand and hence hurt the sector’s turnovers.
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Welfare and social spending
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Minimum wage to rise gradually to 60% of average salary (see Figure 2)
Restrictions on increases in rents
Spending 7 percent of GDP on the national health service by 2023 — it amounted to 6.24% in 2018
Eliminate the formula that links pensions to life expectancy, as well as getting rid of the revaluation index, which sees pension rises subject to the performance of the Spanish economy
Higher budget for culture
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The sectors that will be the most impacted by the government’s measure are those with the lowest average compensation by worker (where the SMI – minimum wage – hike has the highest likelihood of incurring costs) and the highest labor intensity (ratio of compensation of employees to GVA). Those are construction and selected services such as those related to tourism (wholesale, retail, transport, accommodation and food; arts, entertainment, recreation, and professional scientific and technical activities (see Figure 1).
Real estate will be under additional pressure to new rent controls
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Structural reforms and investment
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A significant overturning of the 2012 labor market reform
> Companies lose right to fire staff after long absences due to illness
> Sectoral wage agreements to take priority over firm-wide deals: limit companies’ ability to unilaterally modify contract conditions
> Limit outsourcing to specialized services outside the main activity of the company
The European Commission repeatedly warned that it would be a mistake for the Spanish government to depart from the reforms passed after Spain’s 2012 bailout.
By 2050, 100% of electricity would be renewable, which should drive the energy transition
Invest in the workforce, through education and vocational training, active labor market policies, spending on research and development as well as improving women’s access to employment.
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In the short-term, overturning the labor reform should accelerate the competitiveness reversal in Spain. Higher labor costs could slow Spanish exports, and harm corporate margins.
In the medium to long term, the healthcare sector could benefit from higher government spending in this area and the renewable energy sector as well.
Increasing female participation to the labor force could help reduce a notorious disparity in the Spanish job market and lower the overall rate of unemployment.
Investing in education should help unlock some of Spain’s growth potential by raising productivity and workforce utilization.
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Figure 1 : Sectors that are most vulnerable to a higher minimum wage