UK voted worst place to live in Europe for quality of life whilst Spain is the second best place to live

The UK has been voted the worst place to live in Europe for quality of life, according to uSwitch. The high cost of living, later retirement age and lack of holidays have pushed the UK into bottom place, behind Poland, Germany, Ireland and Sweden.

Top of the list for the third year running is France, second place goes to Spain while Italy falls into third.

Although the average net income in the UK is one of the highest in Europe, everyday living costs are far greater with the price of unleaded petrol, alcohol and cigarettes way above the European average.

The study was conducted by looking at 16 different factors, including income and the cost of essential goods along, with lifestyle factors such as hours of sunshine, life expectancy, working hours and holiday entitlement.

Today just 5% of us are happy living in the UK, while 12% admit to wanting to emigrate. When asked what the worst thing about living in the UK was, 59% said it was Britain’s broken society, while 49% blamed the cost of living and 47% cited crime and violence.

Ann Robinson, spokesperson for uSwitch.com, says: “We may still be enjoying the fourth-highest household income in Europe, but the high cost of living means that we’re living to work. When coupled with many of the issues facing households in the UK today it’s not surprising that one in ten of us have contemplated starting a new life abroad.

“For those of us who decide to stay put and ride out the storm, there will be no choice but to batten down the hatches. Cutting back where possible to help combat our high living costs will go some way to improving our quality of life.”

Rank Countries VAT Working hours per week Number of holiday days per year Retirement age Cost of fuel (per litre) Food prices (GBP)
1 France 19.6% 38.0 36 60 £1.31 £120.78
2 Spain 18% 38.6 39 62.3 £1.15 £124.54
3 Italy 20% 37.8 31 60.1 £1.33 £125.22
4 Holland 19% 30.6 31 63.5 £1.43 £122.51
5 Germany 19% 35.7 29 62.2 £1.33 £123.88
6 Denmark 25% 33.5 36 62.3 £1.40 £130.09
7 Poland 23% 40.6 38 59.3 £1.10 £137.72
8 Sweden 23% 36.5 38 61.4 £1.35 £126.78
9 Ireland 21% 35.0 29 64.1 £1.28 £112.62
10 UK 20% 36.4 28 63 £1.33 £145.30

Home construction in Spain to recover in 2013?

Construction in Spain and Tenerife set to improve in 2013

Home construction in Spain will begin to recover in 2013, according to the
Corporate Practise Institute.

The IPE’s Real Estate Pulsometer has predicted that the country’s inventory
of unsold will decline by 23.6 per cent this year, with up to 611,250 homes
being snapped up.

The report also notes an increasing trend for purchasing Spanish property
with cash, predicting that mortgages taken out will amount to just
one-third of the level seen in 2006.

However, while the market’s outlook is promising for the next 24 months,
“the report stresses that current construction activity has been reduced
to 20% of that achieved in 2007″,  Spanish rents rose by 0.7 per cent in April.

Figures from the National Statistics Institute showed that rental rates
increased compared to April 2011, with only two regions recording a
decrease in price: Murcia and La Rioja, where prices fell by 1.2 per cent
and 0.3 per cent respectively.

Rents increased by the highest amount in Catalonia, 1.4 per cent, followed
by Asturias and the Basque Country, where rates jumped by 1.2 per cent.
Rents rose by 1.1 per cent in Castilla y Leon and 1 per cent in Galicia.

Increases of less than 1% occurred in Andalusia (0.8%), Melilla (0.7%),
Ceuta (0.7%), the Canary Islands (0.6%), Extremadura (0.5%), Castilla-La
Mancha (0.5%), Cantabria (0.4%), Aragon (0.4%), the Balearic Islands
(0.4%), and Madrid (0.2%).

Source: Kyero

Moody’s downgrades 16 Spanish banks

Banks in Spain and tenerife downgraded by Moody's as a result of Euro crisis

Credit rating agency Moody’s has downgraded 16 Spanish banks including two of Spain’s biggest lenders, the Banco Santander and Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria (BBVA).

According to a statement from Moody’s, nine banks were cut three notches and seven were kept on review of the agency for further downgrades.  Spain’s borrowing costs shot up at a bond auction on Thursday, after economic data confirmed the country is back in recession and reports of an outflow of deposits from nationalised Bankia hammered its share price.

According to official data, Spain is in recession recording a 0.3 percent contraction in the economy in the first quarter. Moody’s cited bad loans, recession, funding access worries, real estate crisis, high unemployment rate and lower credit worthiness of the government as the reasons for the downgrade. “The Spanish economy has fallen back into recession in first-quarter 2012, and Moody’s does not expect conditions to improve,” the credit rating agency said in a statement. “Banks will continue to face highly adverse operating and market funding conditions that pose a threat to their creditworthiness,” it added.

The agency has also cut the ratings on Santander UK, a subsidiary of Banco Santander, the eurozone’s largest lender. Santander UK maintained that the downgrade would not have any impact on its operations.

Asking prices for property in Spain fall

Property prices on the slide in Tenerife and Spain

Asking prices for Spanish homes fell 9.5pc over 12 months to the end of April, according to data from Idealista, a Spanish property portal.

With Spain back in recession, and banks refusing to lend on anything but their own properties, home owners trying to sell have no alternative but to drop their prices. The average resale property in Spain now has an asking prices of 1,993 €/m2, down from 2,202 €/m2 a year ago. On a monthly basis, asking prices fell 1pc in April.

Asking prices fell the most in Castilla La Mancha, Navarra , Murcia, and Extremadura, and the least in Castilla y Leon, La Rioja and Galicia.

You can read the full monthly house (asking) price index report from Idealista  here (pdf in Spanish)

Monthly planning approvals at record lows

Monthly low for new builds in Spain and Tenerife

Monthly planning approvals for new homes are close to record lows, and might create a shortage in the next 5 years. There were just 4,600 planning approvals for new homes in February, down 44pc on the same month last year, according to the latest figures from the Government (Fomento).

Compared to February 2006, when Spain’s building boom was in full swing, planning approvals are down 93pc. That shows how badly the Spanish house building industry has been hit . From being the driver of Spain’s economy it has collapsed to almost nothing, which helps explain why unemployment is close to 25pc and heading for 30pc.

As a result of the collapse in planning approvals, there will clearly be a shortage of newly built homes in the next 3 to 5 years. This despite the fact that there is a glut of something like 750,000 newly built homes on the market today.

The problem is that many of those homes are typical of what gets built at the peak of a boom, badly built too quick, in undesirable locations with scant regard to what house buyers actually want. There is always a demand for new homes, that are properly built and well located. 

It is best to try to buy off-plan in the depths of the bust, not at the peak of the boom, though, most people do the opposite.

People  want  better designed, better built, more generously sized, more energy efficient, better located, and significantly cheaper homes than are on offer. As there are hardly any developers left standing,we are clearly going to see a shortage of such properties in Spain and Tenerife in the future.

Brits amongst the most active purchasers in Spain and the islands

Brits active in property market in Tenerife and Spain

Official figures show that Brits were among the most active purchasers of homes in Costa Blanca last year, along with the Russian and Norwegians, which collectively made up 80% of all transactions in the region.

According to figures obtained from Spain’s notaries, at least 9,200 foreigners bought holiday homes on the Costa Blanca last year, including 5,200 in the Catalonia region Costa Brava/Dorada, and 4,600 in Malaga  Costa del Sol; Balearics (2,700), and Murcia (1,500).

José Vicente Dómine, Director General of Public Works for the Generalitat (Valencian regional government), told the press that more overseas nationals purchased bought homes on the Costa Blanca last year than in Madrid and Andalusia combined, and almost as much as Catalonia, the Balearics, and Murcia combined.

While the Spanish property market continues to suffer from an oversupply of homes, now is a great opportunity “for foreign buyers to bag a bargain on the Spanish coast,” said Spanish property commentator Mark Stucklin.

Wet weather sends Brits searching for the sun

Wet weather in the UK sends Brits to Tenerife and Spain

As summer approaches and the temperature rises abroad, demand for traditional holiday destinations is also beginning to hot up. With the wet weather in the UK, Brits have turned to search for overseas property in record numbers with properties in Spain attracting the greatest volume of searches. The latest Rightmove Overseas report shows that properties in Portugal were also high on Briton’s wish list, along with a range of other holiday hot spots, including Australia. But Spanish locations dominate the top 10 climbing regions. Shameem Golamy, head of Rightmove Overseas, said: “The main beneficiary of this increased search activity has again been the traditional Spanish destinations of Benidorm, Estepona, Tenerife and Torrevieja, as people look for properties in familiar locations. Albufeira and Carvoeiro in Portugal have also benefitted from extra searches, as has Sydney in Australia.” The report also reveals that more property investors are eyeing up property investment opportunities in Greece, Malta, Spain and Ireland, where prices have plummeted in recent years.  “The economic woes affecting parts of Europe has failed to deter buyers in the UK interested in overseas property. Germany, usually a favourite destination of UK investors, seems to be gradually losing interest. It seems that UK buyers are more inclined to look for warmer destinations as thoughts turn towards the summer.”

Change for NIE numbers collection when buying Spanish property

Changes to NIE collection rules in Spain and Tenerife for UK and overseas property purchasers

Foreigners buying property in Spain no longer have to go in person to a Spanish police station to get their NIE numbers, after a Spanish Government u-turn.

Some nine million UK and Irish people travel to Spain each year. Of those, over one million have acquired holiday homes or timeshares. Even without owning property, many have opened Spanish bank accounts to facilitate transactions while there. Spanish law has for many years required foreigners conducting business, professional or social matters in Spain to obtain a Numero de Identificacion de Extranjeros (Foreigners Identification Number), or NIE for short.

Your Spanish NIE certificate number is essential for all types of financial or property transaction and acts as your tax identification number as a foreign resident. It is required for all property and finance related transactions e.g. paying your bills, opening bank accounts or buying or selling property.

In the middle of a deep recession, which has crippled the Spanish property market, the Spanish authorities appeared to have shot themselves in the foot by introducing a ludicrous regulation requiring all foreigners to appear personally at the police station, merely for the purpose of applying for NIE.

The problem stemmed from a little known and little observed regulation dated 20 April 2011, which established that foreigners intending to carry on business in Spain were required to appear personally at their local (Spanish) police station to apply for NIE. In typical Spanish manner, and displaying sound common sense, this regulation was largely disregarded throughout many parts of Spain where the police would accept applications for NIE presented via Power of Attorney in favour of a lawyer or other authorised representative of the applicant. Provided the Power of Attorney was correctly drawn up and properly sealed by a Notary Public and the UK authorities, it was acceptable for use to make application for NIE without requiring the applicant to trek in person all the way to Spain.

However all that changed since a communique from the Secretary of State for Immigration on 13 December 2011 indicating that the expression “personally” contained in the rule governing such foreign related matters did not leave any room for interpretation and whilst acknowledging it hampered the use of Notarial powers to apply for NIE, directed that the personal appearance of applicants was required at police stations all over Spain, and that applications by Power of Attorney would no longer be acceptable

Naturally this literal interpretation of what anyway was initially a daft regulation caused huge consternation throughout Spain in the legal profession and the property construction and sales sector. It also meant that there were probably a lot of unhappy policemen who were likely going to be buried under an avalanche of paperwork from foreigners queuing up to apply for NIE.

There was some optimism among the legal profession in Spain that this nonsense would eventually be resolved but for that period, chaos reigned in the property holiday sector involving non-nationals having bank accounts or property in Spain.

Now, it appears the Spanish authorities have had a rethink and change of heart. A recent communiqué dated 13th April 2012 issued by the department of the Spanish Interior Ministry responsible for policing matters  Direccion General de la Policia  has advised that henceforth applications for NIE will be accepted whether made personally or through a representative. In other words, Powers of Attorney will once again be accepted for such applications. The communiqué also states that this new instruction shall be circulated to all the relevant police or other offices and departments affected by the instruction.  Common sense prevails!

Spanish house prices back to levels of seven years ago

Tenerife and Spanish property prices down to levels seen seven years ago

Spanish house prices have fallen back to where they where seven years ago, according to the Government’s House Price Index (Fomento). House prices fell 7.2pc in Q1 compared to the same time last year.

The average cost of housing in Euros/m2 now stands at 1,649€/m2, basically where it was at the start of 2005, when the Government first started publishing this particular index. This index isn’t totally reliable but it does help to illustrate the house prices are clearly going down.

Latest Tinsa property prices.

Latest Tinsa property prices for Tenerife and Spain

Spanish property prices fell again in April, according to TINSA. The firm’s latest report saw that IMIE General Index of real estate values declined by 12.5 per cent last month, marking a cumulative drop of 29.8 per cent from, the market peak at the end of 2007.

The Mediterranean coast continues to record the biggest falls in year-on-year prices, with a decrease of 14.3 per cent in the area’s prices compared to 2011. This was closely followed by “Capitals and Major Cities” which fell by 13.7% compared to the same month last year. In both cases the decline was higher than the market average.

Below the market average were the “Balearic and Canary Islands” which fell by 12.3% year-on-year, followed by “Metropolitan Areas” with 12%; while the lowest declines were recorded by “Other Municipalities”, defined as those not included in the other segments, which recorded a fall of 10.6%.

In terms of cumulative declines from the top of the market by segment, the “Mediterranean Coast” was down by a total of 37% in April; followed by “Capitals and Major Cities” with 32.8%, Metropolitan Areas” with 30.7%, “Balearic and Canary Islands” with 26.9% and lastly “Other Municipalities” with 24.2%