Spain financial crisis: Sun setting on expats’ Costa dreams

As the financial crisis in Spain deepens, British expats are finding that life is becoming increasingly hard.

It was sundowner time at the Cantina tapas bar in the picturesque village of Frigiliana, a few miles inland from the Costa del Sol town of Nerja. Inside, local men were watching bullfighting on television and smoking cigars in quiet contravention of the smoking ban. Outside, expatriate Britons were discussing the vagaries of living in Spain while downing glasses of tinto de verano, the popular summer drink of red wine and lemonade. Mark Jones, who runs his own gardening and pool maintenance company, had spent two days queuing at the local municipal office to renew his residence permit.

“I got there at 9am on the first day and my number was 26; by lunchtime they were only up to number 6 and they close at 2pm,” he complained. “You have to renew every bit of paper here every few years but I can’t afford two days off to queue in an office. There are no staff now because of the cuts, so it all takes longer. It’s like everywhere – as soon as the recession hits, it’s the immigrants who cop it worst.”

Conversation turned to a local couple, who are desperate to leave Spain but who can’t because their house is still unsold after four years on the market – despite dropping the asking price from €1 million to €750,000.

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Categories: Europe, UK

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