Explore the wage increase agreements in Spain and their impact on inflation. Stay informed with the latest insights, analysis, and trends from Coface News.
Some sector disparities
2021 ended with an annual average wage increase of 1.47%, as agreed in collective bargaining agreements. This is the lowest increase since 2017, but also the first time since then that the wage increase agreed in collective bargaining agreements is lower than the average inflation rate for the year: 3.1% in 2021, according to preliminary data from the Spanish Statistical Office INE (Instituto Nacional de Estadística).
However, there are significant sector disparities: although wage increases reached 2.4% in construction and 3.3% in information and communications, hospitality (+0.8%) and industry (+1.2%) saw below -average increases.
A decreasing purchasing power
According to data published by Spain’s Ministry of Labour, 94% of workers agreed wage increases below inflation in 2021. On the one hand, this means that a large share of workers will have lost purchasing power in 2021, which will slow down the recovery of household consumption (which was still 7% below its pre-crisis level at the end of September 2021). On the other hand, it also puts a brake on the second-round effects of inflation, which is expected to moderate gradually over the course of 2022.
It should be noted that, as every year, the vast majority of 2021’s collective agreements (85% of the total) were signed in January 2021, when the last known inflation figure was negative (-0.5% in December 2020). It is therefore possible that the 2022 collective agreements, most of which should be signed in January, will result in much higher wage increases, in a context of strong price increases (+6.7% in December 2021). However, this is not guaranteed, as the few collective agreements signed between October and December 2021 agreed on wage increases of around 1.5%, despite already high inflation.