MADRID (Reuters) – The Spanish government will fulfill its commitment to change the country’s labor laws and will not lower public pensions after approval of the EU recovery fund earlier this week, Labor Minister Yolanda Diaz said on Wednesday.
Diaz’s comments echoed remarks by Foreign Minister Arancha Gonzalez, who said Spain intended to reform its labor laws to reduce the structural unemployment rate as part of commitments tied to the disbursement of the European Union recovery fund.
“We will fulfill the government agreement because it is necessary,” the labor minister told SER radio station when asked if the EU deal could affect the agreement between the Socialist Party and its far-left coalition partner, Unidas Podemos, to modify the 2012 labor legislation.
Diaz said it was necessary to correct what she called the “enormous precariousness” of Spain’s labor market and its wage devaluation, but stressed those issues would be addressed in talks with unions and business associations.
Asked if public pensions would be lowered as a consequence of the EU deal, she replied: “No”.
Introduced by a previous conservative government, the labor reform allowed far greater flexibility in the labor market, making it easier to cut wages and cheaper to lay off workers.
Supporters of the reform argue it helped convert Spain into a more competitive market, but detractors say it eroded workers’ rights and promoted the creation of more precarious low-wage jobs.
“Our pending task is to carry out reforms with the consensus of all the political and social forces of the country,” Gonzalez said earlier on Wednesday in an interview with Spanish TV channel La Sexta, without elaborating on how the laws would be reformed.
The number of people in Spain registering as jobless rose by 0.13% in June from a month earlier, or by 5,017 people, leaving 3.86 million people out of work as the coronavirus lockdown was lifted.
(Reporting by Inti Landauro and Joan Faus; Editing by Nathan Allen and Peter Cooney)