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Autonomous communities of Spain

In Spain, an autonomous community (Spanish: comunidad autónoma) is the first-level political and administrative division, created in accordance with the Spanish Constitution of 1978, with the aim of guaranteeing limited autonomy of the nationalities and regions that make up Spain.[1][2][3]

Autonomous communities

Spanish: comunidad autónoma[a]
Basque: autonomia erkidegoa[b]
Catalan: comunitat autònoma[c]
Galician: comunidade autónoma[d]
Occitan: comunautat autonòma
Aragonese: comunidat autonoma
Asturian: comunidá autónoma

CategoryAutonomous administrative division
Location Spain
Created bySpanish Constitution of 1978
Created
  • 1979–1983
Number17 autonomous communities
2 autonomous cities
PopulationsAutonomous communities:
319,914 (La Rioja) – 8,464,411 (Andalusia)
Autonomous cities:
84,202 (Ceuta) – 87,076 (Melilla)
AreasAutonomous communities:
4,992 km2 (Balearic Islands) – 94,223 km2 (Castile and León)
Autonomous cities:
12.3 km2 (Melilla) – 18.5 km2 (Ceuta)
Government
Subdivisions

Spain is not a federation, but a decentralised[4][5] unitary country.[1] While sovereignty is vested in the nation as a whole, represented in the central institutions of government, the nation has, in variable degrees, devolved power to the communities, which, in turn, exercise their right to self-government within the limits set forth in the constitution and their autonomous statutes.[1] Each community has its own set of devolved powers; typically those communities with stronger local nationalism have more powers, and this type of devolution has been called asymmetrical. Some scholars have referred to the resulting system as a federal system in all but name, or a "federation without federalism".[6] There are 17 autonomous communities and two autonomous cities that are collectively known as "autonomies".[i] The two autonomous cities have the right to become autonomous communities, but neither has yet exercised it. This unique framework of territorial administration is known as the "State of Autonomies".[ii]

The autonomous communities are governed according to the constitution and their own organic laws known as Statutes of Autonomy,[iii] which define the powers that they assume. Since devolution was intended to be asymmetrical in nature,[7] the scope of powers (Spanish: competencia) varies for each community, but all have the same parliamentary structure; in fact, despite the Constitution not setting a mandatory legislative chamber framework, all autonomous communities have chosen unicameralism.[1]

Autonomous communities

Flag Autonomous
community
Capital President Legislature Government
coalition
Senate
seats
Area
(km2)
Pop.
(2020)
Density
(/km2)
GDP per capita () Status
  Andalusia Seville Juan Manuel Moreno (PP) Parliament PP 41 (9 RA, 32 DE) 87,268 8,464,411 96 19,107 Nationality
  Aragon Zaragoza Javier Lambán (PSOE) Cortes PSOE, Podemos, CHA, PAR 14 (2 RA, 12 DE) 47,719 1,329,391 28 28,151 Nationality
  Asturias Oviedo Adrián Barbón (PSOE) General Junta PSOE 6 (2 RA, 4 DE) 10,604 1,018,784 96 22,789 Historical community
  Balearic Islands Palma Francina Armengol (PSOE) Parliament PSOE, UP, Més 7 (2 RA, 5 DE) 4,992 1,171,543 230 27,682 Nationality
  Basque Country Vitoria-Gasteiz
(de facto seat of institutions)
Iñigo Urkullu (PNV) Parliament PNV, PSOE 15 (3 RA, 12 DE) 7,234 2,220,504 305 33,223 Nationality
  Canary Islands Las Palmas,
Santa Cruz
Ángel Víctor Torres (PSOE) Parliament PSOE, NCa, Podemos, ASG 14 (3 RA, 11 DE) 7,447 2,175,952 289 20,892 Nationality
  Cantabria Santander Miguel Ángel Revilla (PRC) Parliament PRC, PSOE 5 (1 RA, 4 DE) 5,321 582,905 109 23,757 Historical community
  Castile and León Valladolid
(de facto seat of institutions)
Alfonso Fernández Mañueco (PP) Cortes PP, Vox 39 (3 RA, 36 DE) 94,223 2,394,918 25 24,031 Historical community
  Castilla–La Mancha Toledo Emiliano García-Page (PSOE) Cortes PSOE 23 (3 RA, 20 DE) 79,463 2,045,221 26 20,363 Region
  Catalonia Barcelona Pere Aragonès (ERC) Parliament ERC 24 (8 RA, 16 DE) 32,114 7,780,479 239 30,426 Nationality
  Madrid City of Madrid Isabel Díaz Ayuso (PP) Assembly PP 11 (7 RA, 4 DE) 8,028 6,779,888 830 35,041 Region
  Extremadura Mérida Guillermo Fernández Vara (PSOE) Assembly PSOE 10 (2 RA, 8 DE) 41,634 1,063,987 26 18,469 Region
  Galicia Santiago de Compostela Alfonso Rueda (PP) Parliament PP 19 (3 RA, 16 DE) 29,574 2,701,819 91 23,183 Nationality
  La Rioja Logroño Concha Andreu (PSOE) Parliament PSOE, Podemos 5 (1 RA, 4 DE) 5,045 319,914 63 27,225 Region
  Navarre Pamplona María Chivite (PSOE) Parliament PSN, GBai, Podemos 5 (1 RA, 4 DE) 10,391 661,197 63 31,389 Nationality
  Murcia City of Murcia Fernando López Miras (PP) Regional Assembly PP, Ind. 6 (2 RA, 4 DE) 11,313 1,511,251 132 21,269 Region
  Valencia City of Valencia Ximo Puig (PSOE) Cortes PSOE, Compromís, UP 17 (5 RA, 12 DE) 23,255 5,057,353 215 22,426 Nationality

RA: Regionally Appointed

DE: Directly Elected

Autonomous cities

Flag Coat of arms Autonomous
city
Mayor-President Legislature Government
coalition
Senate seats Area
(km2)
Pop.
(2020)
Density
(/km2)
GDP per capita
()
    Ceuta Juan Jesús Vivas (PP) Assembly PP 2 (DE) 18.5 84,202 4,583 19,335
    Melilla Eduardo de Castro (Ind.) Assembly CpM, PSOE, Ind. 2 (DE) 12.3 87,076 7,031 16,981

DE: Directly Elected

History

Background

 
A map of Iberia in 1757

Spain is a diverse country made up of several different regions with varying economic and social structures, as well as different languages and historical, political and cultural traditions.[8][9] While the entire Spanish territory was united under one crown in 1479 this was not a process of national homogenization or amalgamation. The constituent territories—be they crowns, kingdoms, principalities or dominions—retained much of their former institutional existence,[10] including limited legislative, judicial or fiscal autonomy. These territories also exhibited a variety of local customs, laws, languages and currencies until the mid 19th century.[10]

From the 18th century onwards, the Bourbon kings and the government tried to establish a more centralized regime. Leading figures of the Spanish Enlightenment advocated for the building of a Spanish nation beyond the internal territorial boundaries.[10] This culminated in 1833, when Spain was divided into 49 (now 50) provinces, which served mostly as transmission belts for policies developed in Madrid.

Spanish history since the late 19th century has been shaped by a dialectical struggle between Spanish nationalism and peripheral nationalisms,[11][12] mostly in Catalonia and the Basque Country, and to a lesser degree in Galicia.

In a response to Catalan demands, limited autonomy was granted to the Commonwealth of Catalonia in 1914, only to be abolished in 1925. It was granted again in 1932 during the Second Spanish Republic, when the Generalitat, Catalonia's mediaeval institution of government, was restored. The constitution of 1931 envisaged a territorial division for all Spain in "autonomous regions", which was never fully attained—only Catalonia, the Basque Country and Galicia had approved "Statutes of Autonomy"—the process being thwarted by the Spanish Civil War that broke out in 1936, and the victory of the rebel Nationalist forces under Francisco Franco.[11]

During General Franco's dictatorial regime, centralism was vigorously enforced as a way of preserving the "unity of the Spanish nation".[11] Peripheral nationalism, along with communism and atheism were regarded by his regime as the main threats.[13] His attempts to fight separatism with heavy-handed but sporadic repression,[9] and his often severe suppression of language and regional identities[9] backfired: the demands for democracy became intertwined with demands for the recognition of a pluralistic vision of the Spanish nationhood.[11][14]

When Franco died in 1975, Spain entered into a phase of transition towards democracy. The most difficult task of the newly democratically elected Cortes Generales (the Spanish Parliament) in 1977 acting as a Constituent Assembly was to transition from a unitary centralized state into a decentralized state[15] in a way that would satisfy the demands of the peripheral nationalists.[16][17] The then Prime Minister of Spain, Adolfo Suárez, met with Josep Tarradellas, president of the Generalitat of Catalonia in exile. An agreement was made so that the Generalitat would be restored and limited competencies would be transferred while the constitution was still being written. Shortly after, the government allowed the creation of "assemblies of members of parliament" integrated by deputies and senators of the different territories of Spain, so that they could constitute "pre-autonomic regimes" for their regions as well.[citation needed]

The Fathers of the Constitution had to strike a balance between the opposing views of Spain—on the one hand, the centralist view inherited from monarchist and nationalist elements of Spanish society,[15] and on the other hand federalism and a pluralistic view of Spain as a "nation of nations";[18] between a uniform decentralization of entities with the same competencies and an asymmetrical structure that would distinguish the nationalities. Peripheral nationalist parties wanted a multinational state with a federal or confederal model, whereas the governing Union of the Democratic Centre (UCD) and the People's Alliance (AP) wanted minimum decentralization; the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) was sympathetic to a federal system.[13]

In the end, the constitution, published and ratified in 1978, found a balance in recognizing the existence of "nationalities and regions" in Spain, within the "indissoluble unity of the Spanish nation". In order to manage the tensions present in the Spanish transition to democracy, the drafters of the current Spanish constitution avoided giving labels such as 'federal' to the territorial arrangements,[19] while enshrining in the constitution the right to autonomy or self-government of the "nationalities and regions", through a process of asymmetric devolution of power to the "autonomous communities" that were to be created.[20][21]

Constitution of 1978

 
First page of the Spanish Constitution.

The starting point in the territorial organization of Spain was the second article of the constitution,[22] which reads:

The Constitution is based on the indissoluble unity of the Spanish Nation, the common and indivisible homeland of all Spaniards; it recognizes and guarantees the right to self-government of the nationalities and regions of which it is composed and the solidarity among them all.

— Second Article of the Spanish Constitution of 1978

The constitution was rather ambiguous on how this was to take place.[15][23] It does not define, detail, or impose the structure of the state;[17][22] it does not tell the difference between "nation" and "nationality"; and it does not specify which are the "nationalities" and which are the "regions", or the territories they comprise.[22][24] Rather than imposing, it enables a process towards a decentralized structure based on the exercise that these "nationalities and regions" would make of the right to self-government that they were granted.[22] As such, the outcome of this exercise was not predictable[25] and its construction was deliberately open-ended;[13] the constitution only created a process for an eventual devolution, but it was voluntary in nature: the "nationalities and regions" themselves had the option of choosing to attain self-government or not.[26]

In order to exercise this right, the constitution established an open process whereby the "nationalities and regions" could be constituted as "autonomous communities". First, it recognized the pre-existing 50 provinces of Spain, a territorial division of the liberal centralizing regime of the 19th century created for purely administrative purposes (it also recognized the municipalities that integrated the provinces). These provinces would serve as the building blocks and constituent parts of the autonomous communities. The constitution stipulated that the following could be constituted as autonomous communities:[27]

  • Two or more adjacent provinces with common historical, cultural and economic characteristics.
  • Insular territories.
  • A single province with a "historical regional identity".

It also allowed for exceptions to the above criteria, in that the Spanish Parliament could:[27]

  • Authorize, in the nation's interest, the constitution of an autonomous community even if it was a single province without a historical regional identity.
  • Authorize or grant autonomy to entities or territories that were not provinces.
 
The Basque Parliament or the Eusko Legebiltzarra, in session.

The constitution also established two "routes" to accede to autonomy. The "fast route" or "fast track",[23] also called the "exception",[22] was established in article 151, and was implicitly reserved for the three "historical nationalities"[7][24][28]—the Basque Country, Catalonia and Galicia—in that the very strict requirements to opt for this route were waived via the second transitory disposition for those territories that had approved a "Statute of Autonomy" during the Second Spanish Republic[28] (otherwise, the constitution required the approval of three-fourths of the municipalities involved whose population would sum up at least the majority of the electoral census of each province, and required the ratification through a referendum with the affirmative vote of the absolute majority of the electoral census of each province—that is, of all registered citizens, not only of those who would vote).

The constitution also explicitly established that the institutional framework for these communities would be a parliamentary system, with a Legislative Assembly elected by universal suffrage, a cabinet or "council of government", a president of such a council, elected by the Assembly, and a High Court of Justice. They were also granted a maximum level of devolved competencies.

The "slow route" or "slow track",[23] also called the "norm",[22] was established in article 143. This route could be taken—via the first transitory disposition—by the "pre-autonomic regimes" that had been constituted in 1978, while the constitution was still being drafted, if approved by two-thirds of all municipalities involved whose population would sum up to at least the majority of the electoral census of each province or insular territory. These communities would assume limited powers (Spanish: competencias) during a provisional period of 5 years, after which they could assume further powers, upon negotiation with the central government. However, the constitution did not explicitly establish an institutional framework for these communities. They could have established a parliamentary system like the "historical nationalities", or they could have not assumed any legislative powers and simply established mechanisms for the administration of the powers they were granted.[22][24]

 
The Parliament of Catalonia or the Parlament de Catalunya, in 2017.

Once the autonomous communities were created, Article 145 prohibits the "federation of autonomous communities". This was understood as any agreement between communities that would produce an alteration to the political and territorial equilibrium that would cause a confrontation between different blocks of communities, an action incompatible with the principle of solidarity and the unity of the nation.[29]

The so-called "additional" and "transitory" dispositions of the constitution allowed for some exceptions to the above-mentioned framework. In terms of territorial organization, the fifth transitory disposition established that the cities of Ceuta and Melilla, Spanish exclaves located on the northern coast of Africa, could be constituted as "autonomous communities" if the absolute majority of the members of their city councils would agree on such a motion, and with the approval of the Spanish Parliament, which would exercise its prerogatives to grant autonomy to other entities besides provinces.[30]

In terms of the scope of powers, the first additional disposition recognized the historical rights of the "chartered" territories,[iv] namely the Basque-speaking provinces, which were to be updated in accordance with the constitution.[31] This recognition would allow them to establish a financial "chartered regime" whereby they would not only have independence to manage their own finances, like all other communities, but to have their own public financial ministries with the ability to levy and collect all taxes. In the rest of the communities, all taxes are levied and collected by or for the central government and then redistributed among all.

Autonomic pacts

 
The Conference of Presidents in 2017, is the meeting between the Government of Spain or Gobierno de la Nación and the presidents of the Autonomous communities of Spain.

The Statutes of Autonomy of the Basque Country and Catalonia were sanctioned by the Spanish Parliament on 18 December 1979. The position of the party in government, the Union of the Democratic Centre (UCD), was that only the three "historical nationalities" would assume full powers, while the rest would accede to autonomy via article 143, assuming fewer powers and perhaps not even establishing institutions of government.[32] This was firmly opposed by the representatives of Andalusia, who demanded for their region the maximum level of powers granted to the "nationalities".[24][33]

After a massive rally in support of autonomy, a referendum was organized for Andalusia to attain autonomy through the strict requirements of article 151, or the "fast route"—with UCD calling for abstention, and the main party in opposition in Parliament, the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) calling for a vote in favour.[24] These requirements were not met, as in one of the eight provinces, Almería, votes in favour — although the plurality — did not amount to half of the electoral census as required. Yet, in general, the results of the referendum had been clear and unequivocal.[22]

After several months of discussion, the then prime minister of Spain, Adolfo Suárez and the leader of the opposition, Felipe González, reached an agreement to resolve the Andalusian issue, whereby the Parliament approved an amendment to the law that regulated referendums, and used a prerogative of article 144c of the constitution, both actions which combined would allow Andalusia to take the fast route. They also agreed that no other region would take the "fast route", but that all regions would establish a parliamentary system with all institutions of government.[24] This opened a phase that was dubbed as café para todos, "coffee for all".[7] This agreement was eventually put into writing in July 1981 in what has been called the "first autonomic pacts".[23]

These "autonomic pacts"[v] filled in the gap left by the open character of the constitution. Among other things:[22][34]

  • They described the final outline of the territorial division of Spain, with the specific number and name of the autonomous communities to be created.
  • They restricted the "fast-route" to the "historical nationalities" and Andalusia; all the rest had to take the "slow-route".
  • They established that all autonomous communities would have institutions of government within a parliamentary system.
  • They set up a deadline for all the remaining communities to be constituted: 1 February 1983.
 
The Spanish Parliament, Congress of Deputies

In the end, 17 autonomous communities were created:

  • Andalusia, and the three "historical nationalities"—the Basque Country, Catalonia and Galicia—took the "fast-route" and immediately assumed the maximum set of powers allowed in the constitution; the rest took the "slow route".
  • Aragon, Castilla-La Mancha, Castile and León, Extremadura and the Valencian Community acceded to autonomy as communities integrated by two or more provinces with common historical, economic and cultural characteristics.
  • The Balearic Islands and the Canary Islands acceded to autonomy as insular territories, the latter integrated by two provinces.
  • Principality of Asturias, Cantabria, La Rioja and Murcia acceded to autonomy as single provinces with historical identity (also called "uniprovincial" autonomous communities).
  • Navarre, as a single province, acceded to autonomy through the recognition, update and improvement of its historical and local "law" (charters; Spanish fueros), and as such, it is known as a "chartered community".
  • The province of Madrid, home to the national capital, was removed from Castilla-La Mancha (formerly New Castile), to which it previously belonged, and constituted as a single-province autonomous community in the "national interest", the Community of Madrid.

Special provisions were made for the Valencian Community and the Canary Islands in that, although they took the "slow route", through the subsequent approval of specific organic laws, they were to assume full autonomy in less than 5 years, since they had started a process towards the "fast route" prior to the approval of the "autonomic pacts".

On the other hand, Cantabria and La Rioja, although originally part of Old Castile—and both originally included in the "pre-autonomic regime" of Castile and León—were granted autonomy as single provinces with historical identity, a move supported by the majority of their populations.[11][24][35] The "autonomic pacts" give both Cantabria and La Rioja the option of being incorporated into Castile and León in the future, and required that the Statutes of Autonomy of all three communities include such a provision.[34] León, a historical kingdom and historical region of Spain, once joined to Old Castile to form Castile and León, was denied secession to be constituted as an autonomous community on its own right.[36]

During the second half of the 1980s, the central government seemed reluctant to transfer all powers to the "slow route" communities.[16] After the five years set up by the constitution, all "slow route" communities demanded the maximum transfer guaranteed by the constitution. This led to what has been called the "second autonomic pacts" of 1992, between the then prime minister of Spain Felipe González from PSOE and the leader of the opposition, José María Aznar from the newly created People's Party (PP) successor of the People's Alliance party. Through these agreements new powers were transferred, with the reforms to many Statutes of Autonomy of the "slow-route" communities with the aim of equalizing them to the "fast route" communities.[16] In 1995, the cities of Ceuta and Melilla were constituted as "autonomous cities" without legislative powers, but with an autonomous assembly[clarification needed] not subordinated to any other province or community.

The creation of the autonomous communities was a diverse process, that started with the constitution, was normalized with the autonomic pacts and was completed with the Statutes of Autonomy.[22] It is, however, an ongoing process; further devolution—or even the return of transferred powers—is always a possibility. This has been evidenced in the 2000s, at the beginning with a wave of approval of new Statutes of Autonomy for many communities, and more recently with many considering the recentralization of some powers in the wake of the economic and financial crisis of 2008. Nonetheless Spain is now a decentralized country with a structure unlike any other, similar but not equal to a federation,[22] even though in many respects the country can be compared to countries which are undeniably federal.[37] The unique resulting system is referred to as "Autonomous state", or more precisely "State of Autonomies".[15]

Current state of affairs

With the implementation of the Autonomous Communities, Spain went from being one of the most centralized countries in the OECD to being one of the most decentralized; in particular, it has been the country where the incomes and outcomes of the decentralized bodies (the Autonomous Communities) has grown the most, leading this rank in Europe by 2015 and being fifth among OECD countries in tax devolution (after Canada, Switzerland, the United States and Austria).[38][39] By means of the State of Autonomies implemented after the Spanish Constitution of 1978, Spain has been quoted to be "remarkable for the extent of the powers peacefully devolved over the past 30 years" and "an extraordinarily decentralized country", with the central government accounting for just 18% of public spending,[40] 38% by the regional governments, 13% by the local councils, and the remaining 31% by the social security system.[41]

In terms of personnel, by 2010 almost 1,350,000 people or 50.3% of the total civil servants in Spain were employed by the autonomous communities;[42] city and provincial councils accounted for 23.6% and those employees working for the central administration (police and military included) represented 22.2% of the total.[43]

Tensions within the system

Peripheral nationalism continues to play a key role in Spanish politics. Some peripheral nationalists view that there is a vanishing practical distinction between the terms "nationalities" and "regions",[44] as more powers are transferred to all communities in roughly the same degree and as other communities have chosen to identify themselves as "nationalities". In fact, it has been argued that the establishment of the State of Autonomies "has led to the creation of "new regional identities",[45][46] and "invented communities".[46]

 
 
Pro-Catalan independence (left) and pro-Spanish unity demonstrations in Barcelona.

Many in Galicia, the Basque Country, and Catalonia view their communities as "nations", not just "nationalities", and Spain as a "plurinational state" or a "nation of nations", and they have made demands for further devolution or secession.

In 2004 the Basque Parliament approved the Ibarretxe Plan, whereby the Basque Country would approve a new Statute of Autonomy containing key provisions such as shared sovereignty with Spain, full independence of the judiciary, and the right to self-determination, and assuming all powers except that of the Spanish nationality law, defense, and monetary policy. The plan was rejected by the Spanish Parliament in 2005 and the situation has remained largely stable in that front so far.

A particularly contentious point – especially in Catalonia – has been the one of fiscal tensions, with Catalan nationalists intensifying their demand for further financing during the 2010s. In this regard, the new rules for fiscal decentralisation in force since 2011 already make Spain one of the most decentralised countries in the world also in budgetary and fiscal matters,[47] with the base for income tax split at 50/50 between the Spanish government and the regions (something unheard of in much bigger federal states such as Germany or the United States, which retain the income tax as an exclusively or primarily federal one).[47] Besides, each region can also decide to set its own income tax bands and its own additional rates, higher or lower than the federal rates, with the corresponding income accruing to the region which no longer has to share it with other regions.[47] This current level of fiscal decentralisation has been regarded by economists such as Thomas Piketty as troublesome since, in his view, "challenges the very idea of solidarity within the country and comes down to playing the regions against each other, which is particularly problematic when the issue is one of income tax as this is supposed to enable the reduction of inequalities between the richest and the poorest, over and above regional or professional identities".[47]

Independence process in Catalonia

The severe economic crisis in Spain that started in 2008 produced different reactions in the different communities. On one hand, some began to consider a return of some responsibilities to the central government[48] while, on the other hand, in Catalonia debate on the fiscal deficit—Catalonia being one of the largest net contributors in taxes[citation needed]—led many to support secession.[49][50] In September 2012, Artur Mas, then Catalonia's president, requested from the central government a new "fiscal agreement", with the possibility of giving his community powers of fiscal autonomy equal to those of the chartered communities, but prime minister Mariano Rajoy refused. Mas dissolved the Catalan Parliament, called for new elections, and promised to conduct a referendum on independence within the next four years.[51]

Rajoy's government declared that they would use all "legal instruments"—current legislation requires the central executive government or the Congress of Deputies to call for or sanction a binding referendum—[52] to block any such attempt.[53] The Spanish Socialist Workers' Party and its counterpart in Catalonia proposed to reopen the debate on the territorial organization of Spain, changing the constitution to create a true federal system to "better reflect the singularities" of Catalonia, as well as to modify the current taxation system.[54][55]

On Friday 27 October 2017 the Catalan Parliament voted on the independence of Catalonia; the result was 70 in favor, 10 against, 2 neither, with 53 representatives not present in protest. In the following days, the members of the Catalan government either fled or were imprisoned.

One scholar summarises the current situation as follows:

the autonomous state appears to have come full circle, with reproaches from all sides. According to some, it has not gone far enough and has failed to satisfy their aspirations for improved self-government. For others it has gone too far, fostering inefficiency or reprehensible linguistic policies.[56]

Constitutional and statutory framework

The State of Autonomies, as established in Article 2 of the constitution, has been argued to be based on four principles: willingness to accede to autonomy, unity in diversity, autonomy but not sovereignty of the communities, and solidarity among them all.[57] The structure of the autonomous communities is determined both by the devolution allowed by the constitution and the powers assumed in their respective Statutes of Autonomy. While the autonomic agreements and other laws have allowed for an "equalization" of all communities, differences still remain.

The Statute of Autonomy

The Statute of Autonomy is the basic institutional law of the autonomous community or city, recognized by the Spanish constitution in article 147. It is approved by a parliamentary assembly representing the community, and then approved by the Cortes Generales, the Spanish Parliament, through an "Organic Law", requiring the favourable vote of the absolute majority of the Congress of Deputies.

For communities that acceded to autonomy through the "fast route", a referendum is required before it can be sanctioned by the Parliament. The Statutes of Autonomy must contain, at least, the name of the community, its territorial limits, the names, organization and seat of the institutions of government, the powers they assume and the principles for their bilingual policy, if applicable.

The constitution establishes that all powers not explicitly assumed by the State (the central government) in the constitution, can be assumed by the autonomous community in their Statutes of Autonomy; but also, all powers not explicitly assumed by the autonomous community in their Statutes of Autonomy are automatically assumed by the State.[27] In case of conflict, the constitution prevails.[27] In case of disagreement, any administration can bring the case before the Constitutional Court of Spain.

Institutional organization

All autonomous communities have a parliamentary system based on a division of powers comprising:

  • A Legislative Assembly, whose members are elected by universal suffrage according to a system of proportional representation, in which all areas that integrate the territory are fairly represented
  • A Council of Government, with executive and administrative powers, headed by a prime minister, whose official title is "president",[e][vi] elected by the Legislative Assembly—usually the leader of the party or coalition with a majority in the Assembly—and nominated by the King of Spain
  • A High Court of Justice, hierarchically under the Supreme Court of Spain
 
Regional Palace, seat of the General Junta, the Parliament of the Principality of Asturias

The majority of the communities have approved regional electoral laws within the limits set up by the laws for the entire country. Despite minor differences, all communities use proportional representation following D'Hondt method; all members of regional parliaments are elected for four-year terms, but the president of the community has the faculty to dissolve the legislature and call for early elections. Nonetheless in all communities except for the Basque Country, Catalonia, Galicia, and Andalusia elections are held the last Sunday of May every four years, concurrent with municipal elections in all Spain.[57]

The names of the Council of Government and the Legislative Assembly vary between communities. In some autonomous communities, these institutions are restored historical bodies of government or representation of the previous kingdoms or regional entities within the Spanish Crown—like the Generalitat of Catalonia—while others are entirely new creations.

In some, both the executive and the legislature, though constituting two separate institutions, are collectively identified with a single specific name. A specific denomination may not refer to the same branch of government in all communities; for example, junta may refer to the executive office in some communities, to the legislature in others, or to the collective name of all branches of government in others.

Given the ambiguity in the constitution that did not specify which territories were nationalities and which were regions, other territories, besides the implicit three "historical nationalities", have also chosen to identify themselves as nationalities, in accordance with their historical regional identity, such as Andalusia, Aragon, the Balearic Islands, the Canary Islands, and the Valencian Community.

The two autonomous cities have more limited powers than autonomous communities, but more than other municipalities. The executive is exercised by a president, who is also the mayor of the city. In the same way, limited legislative power is vested in a local assembly in which the deputies are also the city councillors.

Legal powers

The autonomic agreements of 1982 and 1992 tried to equalize powers (Spanish: competencias) devolved to the 17 autonomous communities, within the limits of the constitution and the differences guaranteed by it. This has led to an "asymmetrical homogeneity".[22] In the words of the Constitutional Court of Spain in its ruling of August 5, 1983, the autonomous communities are characterized by their "homogeneity and diversity...equal in their subordination to the constitutional order, in the principles of their representation in the Senate, in their legitimation before the Constitutional Court, and in that the differences between the distinct Statutes [of Autonomy] cannot imply economic or social privileges; however, they can be unequal with respect to the process to accede to autonomy and the concrete determination of the autonomic content of their Statute, and therefore, in their scope of powers. The autonomic regime is characterized by an equilibrium between homogeneity and diversity ... Without the former there will be no unity or integration in the state's ensemble; without the latter, there would not be [a] true plurality and the capacity of self-government".[58]

 
An Ertzaintza police car in the Basque Country

The asymmetrical devolution is a unique characteristic of the territorial structure of Spain, in that the autonomous communities have a different range of devolved powers. These were based on what has been called in Spanish as hechos diferenciales, "differential facts" or "differential traits".[vii][59]

This expression refers to the idea that some communities have particular traits, with respect to Spain as a whole. In practice these traits are a native "language proper to their own territories" separate from Spanish, a particular financial regime or special civil rights expressed in a code, which generate a distinct political personality.[59] These hechos diferenciales of their distinct political and historical personality are constitutionally and statutorily (i. e., in their Statutes of Autonomy) recognized in the exceptions granted to some of them and the additional powers they assume.[59]

The powers to be exercised can be divided into three groups: exclusive to the State or central government, shared powers, and devolved powers exclusive to the communities. Article 149 states which powers are exclusive to the central government: international relations, defense, administration of justice, commercial, criminal, civil, and labour legislation, customs, general finances and state debt, public health, basic legislation, and general coordination.[5] All autonomous communities have the power to manage their own finances in the way they see fit, and are responsible for the administration of education—school and universities—health and social services and cultural and urban development.[60] Yet there are differences as stipulated in their Statutes and the constitution:[57]

  • Aragon, the Balearic Islands, the Basque Country, Catalonia, Galicia and the Valencian Community have a regional civil code
  • Basque Country, Catalonia, and Navarre have their own police corps—the Ertzaintza, the Mossos d'Esquadra and the Nafarroako Foruzaingoa, respectively; other communities have them too, but not fully developed (adscribed to the Spanish National Police)[dubious ]
  • The Canary Islands have a special financial regime in virtue of its location as an overseas territories, while the Basque Country and Navarre have a distinct financial regime called "chartered regime"
  • The Balearic Islands, the Basque Country, Catalonia, Galicia, Navarre, and the Valencian Community have a co-official language and therefore a distinct linguistic regime[57]

Degree of financial autonomy

How the communities are financed has been one of the most contentious aspects in their relationship with the central government.[45] The constitution gave all communities significant control over spending, but the central government retained effective control of their revenue supply.[45] That is, the central government is still charge of levying and collecting most taxes, which it then redistributes to the autonomous communities with the aim of producing "fiscal equalization".[5] This applies to all communities, with the exception of the Basque Country and Navarre.

This financial scheme is known as the "common regime". In essence, fiscal equalization implies that richer communities become net contributors to the system, while poorer communities become net recipients. The two largest net contributors to the system are the Balearic Islands and the Community of Madrid, in percentage terms, or the Community of Madrid and Catalonia in absolute terms.[5][61]

Central government funding is the main source of revenue for the communities of "common regime". Redistribution, or transfer payments, are given to the communities of common regime to manage the responsibilities they have assumed. The amount they receive is based upon several calculations which include a consideration for population, land area, administrative units, dispersal of population, relative poverty, fiscal pressure and insularity.[7] The central government is committed to returning a specific percentage of taxes to all communities with common regime, within the differences allowed for fiscal equalization. The communities of common regime have the ability to add a surcharge to the so-called "ceded taxes"—taxes set at the central level, but collected locally—and they can lower or raise personal income taxes up to a limit.[45]

The Basque Country and Navarre were granted an exception in the fiscal and financial system through the first additional disposition of the constitution that recognizes their historical "charters"[viii] —hence they are known as "communities of chartered regime" or "foral regime".[45] Through their "chartered regime", these communities are allowed to levy and collect all so-called "contracted taxes", including income tax and corporate tax, and they have much more flexibility to lower or raise them.[45] This "chartered" or "foral" contract entails true financial autonomy.[45]

Since they collect almost all taxes, they send to the central government a pre-arranged amount known as cupo, "quota" or aportación, "contribution", and the treaty whereby this system is recognized is known as concierto, "treaty", or convenio, "pact".[62] Hence they are also said to have concierto económico, an "economic treaty". Since they collect all taxes themselves and only send a prearranged amount to the central government for the powers exclusive to the State, they do not participate in "fiscal equalization", in that they do not receive any money back.

Spending

As more responsibilities have been assumed by the autonomous communities in areas such as social welfare, health, and education, public expenditure patterns have seen a shift from the central government towards the communities since the 1980s.[45] In the late 2000s, autonomous communities accounted for 35% of all public expenditure in Spain, a percentage that is even higher than that of states within a federation.[5] With no legal constraints to balance budgets, and since the central government retains control over fiscal revenue in the communities of common regime, these are in a way encouraged to build up debt.[45]

The Council on Fiscal and Financial Policy, which includes representatives of the central government and of the autonomous communities, has become one of the most efficient institutions of coordination in matters of public expenditures and revenue.[63] Through the Council several agreements of financing have been agreed, as well as limits to the communities' public debt. The Organic Law of the Financing of Autonomous Communities of 1988 requires that the communities obtain the authorization of the central Ministry of Finance to issue public debt.[63]

Linguistic regimes

 
Bilingual signs, showing the names of the city known as Pamplona in Spanish and Iruña in Basque

The preamble to the constitution explicitly stated that it is the nation's will to protect "all Spaniards and the peoples of Spain in the exercise of human rights, their cultures and traditions, languages and institutions".[64] This is a significant recognition not only in that it differed drastically from the restrictive linguistic policies during the Franco era, but also because part of the distinctiveness of the "historical nationalities" lies on their own regional languages.[8][9] The nation is thus openly multilingual,[11] in which Castilian—that is, Spanish—is the official language in all territories, but the "other Spanish languages" can also be official in their respective communities, in accordance with their Statutes of Autonomy.

Article 3 of the constitution ends up declaring that the "richness of the distinct linguistic modalities of Spain represents a patrimony which will be the object of special respect and protection".[65] Spanish remains the only official language of the State; other languages are only co-official with Spanish in the communities that have so regulated. In addition, knowledge of the Spanish language was declared a right and an obligation of all Spaniards.

Spanish legislation, most notably in the Statutes of Autonomy of the bilingual communities, use the term "own language", or "language proper to a community",[ix] to refer to a language other than Spanish that originated or had historical roots in that particular territory. The Statutes of Autonomy of the respective autonomous communities have declared Basque the language proper to the Basque Country and Navarre, Catalan the language proper to Catalonia, the Balearic Islands and the Valencian Community—where it is historically, traditionally and officially known as Valencian—and Galician to be the language proper to Galicia. There are other protected regional languages in other autonomous communities. As a percentage of total population in Spain, Basque is spoken by 2%, Catalan/Valencian by 17%, and Galician by 7% of all Spaniards.[66] A 2016 Basque Government census revealed 700,000 fluent speakers in Spain (51,000 in Basque counties in France) and 1,185.000 total when passive speakers are included.[67]

Co-official or protected languages of Spain
Language Status Speakers in Spain[f]
Aragonese Not official but recognised in Aragon 11,000[68]
Asturleonese Not official but recognised in Asturias and in Castile and León[g] 100,000[69]
Basque Official in the Basque Country and Navarre 580,000[70]
Catalan/Valencian as Catalan, official in Catalonia and Balearic Islands, and as Valencian, in the Valencian Community;[h] Not official but recognised in Aragon around 10 million,[71] including 2nd language speakers
Galician Official in Galicia and recognised in some municipalities in Castile and León that border Galicia 2.34 million[72]
Occitan Official in Catalonia 4,700
Fala Not official but recognised as a "Bien de Interés Cultural" in Extremadura[73] 11,000

Subdivisions

The Spanish constitution recognizes the municipalities[x] and guarantees their autonomy, meaning the right to manage their own affairs through freely elected assemblies.[74] Municipal, or city, councils[xi] are in charge of the municipalities' government and administration, and they are led by a mayor[xii] and councillors,[xiii] the latter elected by universal suffrage, and the former elected either by the councillors or by suffrage.

Provinces[xiv] are recognized by the constitution as groups of municipalities. Their powers and institutions of government vary greatly among communities. In all communities which have more than one province, provinces are governed by a provincial council,[xv] with a limited scope of administrative powers.[45]

In the Basque Country, the provinces, renamed as "historical territories",[iv] are governed by "chartered councils"[xvi]—which assume the powers of a provincial council as well as the fiscal powers of their "chartered community"—and "General Juntas" [xvii]—parliaments with legislative powers.[45]

In the Canary Islands and the Balearic Islands, each major island is governed by an "island council".[xviii] In Catalonia, the provincial councils have very little power, as another territorial subdivision called the comarques has been created.[45]

In those seven autonomous communities formed by a single province, the provincial councils have been replaced by the communities' institutions of government; in fact, the provinces themselves are not only coterminous with the communities, but correspond in essence to the communities themselves. The two-tier territorial organization common to most communities—first province, then municipalities—is therefore non-existent in these "uniprovincial" communities.[5]

Provinces of each autonomous community
Autonomous community Provinces[i]
  Andalusia Almería, Cádiz, Córdoba,[j] Granada, Huelva, Jaén, Málaga and Seville
  Aragon Huesca, Teruel and Zaragoza[k]
  Asturias (Asturias)[l]
  Balearic Islands (Balearic Islands)
  Basque Country Álava, Biscay, and Gipuzkoa[i]
  Canary Islands Las Palmas and Santa Cruz de Tenerife
  Cantabria (Cantabria)[m]
  Castilla-La Mancha Albacete, Ciudad Real, Cuenca, Guadalajara and Toledo
  Castile and León Ávila, Burgos, León, Palencia, Salamanca, Segovia, Soria, Valladolid and Zamora
  Catalonia Barcelona, Girona, Lleida and Tarragona
  Extremadura Badajoz and Cáceres
  Galicia A Coruña, Lugo, Ourense and Pontevedra
  La Rioja (La Rioja)[n]
  Madrid (Madrid)
  Murcia (Murcia)
  Navarre (Navarre)[o]
  Valencian Community Alicante, Castellón and Valencia

The constitution also allows the creation of other territorial entities formed by groups of municipalities. One of such territorial subdivision is the comarca (equivalent of a "district", "shire", or "county"). While all communities have unofficial historical, cultural, or natural comarcas,[xix] only in Aragon and Catalonia, they have been legally recognized as territorial entities with administrative powers (see comarcal councils).[xx]

Powers exercised by the autonomous governments

The powers of the autonomous communities are not homogeneous.[75] Broadly the powers are divided into "Exclusive", "Shared", and "Executive" ("partial"). In some cases, the autonomous community may have exclusive responsibility for the administration of a policy area but may only have executive (i. e., carries out) powers as far as the policy itself is concerned, meaning it must enforce policy and laws decided at the national level.

Power Basque Country Galicia Catalonia Others
Law, Order & Justice
Police Partial Partial Partial Partial
Public Safety (Civil protection, Firearms, gambling) Shared Shared Shared Shared
Civil & Administrative Law (Justice, Registries, Judicial Appointments) Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive
Child & Family Protection Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive
Consumer Protection Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive
Data protection Shared Shared Shared
Civil registry & Statistics Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive
Health, Welfare & Social Policy
Social Welfare Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive
Equality Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive AN (Exclusive)
Social Security Shared Shared Shared Shared
Employment Shared Shared Shared Shared
Health Care Shared Shared Shared Shared
Benevolent/Mutual Societies Administrative Administrative Shared AN, NA, VC (Shared)
Economy, Transport & Environment
Public Infrastructure (Road, Highways) Exclusive Shared Shared
Public Infrastructure (Rail, Airports) Shared Shared Shared Shared
Environment (Nature, Contamination, Rivers, Weather) Exclusive Exclusive Shared Shared
Economic Planning & Development Exclusive Exclusive Shared
Advertising, Regional Markets and regional controlled origin designations Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive
Professional associations Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive
Workplace & Industrial safety Partial Partial Partial Partial
Financial (Regional Cooperative Banks, & Financial Markets) Exclusive Exclusive Shared Exclusive
Press & Media Shared Shared Shared Shared
Water (Local drainage Basin) Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive
Regional Development (Coast, Housing Rural Services) Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive
Public Sector & Cooperative Banks Shared Shared Shared Shared
Energy & Mining Exclusive Exclusive Shared Shared
Competition Partial Partial Partial Partial
Agriculture and Animal welfare Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive
Fisheries Shared Shared Shared Shared
Hunting & Fishing Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive
Local Transport & Communications (Road Transport, Maritime Rescue) Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive
Tourism Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive
Culture & Education
Culture (libraries, museums, Film industry, Arts, & Crafts...) Shared Shared Shared Shared
Culture (Language Promotion, R & D Projects) Shared Shared Exclusive Shared
Culture (Sports, Leisure, Events) Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive
Education (Primary, secondary, University, Professional & Language) Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive
Religious Organizations Shared Exclusive
Cultural, Welfare, & Education Associations Regulation Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive
International Relations (Culture & language, Cross Border relations) Partial Partial Partial
Resources & Spending
Own Tax resources Yes Yes Yes Yes
Allocation by Central Government No Convergence Funds Convergence Funds Convergence Funds (except NA)
Other resources Co-payments (Health & Education) Co-payments (Health & Education) Co-payments (Health & Education) Co-payments (Health & Education)
Resources 100% 60% 60% 60%
Devolved Spending as % of total public spending 36% (Average for all autonomous communities)[76]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Spanish pronunciation: [komuniˈðað awˈtonoma]
  2. ^ Basque pronunciation: [autonomia erkiðeɣo]
  3. ^ Catalan pronunciation: [kumuniˈtat əwˈtɔnumə]
  4. ^ Galician pronunciation: [komuniˈðaðɪ awˈtɔnʊmɐ]
  5. ^ In the Basque Country, the head of government is officially known as lehendakari in Basque, or by the Spanish rendering of the title, lendakari.
  6. ^ All figures as reported on Ethnologue for the number of speakers in Spain only.
  7. ^ In the Statute of Autonomy of Castile and León, the Astur-Leonese dialect spoken therein is referred to as Leonese.
  8. ^ The Catalan dialect spoken in the Valencian Community is historically, traditionally and officially referred to as Valencian.
  9. ^ a b The Basque provinces and Navarre are officially known as "historical territories" or "chartered territories".[iv]
  10. ^ Also spelled "Cordova" in English.
  11. ^ Also spelled "Saragossa" in English.
  12. ^ Previously known as Oviedo.
  13. ^ Previously known as Santander.
  14. ^ Previously known as Logroño.
  15. ^ Previously known as Pamplona.

Translation of terms

  1. ^ "Autonomies" (in Spanish: autonomías, in Basque: autonomien, in Catalan/Valencian: autonomies, in Galician: autonomías).
  2. ^ "State of Autonomies" (in Spanish: Estado de las Autonomías, in Basque: Autonomien Estatuaren, in Catalan/Valencian: Estat de les Autonomies, in Galician: Estado das Autonomías). Also known as "Autonomous State"[6] (in Spanish: Estado Autonómico, in Basque: Autonomia Estatuko, or Estatuaren, in Catalan/Valencian: Estat Autonòmic, in Galician: Estado Autonómico)
  3. ^ "Statutes of Autonomy" (in Spanish: Estatutos de Autonomía, in Basque: Autonomia Estatutuen, in Catalan/Valencian: Estatuts d'Autonomia, in Galician: Estatutos de Autonomía).
  4. ^ a b c "Historical territories" or "chartered territories" (in Spanish: territorios históricos or territorios forales, in Basque: lurralde historikoak or foru lurraldeak).
  5. ^ "Autonomic pacts" or "autonomic agreements" (in Spanish: pactos autonómicos or acuerdos autonómicos).
  6. ^ "Autonomic president", "regional president", or simply "president" (in Spanish: presidente autonómico, presidente regional, or simply presidente; in Catalan/Valencian: president autonòmic, president regional, or simply president; in Galician: presidente autonómico, presidente rexional, or simply presidente). In the Basque language lehendakari is not translated.
  7. ^ "Differential facts", or, "traits" (in Spanish: hechos diferenciales, in Basque: eragin diferentziala, in Catalan/Valencian: fets diferencials, in Galician: feitos diferenciais).
  8. ^ "Charters" (in Spanish: fueros, in Basque: foruak).
  9. ^ "Own language (of a community)" or "language proper [to a community]" (in Spanish: lengua propia, in Basque: berezko hizkuntza, in Catalan/Valencian: llengua pròpia, in Galician: lingua propia).
  10. ^ "Municipalities" (in Spanish: municipios, in Basque: udalerriak, in Catalan/Valencian: municipis, in Galician: concellos or municipios).
  11. ^ "City councils" or "municipal councils" (in Spanish: ayuntamientos, in Basque: udalak, in Catalan/Valencian: ajuntaments, in Galician: concellos).
  12. ^ "Mayor" (in Spanish: alcalde, in Basque: alkatea, in Catalan/Valencian: alcalde or batlle / batle, in Galician: alcalde).
  13. ^ "Councillors" (in Spanish: concejales, in Basque: zinegotziak, in Catalan/Valencian: regidors, in Galician: concelleiros).
  14. ^ "Provinces" (in Spanish: provincias, in Basque: probintziak, in Catalan/Valencian: províncies, in Galician: provincias).
  15. ^ in Spanish: diputaciones provinciales, in Catalan/Valencian: diputacions provincials, in Galician: deputacións provinciais).
  16. ^ "Chartered Councils" (in Spanish: diputaciones forales, in Basque: foru aldundiek).
  17. ^ "General Juntas" (in Spanish: Juntas Generales, in Basque: Biltzar Nagusiak).
  18. ^ "Insular council" (in Spanish: consejo insular or cabildo insular, in Catalan: consell insular).
  19. ^ "Comarcas" (in Spanish: comarcas, in Basque: eskualdeak, in Catalan/Valencian: comarques, in Galician: comarcas or bisbarras).
  20. ^ "Comarcal councils" (in Spanish: consejos comarcales, in Catalan/Valencian: consells comarcals).

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External links

  • Information about Spain's Autonomous Communities from rulers.org
  • Relations between tiers – CityMayors feature

autonomous, communities, spain, regions, spain, redirects, here, other, uses, regions, spain, disambiguation, spain, autonomous, community, spanish, comunidad, autónoma, first, level, political, administrative, division, created, accordance, with, spanish, con. Regions of Spain redirects here For other uses see Regions of Spain disambiguation In Spain an autonomous community Spanish comunidad autonoma is the first level political and administrative division created in accordance with the Spanish Constitution of 1978 with the aim of guaranteeing limited autonomy of the nationalities and regions that make up Spain 1 2 3 Autonomous communitiesSpanish comunidad autonoma a Basque autonomia erkidegoa b Catalan comunitat autonoma c Galician comunidade autonoma d Occitan comunautat autonomaAragonese comunidat autonomaAsturian comunida autonomaGalicia Navarre Community ofMadrid La Rioja Aragon Catalonia ValencianCommunity Castilla La Mancha Extremadura Portugal Castileand Leon Asturias Cantabria BasqueCountry Region ofMurcia Andalusia Ceuta Melilla France BalearicIslands CanaryIslands Mediterranean Sea AtlanticOcean Andorra AtlanticOcean Gibraltar UK MoroccoCategoryAutonomous administrative divisionLocation SpainCreated bySpanish Constitution of 1978Created1979 1983Number17 autonomous communities2 autonomous citiesPopulationsAutonomous communities 319 914 La Rioja 8 464 411 Andalusia Autonomous cities 84 202 Ceuta 87 076 Melilla AreasAutonomous communities 4 992 km2 Balearic Islands 94 223 km2 Castile and Leon Autonomous cities 12 3 km2 Melilla 18 5 km2 Ceuta GovernmentAutonomous governmentSubdivisionsProvinceMunicipalitySpain is not a federation but a decentralised 4 5 unitary country 1 While sovereignty is vested in the nation as a whole represented in the central institutions of government the nation has in variable degrees devolved power to the communities which in turn exercise their right to self government within the limits set forth in the constitution and their autonomous statutes 1 Each community has its own set of devolved powers typically those communities with stronger local nationalism have more powers and this type of devolution has been called asymmetrical Some scholars have referred to the resulting system as a federal system in all but name or a federation without federalism 6 There are 17 autonomous communities and two autonomous cities that are collectively known as autonomies i The two autonomous cities have the right to become autonomous communities but neither has yet exercised it This unique framework of territorial administration is known as the State of Autonomies ii The autonomous communities are governed according to the constitution and their own organic laws known as Statutes of Autonomy iii which define the powers that they assume Since devolution was intended to be asymmetrical in nature 7 the scope of powers Spanish competencia varies for each community but all have the same parliamentary structure in fact despite the Constitution not setting a mandatory legislative chamber framework all autonomous communities have chosen unicameralism 1 Contents 1 Autonomous communities 1 1 Autonomous cities 2 History 2 1 Background 2 2 Constitution of 1978 2 3 Autonomic pacts 2 4 Current state of affairs 2 4 1 Tensions within the system 2 4 2 Independence process in Catalonia 3 Constitutional and statutory framework 3 1 The Statute of Autonomy 3 2 Institutional organization 3 3 Legal powers 3 4 Degree of financial autonomy 3 5 Spending 3 6 Linguistic regimes 3 7 Subdivisions 3 8 Powers exercised by the autonomous governments 4 See also 5 Notes 5 1 Translation of terms 6 References 7 External linksAutonomous communities EditFlag Autonomouscommunity Capital President Legislature Governmentcoalition Senateseats Area km2 Pop 2020 Density km2 GDP per capita Status Andalusia Seville Juan Manuel Moreno PP Parliament PP 41 9 RA 32 DE 87 268 8 464 411 96 19 107 Nationality Aragon Zaragoza Javier Lamban PSOE Cortes PSOE Podemos CHA PAR 14 2 RA 12 DE 47 719 1 329 391 28 28 151 Nationality Asturias Oviedo Adrian Barbon PSOE General Junta PSOE 6 2 RA 4 DE 10 604 1 018 784 96 22 789 Historical community Balearic Islands Palma Francina Armengol PSOE Parliament PSOE UP Mes 7 2 RA 5 DE 4 992 1 171 543 230 27 682 Nationality Basque Country Vitoria Gasteiz de facto seat of institutions Inigo Urkullu PNV Parliament PNV PSOE 15 3 RA 12 DE 7 234 2 220 504 305 33 223 Nationality Canary Islands Las Palmas Santa Cruz Angel Victor Torres PSOE Parliament PSOE NCa Podemos ASG 14 3 RA 11 DE 7 447 2 175 952 289 20 892 Nationality Cantabria Santander Miguel Angel Revilla PRC Parliament PRC PSOE 5 1 RA 4 DE 5 321 582 905 109 23 757 Historical community Castile and Leon Valladolid de facto seat of institutions Alfonso Fernandez Manueco PP Cortes PP Vox 39 3 RA 36 DE 94 223 2 394 918 25 24 031 Historical community Castilla La Mancha Toledo Emiliano Garcia Page PSOE Cortes PSOE 23 3 RA 20 DE 79 463 2 045 221 26 20 363 Region Catalonia Barcelona Pere Aragones ERC Parliament ERC 24 8 RA 16 DE 32 114 7 780 479 239 30 426 Nationality Madrid City of Madrid Isabel Diaz Ayuso PP Assembly PP 11 7 RA 4 DE 8 028 6 779 888 830 35 041 Region Extremadura Merida Guillermo Fernandez Vara PSOE Assembly PSOE 10 2 RA 8 DE 41 634 1 063 987 26 18 469 Region Galicia Santiago de Compostela Alfonso Rueda PP Parliament PP 19 3 RA 16 DE 29 574 2 701 819 91 23 183 Nationality La Rioja Logrono Concha Andreu PSOE Parliament PSOE Podemos 5 1 RA 4 DE 5 045 319 914 63 27 225 Region Navarre Pamplona Maria Chivite PSOE Parliament PSN GBai Podemos 5 1 RA 4 DE 10 391 661 197 63 31 389 Nationality Murcia City of Murcia Fernando Lopez Miras PP Regional Assembly PP Ind 6 2 RA 4 DE 11 313 1 511 251 132 21 269 Region Valencia City of Valencia Ximo Puig PSOE Cortes PSOE Compromis UP 17 5 RA 12 DE 23 255 5 057 353 215 22 426 NationalityRA Regionally AppointedDE Directly Elected Autonomous cities Edit Flag Coat of arms Autonomouscity Mayor President Legislature Governmentcoalition Senate seats Area km2 Pop 2020 Density km2 GDP per capita Ceuta Juan Jesus Vivas PP Assembly PP 2 DE 18 5 84 202 4 583 19 335 Melilla Eduardo de Castro Ind Assembly CpM PSOE Ind 2 DE 12 3 87 076 7 031 16 981DE Directly ElectedHistory EditMain article Nationalities and regions of Spain Background Edit A map of Iberia in 1757 Spain is a diverse country made up of several different regions with varying economic and social structures as well as different languages and historical political and cultural traditions 8 9 While the entire Spanish territory was united under one crown in 1479 this was not a process of national homogenization or amalgamation The constituent territories be they crowns kingdoms principalities or dominions retained much of their former institutional existence 10 including limited legislative judicial or fiscal autonomy These territories also exhibited a variety of local customs laws languages and currencies until the mid 19th century 10 From the 18th century onwards the Bourbon kings and the government tried to establish a more centralized regime Leading figures of the Spanish Enlightenment advocated for the building of a Spanish nation beyond the internal territorial boundaries 10 This culminated in 1833 when Spain was divided into 49 now 50 provinces which served mostly as transmission belts for policies developed in Madrid Spanish history since the late 19th century has been shaped by a dialectical struggle between Spanish nationalism and peripheral nationalisms 11 12 mostly in Catalonia and the Basque Country and to a lesser degree in Galicia In a response to Catalan demands limited autonomy was granted to the Commonwealth of Catalonia in 1914 only to be abolished in 1925 It was granted again in 1932 during the Second Spanish Republic when the Generalitat Catalonia s mediaeval institution of government was restored The constitution of 1931 envisaged a territorial division for all Spain in autonomous regions which was never fully attained only Catalonia the Basque Country and Galicia had approved Statutes of Autonomy the process being thwarted by the Spanish Civil War that broke out in 1936 and the victory of the rebel Nationalist forces under Francisco Franco 11 During General Franco s dictatorial regime centralism was vigorously enforced as a way of preserving the unity of the Spanish nation 11 Peripheral nationalism along with communism and atheism were regarded by his regime as the main threats 13 His attempts to fight separatism with heavy handed but sporadic repression 9 and his often severe suppression of language and regional identities 9 backfired the demands for democracy became intertwined with demands for the recognition of a pluralistic vision of the Spanish nationhood 11 14 When Franco died in 1975 Spain entered into a phase of transition towards democracy The most difficult task of the newly democratically elected Cortes Generales the Spanish Parliament in 1977 acting as a Constituent Assembly was to transition from a unitary centralized state into a decentralized state 15 in a way that would satisfy the demands of the peripheral nationalists 16 17 The then Prime Minister of Spain Adolfo Suarez met with Josep Tarradellas president of the Generalitat of Catalonia in exile An agreement was made so that the Generalitat would be restored and limited competencies would be transferred while the constitution was still being written Shortly after the government allowed the creation of assemblies of members of parliament integrated by deputies and senators of the different territories of Spain so that they could constitute pre autonomic regimes for their regions as well citation needed The Fathers of the Constitution had to strike a balance between the opposing views of Spain on the one hand the centralist view inherited from monarchist and nationalist elements of Spanish society 15 and on the other hand federalism and a pluralistic view of Spain as a nation of nations 18 between a uniform decentralization of entities with the same competencies and an asymmetrical structure that would distinguish the nationalities Peripheral nationalist parties wanted a multinational state with a federal or confederal model whereas the governing Union of the Democratic Centre UCD and the People s Alliance AP wanted minimum decentralization the Spanish Socialist Workers Party PSOE was sympathetic to a federal system 13 In the end the constitution published and ratified in 1978 found a balance in recognizing the existence of nationalities and regions in Spain within the indissoluble unity of the Spanish nation In order to manage the tensions present in the Spanish transition to democracy the drafters of the current Spanish constitution avoided giving labels such as federal to the territorial arrangements 19 while enshrining in the constitution the right to autonomy or self government of the nationalities and regions through a process of asymmetric devolution of power to the autonomous communities that were to be created 20 21 Constitution of 1978 Edit Main article Spanish Constitution of 1978 First page of the Spanish Constitution The starting point in the territorial organization of Spain was the second article of the constitution 22 which reads The Constitution is based on the indissoluble unity of the Spanish Nation the common and indivisible homeland of all Spaniards it recognizes and guarantees the right to self government of the nationalities and regions of which it is composed and the solidarity among them all Second Article of the Spanish Constitution of 1978 The constitution was rather ambiguous on how this was to take place 15 23 It does not define detail or impose the structure of the state 17 22 it does not tell the difference between nation and nationality and it does not specify which are the nationalities and which are the regions or the territories they comprise 22 24 Rather than imposing it enables a process towards a decentralized structure based on the exercise that these nationalities and regions would make of the right to self government that they were granted 22 As such the outcome of this exercise was not predictable 25 and its construction was deliberately open ended 13 the constitution only created a process for an eventual devolution but it was voluntary in nature the nationalities and regions themselves had the option of choosing to attain self government or not 26 In order to exercise this right the constitution established an open process whereby the nationalities and regions could be constituted as autonomous communities First it recognized the pre existing 50 provinces of Spain a territorial division of the liberal centralizing regime of the 19th century created for purely administrative purposes it also recognized the municipalities that integrated the provinces These provinces would serve as the building blocks and constituent parts of the autonomous communities The constitution stipulated that the following could be constituted as autonomous communities 27 Two or more adjacent provinces with common historical cultural and economic characteristics Insular territories A single province with a historical regional identity It also allowed for exceptions to the above criteria in that the Spanish Parliament could 27 Authorize in the nation s interest the constitution of an autonomous community even if it was a single province without a historical regional identity Authorize or grant autonomy to entities or territories that were not provinces The Basque Parliament or the Eusko Legebiltzarra in session The constitution also established two routes to accede to autonomy The fast route or fast track 23 also called the exception 22 was established in article 151 and was implicitly reserved for the three historical nationalities 7 24 28 the Basque Country Catalonia and Galicia in that the very strict requirements to opt for this route were waived via the second transitory disposition for those territories that had approved a Statute of Autonomy during the Second Spanish Republic 28 otherwise the constitution required the approval of three fourths of the municipalities involved whose population would sum up at least the majority of the electoral census of each province and required the ratification through a referendum with the affirmative vote of the absolute majority of the electoral census of each province that is of all registered citizens not only of those who would vote The constitution also explicitly established that the institutional framework for these communities would be a parliamentary system with a Legislative Assembly elected by universal suffrage a cabinet or council of government a president of such a council elected by the Assembly and a High Court of Justice They were also granted a maximum level of devolved competencies The slow route or slow track 23 also called the norm 22 was established in article 143 This route could be taken via the first transitory disposition by the pre autonomic regimes that had been constituted in 1978 while the constitution was still being drafted if approved by two thirds of all municipalities involved whose population would sum up to at least the majority of the electoral census of each province or insular territory These communities would assume limited powers Spanish competencias during a provisional period of 5 years after which they could assume further powers upon negotiation with the central government However the constitution did not explicitly establish an institutional framework for these communities They could have established a parliamentary system like the historical nationalities or they could have not assumed any legislative powers and simply established mechanisms for the administration of the powers they were granted 22 24 The Parliament of Catalonia or the Parlament de Catalunya in 2017 Once the autonomous communities were created Article 145 prohibits the federation of autonomous communities This was understood as any agreement between communities that would produce an alteration to the political and territorial equilibrium that would cause a confrontation between different blocks of communities an action incompatible with the principle of solidarity and the unity of the nation 29 The so called additional and transitory dispositions of the constitution allowed for some exceptions to the above mentioned framework In terms of territorial organization the fifth transitory disposition established that the cities of Ceuta and Melilla Spanish exclaves located on the northern coast of Africa could be constituted as autonomous communities if the absolute majority of the members of their city councils would agree on such a motion and with the approval of the Spanish Parliament which would exercise its prerogatives to grant autonomy to other entities besides provinces 30 In terms of the scope of powers the first additional disposition recognized the historical rights of the chartered territories iv namely the Basque speaking provinces which were to be updated in accordance with the constitution 31 This recognition would allow them to establish a financial chartered regime whereby they would not only have independence to manage their own finances like all other communities but to have their own public financial ministries with the ability to levy and collect all taxes In the rest of the communities all taxes are levied and collected by or for the central government and then redistributed among all Autonomic pacts Edit The Conference of Presidents in 2017 is the meeting between the Government of Spain or Gobierno de la Nacion and the presidents of the Autonomous communities of Spain The Statutes of Autonomy of the Basque Country and Catalonia were sanctioned by the Spanish Parliament on 18 December 1979 The position of the party in government the Union of the Democratic Centre UCD was that only the three historical nationalities would assume full powers while the rest would accede to autonomy via article 143 assuming fewer powers and perhaps not even establishing institutions of government 32 This was firmly opposed by the representatives of Andalusia who demanded for their region the maximum level of powers granted to the nationalities 24 33 After a massive rally in support of autonomy a referendum was organized for Andalusia to attain autonomy through the strict requirements of article 151 or the fast route with UCD calling for abstention and the main party in opposition in Parliament the Spanish Socialist Workers Party PSOE calling for a vote in favour 24 These requirements were not met as in one of the eight provinces Almeria votes in favour although the plurality did not amount to half of the electoral census as required Yet in general the results of the referendum had been clear and unequivocal 22 After several months of discussion the then prime minister of Spain Adolfo Suarez and the leader of the opposition Felipe Gonzalez reached an agreement to resolve the Andalusian issue whereby the Parliament approved an amendment to the law that regulated referendums and used a prerogative of article 144c of the constitution both actions which combined would allow Andalusia to take the fast route They also agreed that no other region would take the fast route but that all regions would establish a parliamentary system with all institutions of government 24 This opened a phase that was dubbed as cafe para todos coffee for all 7 This agreement was eventually put into writing in July 1981 in what has been called the first autonomic pacts 23 These autonomic pacts v filled in the gap left by the open character of the constitution Among other things 22 34 They described the final outline of the territorial division of Spain with the specific number and name of the autonomous communities to be created They restricted the fast route to the historical nationalities and Andalusia all the rest had to take the slow route They established that all autonomous communities would have institutions of government within a parliamentary system They set up a deadline for all the remaining communities to be constituted 1 February 1983 The Spanish Parliament Congress of Deputies In the end 17 autonomous communities were created Andalusia and the three historical nationalities the Basque Country Catalonia and Galicia took the fast route and immediately assumed the maximum set of powers allowed in the constitution the rest took the slow route Aragon Castilla La Mancha Castile and Leon Extremadura and the Valencian Community acceded to autonomy as communities integrated by two or more provinces with common historical economic and cultural characteristics The Balearic Islands and the Canary Islands acceded to autonomy as insular territories the latter integrated by two provinces Principality of Asturias Cantabria La Rioja and Murcia acceded to autonomy as single provinces with historical identity also called uniprovincial autonomous communities Navarre as a single province acceded to autonomy through the recognition update and improvement of its historical and local law charters Spanish fueros and as such it is known as a chartered community The province of Madrid home to the national capital was removed from Castilla La Mancha formerly New Castile to which it previously belonged and constituted as a single province autonomous community in the national interest the Community of Madrid Special provisions were made for the Valencian Community and the Canary Islands in that although they took the slow route through the subsequent approval of specific organic laws they were to assume full autonomy in less than 5 years since they had started a process towards the fast route prior to the approval of the autonomic pacts On the other hand Cantabria and La Rioja although originally part of Old Castile and both originally included in the pre autonomic regime of Castile and Leon were granted autonomy as single provinces with historical identity a move supported by the majority of their populations 11 24 35 The autonomic pacts give both Cantabria and La Rioja the option of being incorporated into Castile and Leon in the future and required that the Statutes of Autonomy of all three communities include such a provision 34 Leon a historical kingdom and historical region of Spain once joined to Old Castile to form Castile and Leon was denied secession to be constituted as an autonomous community on its own right 36 During the second half of the 1980s the central government seemed reluctant to transfer all powers to the slow route communities 16 After the five years set up by the constitution all slow route communities demanded the maximum transfer guaranteed by the constitution This led to what has been called the second autonomic pacts of 1992 between the then prime minister of Spain Felipe Gonzalez from PSOE and the leader of the opposition Jose Maria Aznar from the newly created People s Party PP successor of the People s Alliance party Through these agreements new powers were transferred with the reforms to many Statutes of Autonomy of the slow route communities with the aim of equalizing them to the fast route communities 16 In 1995 the cities of Ceuta and Melilla were constituted as autonomous cities without legislative powers but with an autonomous assembly clarification needed not subordinated to any other province or community The creation of the autonomous communities was a diverse process that started with the constitution was normalized with the autonomic pacts and was completed with the Statutes of Autonomy 22 It is however an ongoing process further devolution or even the return of transferred powers is always a possibility This has been evidenced in the 2000s at the beginning with a wave of approval of new Statutes of Autonomy for many communities and more recently with many considering the recentralization of some powers in the wake of the economic and financial crisis of 2008 Nonetheless Spain is now a decentralized country with a structure unlike any other similar but not equal to a federation 22 even though in many respects the country can be compared to countries which are undeniably federal 37 The unique resulting system is referred to as Autonomous state or more precisely State of Autonomies 15 Current state of affairs Edit With the implementation of the Autonomous Communities Spain went from being one of the most centralized countries in the OECD to being one of the most decentralized in particular it has been the country where the incomes and outcomes of the decentralized bodies the Autonomous Communities has grown the most leading this rank in Europe by 2015 and being fifth among OECD countries in tax devolution after Canada Switzerland the United States and Austria 38 39 By means of the State of Autonomies implemented after the Spanish Constitution of 1978 Spain has been quoted to be remarkable for the extent of the powers peacefully devolved over the past 30 years and an extraordinarily decentralized country with the central government accounting for just 18 of public spending 40 38 by the regional governments 13 by the local councils and the remaining 31 by the social security system 41 In terms of personnel by 2010 almost 1 350 000 people or 50 3 of the total civil servants in Spain were employed by the autonomous communities 42 city and provincial councils accounted for 23 6 and those employees working for the central administration police and military included represented 22 2 of the total 43 Tensions within the system Edit Peripheral nationalism continues to play a key role in Spanish politics Some peripheral nationalists view that there is a vanishing practical distinction between the terms nationalities and regions 44 as more powers are transferred to all communities in roughly the same degree and as other communities have chosen to identify themselves as nationalities In fact it has been argued that the establishment of the State of Autonomies has led to the creation of new regional identities 45 46 and invented communities 46 Pro Catalan independence left and pro Spanish unity demonstrations in Barcelona Many in Galicia the Basque Country and Catalonia view their communities as nations not just nationalities and Spain as a plurinational state or a nation of nations and they have made demands for further devolution or secession In 2004 the Basque Parliament approved the Ibarretxe Plan whereby the Basque Country would approve a new Statute of Autonomy containing key provisions such as shared sovereignty with Spain full independence of the judiciary and the right to self determination and assuming all powers except that of the Spanish nationality law defense and monetary policy The plan was rejected by the Spanish Parliament in 2005 and the situation has remained largely stable in that front so far A particularly contentious point especially in Catalonia has been the one of fiscal tensions with Catalan nationalists intensifying their demand for further financing during the 2010s In this regard the new rules for fiscal decentralisation in force since 2011 already make Spain one of the most decentralised countries in the world also in budgetary and fiscal matters 47 with the base for income tax split at 50 50 between the Spanish government and the regions something unheard of in much bigger federal states such as Germany or the United States which retain the income tax as an exclusively or primarily federal one 47 Besides each region can also decide to set its own income tax bands and its own additional rates higher or lower than the federal rates with the corresponding income accruing to the region which no longer has to share it with other regions 47 This current level of fiscal decentralisation has been regarded by economists such as Thomas Piketty as troublesome since in his view challenges the very idea of solidarity within the country and comes down to playing the regions against each other which is particularly problematic when the issue is one of income tax as this is supposed to enable the reduction of inequalities between the richest and the poorest over and above regional or professional identities 47 Independence process in Catalonia Edit The severe economic crisis in Spain that started in 2008 produced different reactions in the different communities On one hand some began to consider a return of some responsibilities to the central government 48 while on the other hand in Catalonia debate on the fiscal deficit Catalonia being one of the largest net contributors in taxes citation needed led many to support secession 49 50 In September 2012 Artur Mas then Catalonia s president requested from the central government a new fiscal agreement with the possibility of giving his community powers of fiscal autonomy equal to those of the chartered communities but prime minister Mariano Rajoy refused Mas dissolved the Catalan Parliament called for new elections and promised to conduct a referendum on independence within the next four years 51 Rajoy s government declared that they would use all legal instruments current legislation requires the central executive government or the Congress of Deputies to call for or sanction a binding referendum 52 to block any such attempt 53 The Spanish Socialist Workers Party and its counterpart in Catalonia proposed to reopen the debate on the territorial organization of Spain changing the constitution to create a true federal system to better reflect the singularities of Catalonia as well as to modify the current taxation system 54 55 On Friday 27 October 2017 the Catalan Parliament voted on the independence of Catalonia the result was 70 in favor 10 against 2 neither with 53 representatives not present in protest In the following days the members of the Catalan government either fled or were imprisoned One scholar summarises the current situation as follows the autonomous state appears to have come full circle with reproaches from all sides According to some it has not gone far enough and has failed to satisfy their aspirations for improved self government For others it has gone too far fostering inefficiency or reprehensible linguistic policies 56 Constitutional and statutory framework EditThe State of Autonomies as established in Article 2 of the constitution has been argued to be based on four principles willingness to accede to autonomy unity in diversity autonomy but not sovereignty of the communities and solidarity among them all 57 The structure of the autonomous communities is determined both by the devolution allowed by the constitution and the powers assumed in their respective Statutes of Autonomy While the autonomic agreements and other laws have allowed for an equalization of all communities differences still remain The Statute of Autonomy Edit Main article Statute of Autonomy The Statute of Autonomy is the basic institutional law of the autonomous community or city recognized by the Spanish constitution in article 147 It is approved by a parliamentary assembly representing the community and then approved by the Cortes Generales the Spanish Parliament through an Organic Law requiring the favourable vote of the absolute majority of the Congress of Deputies For communities that acceded to autonomy through the fast route a referendum is required before it can be sanctioned by the Parliament The Statutes of Autonomy must contain at least the name of the community its territorial limits the names organization and seat of the institutions of government the powers they assume and the principles for their bilingual policy if applicable The constitution establishes that all powers not explicitly assumed by the State the central government in the constitution can be assumed by the autonomous community in their Statutes of Autonomy but also all powers not explicitly assumed by the autonomous community in their Statutes of Autonomy are automatically assumed by the State 27 In case of conflict the constitution prevails 27 In case of disagreement any administration can bring the case before the Constitutional Court of Spain Institutional organization Edit All autonomous communities have a parliamentary system based on a division of powers comprising A Legislative Assembly whose members are elected by universal suffrage according to a system of proportional representation in which all areas that integrate the territory are fairly represented A Council of Government with executive and administrative powers headed by a prime minister whose official title is president e vi elected by the Legislative Assembly usually the leader of the party or coalition with a majority in the Assembly and nominated by the King of Spain A High Court of Justice hierarchically under the Supreme Court of Spain Regional Palace seat of the General Junta the Parliament of the Principality of Asturias The majority of the communities have approved regional electoral laws within the limits set up by the laws for the entire country Despite minor differences all communities use proportional representation following D Hondt method all members of regional parliaments are elected for four year terms but the president of the community has the faculty to dissolve the legislature and call for early elections Nonetheless in all communities except for the Basque Country Catalonia Galicia and Andalusia elections are held the last Sunday of May every four years concurrent with municipal elections in all Spain 57 The names of the Council of Government and the Legislative Assembly vary between communities In some autonomous communities these institutions are restored historical bodies of government or representation of the previous kingdoms or regional entities within the Spanish Crown like the Generalitat of Catalonia while others are entirely new creations In some both the executive and the legislature though constituting two separate institutions are collectively identified with a single specific name A specific denomination may not refer to the same branch of government in all communities for example junta may refer to the executive office in some communities to the legislature in others or to the collective name of all branches of government in others Given the ambiguity in the constitution that did not specify which territories were nationalities and which were regions other territories besides the implicit three historical nationalities have also chosen to identify themselves as nationalities in accordance with their historical regional identity such as Andalusia Aragon the Balearic Islands the Canary Islands and the Valencian Community The two autonomous cities have more limited powers than autonomous communities but more than other municipalities The executive is exercised by a president who is also the mayor of the city In the same way limited legislative power is vested in a local assembly in which the deputies are also the city councillors Legal powers Edit The autonomic agreements of 1982 and 1992 tried to equalize powers Spanish competencias devolved to the 17 autonomous communities within the limits of the constitution and the differences guaranteed by it This has led to an asymmetrical homogeneity 22 In the words of the Constitutional Court of Spain in its ruling of August 5 1983 the autonomous communities are characterized by their homogeneity and diversity equal in their subordination to the constitutional order in the principles of their representation in the Senate in their legitimation before the Constitutional Court and in that the differences between the distinct Statutes of Autonomy cannot imply economic or social privileges however they can be unequal with respect to the process to accede to autonomy and the concrete determination of the autonomic content of their Statute and therefore in their scope of powers The autonomic regime is characterized by an equilibrium between homogeneity and diversity Without the former there will be no unity or integration in the state s ensemble without the latter there would not be a true plurality and the capacity of self government 58 An Ertzaintza police car in the Basque Country The asymmetrical devolution is a unique characteristic of the territorial structure of Spain in that the autonomous communities have a different range of devolved powers These were based on what has been called in Spanish as hechos diferenciales differential facts or differential traits vii 59 This expression refers to the idea that some communities have particular traits with respect to Spain as a whole In practice these traits are a native language proper to their own territories separate from Spanish a particular financial regime or special civil rights expressed in a code which generate a distinct political personality 59 These hechos diferenciales of their distinct political and historical personality are constitutionally and statutorily i e in their Statutes of Autonomy recognized in the exceptions granted to some of them and the additional powers they assume 59 The powers to be exercised can be divided into three groups exclusive to the State or central government shared powers and devolved powers exclusive to the communities Article 149 states which powers are exclusive to the central government international relations defense administration of justice commercial criminal civil and labour legislation customs general finances and state debt public health basic legislation and general coordination 5 All autonomous communities have the power to manage their own finances in the way they see fit and are responsible for the administration of education school and universities health and social services and cultural and urban development 60 Yet there are differences as stipulated in their Statutes and the constitution 57 Aragon the Balearic Islands the Basque Country Catalonia Galicia and the Valencian Community have a regional civil code Basque Country Catalonia and Navarre have their own police corps the Ertzaintza the Mossos d Esquadra and the Nafarroako Foruzaingoa respectively other communities have them too but not fully developed adscribed to the Spanish National Police dubious discuss The Canary Islands have a special financial regime in virtue of its location as an overseas territories while the Basque Country and Navarre have a distinct financial regime called chartered regime The Balearic Islands the Basque Country Catalonia Galicia Navarre and the Valencian Community have a co official language and therefore a distinct linguistic regime 57 Degree of financial autonomy Edit Main article Communities of chartered regime How the communities are financed has been one of the most contentious aspects in their relationship with the central government 45 The constitution gave all communities significant control over spending but the central government retained effective control of their revenue supply 45 That is the central government is still charge of levying and collecting most taxes which it then redistributes to the autonomous communities with the aim of producing fiscal equalization 5 This applies to all communities with the exception of the Basque Country and Navarre This financial scheme is known as the common regime In essence fiscal equalization implies that richer communities become net contributors to the system while poorer communities become net recipients The two largest net contributors to the system are the Balearic Islands and the Community of Madrid in percentage terms or the Community of Madrid and Catalonia in absolute terms 5 61 Central government funding is the main source of revenue for the communities of common regime Redistribution or transfer payments are given to the communities of common regime to manage the responsibilities they have assumed The amount they receive is based upon several calculations which include a consideration for population land area administrative units dispersal of population relative poverty fiscal pressure and insularity 7 The central government is committed to returning a specific percentage of taxes to all communities with common regime within the differences allowed for fiscal equalization The communities of common regime have the ability to add a surcharge to the so called ceded taxes taxes set at the central level but collected locally and they can lower or raise personal income taxes up to a limit 45 The Basque Country and Navarre were granted an exception in the fiscal and financial system through the first additional disposition of the constitution that recognizes their historical charters viii hence they are known as communities of chartered regime or foral regime 45 Through their chartered regime these communities are allowed to levy and collect all so called contracted taxes including income tax and corporate tax and they have much more flexibility to lower or raise them 45 This chartered or foral contract entails true financial autonomy 45 Since they collect almost all taxes they send to the central government a pre arranged amount known as cupo quota or aportacion contribution and the treaty whereby this system is recognized is known as concierto treaty or convenio pact 62 Hence they are also said to have concierto economico an economic treaty Since they collect all taxes themselves and only send a prearranged amount to the central government for the powers exclusive to the State they do not participate in fiscal equalization in that they do not receive any money back Spending Edit As more responsibilities have been assumed by the autonomous communities in areas such as social welfare health and education public expenditure patterns have seen a shift from the central government towards the communities since the 1980s 45 In the late 2000s autonomous communities accounted for 35 of all public expenditure in Spain a percentage that is even higher than that of states within a federation 5 With no legal constraints to balance budgets and since the central government retains control over fiscal revenue in the communities of common regime these are in a way encouraged to build up debt 45 The Council on Fiscal and Financial Policy which includes representatives of the central government and of the autonomous communities has become one of the most efficient institutions of coordination in matters of public expenditures and revenue 63 Through the Council several agreements of financing have been agreed as well as limits to the communities public debt The Organic Law of the Financing of Autonomous Communities of 1988 requires that the communities obtain the authorization of the central Ministry of Finance to issue public debt 63 Linguistic regimes Edit Bilingual signs showing the names of the city known as Pamplona in Spanish and Iruna in Basque The preamble to the constitution explicitly stated that it is the nation s will to protect all Spaniards and the peoples of Spain in the exercise of human rights their cultures and traditions languages and institutions 64 This is a significant recognition not only in that it differed drastically from the restrictive linguistic policies during the Franco era but also because part of the distinctiveness of the historical nationalities lies on their own regional languages 8 9 The nation is thus openly multilingual 11 in which Castilian that is Spanish is the official language in all territories but the other Spanish languages can also be official in their respective communities in accordance with their Statutes of Autonomy Article 3 of the constitution ends up declaring that the richness of the distinct linguistic modalities of Spain represents a patrimony which will be the object of special respect and protection 65 Spanish remains the only official language of the State other languages are only co official with Spanish in the communities that have so regulated In addition knowledge of the Spanish language was declared a right and an obligation of all Spaniards Spanish legislation most notably in the Statutes of Autonomy of the bilingual communities use the term own language or language proper to a community ix to refer to a language other than Spanish that originated or had historical roots in that particular territory The Statutes of Autonomy of the respective autonomous communities have declared Basque the language proper to the Basque Country and Navarre Catalan the language proper to Catalonia the Balearic Islands and the Valencian Community where it is historically traditionally and officially known as Valencian and Galician to be the language proper to Galicia There are other protected regional languages in other autonomous communities As a percentage of total population in Spain Basque is spoken by 2 Catalan Valencian by 17 and Galician by 7 of all Spaniards 66 A 2016 Basque Government census revealed 700 000 fluent speakers in Spain 51 000 in Basque counties in France and 1 185 000 total when passive speakers are included 67 Co official or protected languages of Spain Language Status Speakers in Spain f Aragonese Not official but recognised in Aragon 11 000 68 Asturleonese Not official but recognised in Asturias and in Castile and Leon g 100 000 69 Basque Official in the Basque Country and Navarre 580 000 70 Catalan Valencian as Catalan official in Catalonia and Balearic Islands and as Valencian in the Valencian Community h Not official but recognised in Aragon around 10 million 71 including 2nd language speakersGalician Official in Galicia and recognised in some municipalities in Castile and Leon that border Galicia 2 34 million 72 Occitan Official in Catalonia 4 700Fala Not official but recognised as a Bien de Interes Cultural in Extremadura 73 11 000Subdivisions Edit Main article Local government in Spain See also Comarcas of Spain Provinces of Spain and Municipalities of Spain The Spanish constitution recognizes the municipalities x and guarantees their autonomy meaning the right to manage their own affairs through freely elected assemblies 74 Municipal or city councils xi are in charge of the municipalities government and administration and they are led by a mayor xii and councillors xiii the latter elected by universal suffrage and the former elected either by the councillors or by suffrage Provinces xiv are recognized by the constitution as groups of municipalities Their powers and institutions of government vary greatly among communities In all communities which have more than one province provinces are governed by a provincial council xv with a limited scope of administrative powers 45 In the Basque Country the provinces renamed as historical territories iv are governed by chartered councils xvi which assume the powers of a provincial council as well as the fiscal powers of their chartered community and General Juntas xvii parliaments with legislative powers 45 In the Canary Islands and the Balearic Islands each major island is governed by an island council xviii In Catalonia the provincial councils have very little power as another territorial subdivision called the comarques has been created 45 In those seven autonomous communities formed by a single province the provincial councils have been replaced by the communities institutions of government in fact the provinces themselves are not only coterminous with the communities but correspond in essence to the communities themselves The two tier territorial organization common to most communities first province then municipalities is therefore non existent in these uniprovincial communities 5 Provinces of each autonomous community Autonomous community Provinces i Andalusia Almeria Cadiz Cordoba j Granada Huelva Jaen Malaga and Seville Aragon Huesca Teruel and Zaragoza k Asturias Asturias l Balearic Islands Balearic Islands Basque Country Alava Biscay and Gipuzkoa i Canary Islands Las Palmas and Santa Cruz de Tenerife Cantabria Cantabria m Castilla La Mancha Albacete Ciudad Real Cuenca Guadalajara and Toledo Castile and Leon Avila Burgos Leon Palencia Salamanca Segovia Soria Valladolid and Zamora Catalonia Barcelona Girona Lleida and Tarragona Extremadura Badajoz and Caceres Galicia A Coruna Lugo Ourense and Pontevedra La Rioja La Rioja n Madrid Madrid Murcia Murcia Navarre Navarre o Valencian Community Alicante Castellon and ValenciaThe constitution also allows the creation of other territorial entities formed by groups of municipalities One of such territorial subdivision is the comarca equivalent of a district shire or county While all communities have unofficial historical cultural or natural comarcas xix only in Aragon and Catalonia they have been legally recognized as territorial entities with administrative powers see comarcal councils xx Powers exercised by the autonomous governments Edit The powers of the autonomous communities are not homogeneous 75 Broadly the powers are divided into Exclusive Shared and Executive partial In some cases the autonomous community may have exclusive responsibility for the administration of a policy area but may only have executive i e carries out powers as far as the policy itself is concerned meaning it must enforce policy and laws decided at the national level Power Basque Country Galicia Catalonia OthersLaw Order amp JusticePolice Partial Partial Partial PartialPublic Safety Civil protection Firearms gambling Shared Shared Shared SharedCivil amp Administrative Law Justice Registries Judicial Appointments Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive ExclusiveChild amp Family Protection Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive ExclusiveConsumer Protection Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive ExclusiveData protection Shared Shared SharedCivil registry amp Statistics Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive ExclusiveHealth Welfare amp Social PolicySocial Welfare Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive ExclusiveEquality Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive AN Exclusive Social Security Shared Shared Shared SharedEmployment Shared Shared Shared SharedHealth Care Shared Shared Shared SharedBenevolent Mutual Societies Administrative Administrative Shared AN NA VC Shared Economy Transport amp EnvironmentPublic Infrastructure Road Highways Exclusive Shared SharedPublic Infrastructure Rail Airports Shared Shared Shared SharedEnvironment Nature Contamination Rivers Weather Exclusive Exclusive Shared SharedEconomic Planning amp Development Exclusive Exclusive SharedAdvertising Regional Markets and regional controlled origin designations Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive ExclusiveProfessional associations Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive ExclusiveWorkplace amp Industrial safety Partial Partial Partial PartialFinancial Regional Cooperative Banks amp Financial Markets Exclusive Exclusive Shared ExclusivePress amp Media Shared Shared Shared SharedWater Local drainage Basin Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive ExclusiveRegional Development Coast Housing Rural Services Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive ExclusivePublic Sector amp Cooperative Banks Shared Shared Shared SharedEnergy amp Mining Exclusive Exclusive Shared SharedCompetition Partial Partial Partial PartialAgriculture and Animal welfare Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive ExclusiveFisheries Shared Shared Shared SharedHunting amp Fishing Exclusive Exclusive ExclusiveLocal Transport amp Communications Road Transport Maritime Rescue Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive ExclusiveTourism Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive ExclusiveCulture amp EducationCulture libraries museums Film industry Arts amp Crafts Shared Shared Shared SharedCulture Language Promotion R amp D Projects Shared Shared Exclusive SharedCulture Sports Leisure Events Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive ExclusiveEducation Primary secondary University Professional amp Language Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive ExclusiveReligious Organizations Shared ExclusiveCultural Welfare amp Education Associations Regulation Exclusive Exclusive Exclusive ExclusiveInternational Relations Culture amp language Cross Border relations Partial Partial PartialResources amp SpendingOwn Tax resources Yes Yes Yes YesAllocation by Central Government No Convergence Funds Convergence Funds Convergence Funds except NA Other resources Co payments Health amp Education Co payments Health amp Education Co payments Health amp Education Co payments Health amp Education Resources 100 60 60 60 Devolved Spending as of total public spending 36 Average for all autonomous communities 76 See also Edit Spain portalAutonomous administrative division Autonomous Communities Administration Autonomous Regions of Portugal List of current presidents of the autonomous communities of Spain List of Spanish autonomous communities by gross domestic product List of Spanish autonomous communities by Human Development Index Manuel Clavero Political divisions of Spain President Autonomous community Ranked lists of Spanish autonomous communitiesNotes Edit Spanish pronunciation komuniˈdad awˈtonoma Basque pronunciation autonomia erkideɣo Catalan pronunciation kumuniˈtat ewˈtɔnume Galician pronunciation komuniˈdadɪ awˈtɔnʊmɐ In the Basque Country the head of government is officially known as lehendakari in Basque or by the Spanish rendering of the title lendakari All figures as reported on Ethnologue for the number of speakers in Spain only In the Statute of Autonomy of Castile and Leon the Astur Leonese dialect spoken therein is referred to as Leonese The Catalan dialect spoken in the Valencian Community is historically traditionally and officially referred to as Valencian a b The Basque provinces and Navarre are officially known as historical territories or chartered territories iv Also spelled Cordova in English Also spelled Saragossa in English Previously known as Oviedo Previously known as Santander Previously known as Logrono Previously known as Pamplona Translation of terms Edit Autonomies in Spanish autonomias in Basque autonomien in Catalan Valencian autonomies in Galician autonomias State of Autonomies in Spanish Estado de las Autonomias in Basque Autonomien Estatuaren in Catalan Valencian Estat de les Autonomies in Galician Estado das Autonomias Also known as Autonomous State 6 in Spanish Estado Autonomico in Basque Autonomia Estatuko or Estatuaren in Catalan Valencian Estat Autonomic in Galician Estado Autonomico Statutes of Autonomy in Spanish Estatutos de Autonomia in Basque Autonomia Estatutuen in Catalan Valencian Estatuts d Autonomia in Galician Estatutos de Autonomia a b c Historical territories or chartered territories in Spanish territorios historicos or territorios forales in Basque lurralde historikoak or foru lurraldeak Autonomic pacts or autonomic agreements in Spanish pactos autonomicos or acuerdos autonomicos Autonomic president regional president or simply president in Spanish presidente autonomico presidente regional or simply presidente in Catalan Valencian president autonomic president regional or simply president in Galician presidente autonomico presidente rexional or simply presidente In the Basque language lehendakari is not translated Differential facts or traits in Spanish hechos diferenciales in Basque eragin diferentziala in Catalan Valencian fets diferencials in Galician feitos diferenciais Charters in Spanish fueros in Basque foruak Own language of a community or language proper to a community in Spanish lengua propia in Basque berezko hizkuntza in Catalan Valencian llengua propia in Galician lingua propia Municipalities in Spanish municipios in Basque udalerriak in Catalan Valencian municipis in Galician concellos or municipios City councils or municipal councils in Spanish ayuntamientos in Basque udalak in Catalan Valencian ajuntaments in Galician concellos Mayor in Spanish alcalde in Basque alkatea in Catalan Valencian alcalde or batlle batle in Galician alcalde Councillors in Spanish concejales in Basque zinegotziak in Catalan Valencian regidors in Galician concelleiros Provinces in Spanish provincias in Basque probintziak in Catalan Valencian provincies in Galician provincias in Spanish diputaciones provinciales in Catalan Valencian diputacions provincials in Galician deputacions provinciais Chartered Councils in Spanish diputaciones forales in Basque foru aldundiek General Juntas in Spanish Juntas Generales in Basque Biltzar Nagusiak Insular council in Spanish consejo insular or cabildo insular in Catalan consell insular Comarcas in Spanish comarcas in Basque eskualdeak in Catalan Valencian comarques in Galician comarcas or bisbarras Comarcal councils in Spanish consejos comarcales in Catalan Valencian consells comarcals References Edit a b c d Organizacion territorial El Estado de las Autonomias PDF Recursos Educativos Instituto Nacional de Tecnologias Educativas y de Formacion del Profesorado Ministerio de Eduacion Cultura y Deporte Retrieved 19 October 2012 Article 2 Cortes Generales Spanish Parliament 1978 Titulo Preliminar Spanish Constitution of 1978 Retrieved 29 September 2012 Article 143 Cortes Generales Spanish Parliament 1978 Titulo VIII De la Organizacion Territorial del Estado Spanish Constitution of 1978 Retrieved 29 September 2012 Bacigalupo Sagesse Mariano June 2005 Sinopsis articulo 145 Constitucion espanola con sinopsis Congress of the Deputies Retrieved 28 January 2012 a b c d e f Ruiz Huerta Carbonell Jesus Herrero Alcalde Ana 2008 Bosch Nuria Duran Jose Maria eds Fiscal Equalization in Spain Fiscal Federalism and Political Decentralization Lessons from Spain Germany and Canada Edward Elgar Publisher Limited ISBN 9781847204677 Retrieved 15 October 2012 a b The Federal Option and Constitutional Management of Diversity in Spain Xavier Arbos Marin page 375 included in The Ways of Federalism in Western Countries and the Horizons of Territorial Autonomy in Spain volume 2 edited by Alberto Lopez Eguren and Leire Escajedo San Epifanio edited by Springer ISBN 978 3 642 27716 0 ISBN 978 3 642 27717 7 eBook a b c d Borzel Tanja A 2002 States and Regions in the European Union University Press Cambridge pp 93 151 ISBN 978 0521008600 Retrieved 20 October 2012 a b Villar Fernando P June 1998 Nationalism in Spain Is It a Danger to National Integrity Storming Media Pentagon Reports Archived from the original on 27 September 2013 Retrieved 3 February 2012 a b c d Shabad Goldie Gunther Richard July 1982 Language Nationalism and Political Conflict in Spain Comparative Politics Comparative Politics Vol 14 No 4 14 4 443 477 doi 10 2307 421632 JSTOR 421632 a b c Moreno Hernandez Luis Manuel Federalization in Multinational Spain PDF Unidad de Politicas Comparadas Retrieved 8 October 2012 a b c d e f Conversi Daniele 2002 The Smooth Transition Spain s 1978 Constitution and the Nationalities Question PDF National Identities Vol 4 No 3 Carfax Publishing Inc Archived from the original PDF on 11 May 2008 Retrieved 28 January 2008 Moreno Fernandez Luis Miguel 2008 April 1997 La federalizacion de Espana Poder politico y territorio 2nd ed Siglo XXI Espana Editores pp 98 99 ISBN 978 8432312939 a b c Schrijver Frans 30 June 2006 Regionalism after Regionalisation Spain France and the United Kingdom Vossiupers UvA Amsterdam University Press ISBN 978 9056294281 Retrieved 14 October 2012 Moreno Fernandez Luis Miguel 2008 April 1997 La federalizacion de Espana Poder politico y territorio 2nd ed Siglo XXI Espana Editores pp 78 79 ISBN 978 8432312939 a b c d Colomer Josep M 1 October 1998 The Spanish state of autonomies non institutional federalism Special Issue on Politics and Policy in Democratic Spain No Longer Different West European Politics Archived from the original on 18 May 2013 Retrieved 7 October 2012 via HighBeam Research subscription required a b c Aparicio Sonia Cafe para Todos La Espana de las Autonomias Un Especial de elmundo es Retrieved 29 January 2012 a b Portero Molina Jose Antonio 2005 Vidal Beltran Jose Maria Garcia Herrera Miguel Angel eds El Estado de las Autonomias en Tiempo de Reformas El Estado Autonomico Integracion Solidaridad Diversidad Volumen 1 Instituto Nacional de Administracion Publica pp 39 64 ISBN 978 8478799770 Retrieved 29 September 2012 Delgado Ibarren Garcia Campero Manuel June 2005 Sinopsis articulo 2 Constitucion espanola con sinopsis Congress of the Deputies Retrieved 28 January 2012 Why Talk of Federalism Won t Help Peace in Syria Foreign Policy Devolution of Powers in Spain PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2016 10 12 Retrieved 2016 03 31 Devolution and Democracy Identity Preferences and Voting in the Spanish State of Autonomies a b c d e f g h i j k l Perez Royo Javier December 1999 Hernandez Lafuente Adolfo ed Desarrollo y Evolucion del Estado Autonomico El Proceso Constituyente y el Consenso Constitucional El Funcionamiento del Estado Autonomico Ministerio de Administraciones Publicas pp 50 67 ISBN 978 8470886904 Retrieved 7 October 2012 a b c d Nunez Seixas Xose M 2000 Alvarez Junco Jose Schubert Adrian eds The awakening of peripheral nationalisms and the State of the Autonomous Communities Spanish History since 1808 Arnold Publishers pp 315 330 ISBN 978 0340662298 Retrieved 9 October 2008 a b c d e f g Clavero Arevalo Manuel 2006 Un balance del Estado de las Autonomias PDF Coleccion Mediterraneo Economico num 10 Fundacion Caja Rural Intermediterranea Archived from the original PDF on April 9 2010 Retrieved 7 October 2012 Barberia Jose Luis 30 September 2012 Reformamos la Constitucion El Pais Retrieved 23 September 2012 Alonso de Antonio Jose Antonio June 2003 Sinopsis articulo 143 Constitucion espanola con sinopsis Congress of the Deputies Retrieved 29 January 2012 a b c d Congreso de los Diputados 1978 Titulo VIII De la Organizacion Territorial del Estado Capitulo tercero De las Comunidades Autonomas Articulos 143 a 158 Constitucion espanola Retrieved 22 October 2012 a b Alonso de Antonio Jose Antonio December 2003 Sinopsis Disposicion Transitoria 2 Congress of Deputies Retrieved 29 September 2012 Gonzalez Garcia Ignacio La Prohibicion de la Federacion entre Territorios Autonomos en el Constitucionalismo Espanol PDF Congreso Iberoamericano de Derecho Constitucional Archived from the original PDF on 22 December 2009 Retrieved 20 October 2012 Congreso de los Diputados 1978 Disposiciones transitorias Constitucion espanola Retrieved 22 October 2012 Congreso de los Diputados 1978 Disposiciones transitorias Constitucion espanola Retrieved 22 October 2012 Rebollo Luis Martin 2005 Ministerio de Justicia ed Consideraciones sobre la Reforma de los Estatutos de Autonomia de las Comunidades Autonomas La Reforma Constitucional XXVI Jornadas de Estudio 27 28 y 29 de octubre de 2004 Direccion del Servicio Juridico del Estado ISBN 978 84 7787 815 5 Retrieved 3 November 2012 El referendum de iniciativa barrera no exigida a las nacionalidades historicas El Pais in Spanish 9 December 1979 Retrieved 16 December 2019 a b Acuerdos Autonomicos firmados por el Gobierno de la Nacion y el Partido Socialista Obrero Espanol el 31 de julio de 1981 PDF 31 July 1981 Retrieved 11 October 2012 Garcia Ruiz Jose Luis 2006 Garcia Ruiz Jose Luis Giron Reguera Emilia eds Dos siglos de cuestion territorial de la Espana liberal al Estado de las autonomias Estudios sobre descentralizacion territorial El caso particular de Colombia Servicio de Publicaciones Universidad de Cadiz pp 109 126 ISBN 978 8498280371 Retrieved 21 October 2012 Moreno Fernandez Luis Miguel 2008 April 1997 La federalizacion de Espana Poder politico y territorio 2nd ed Siglo XXI Espana Editores p 66 ISBN 978 8432312939 The Federal Option and Constitutional Management of Diversity in Spain Xavier Arbos Marin page 381 included in The Ways of Federalism in Western Countries and the Horizons of Territorial Autonomy in Spain volume 2 edited by Alberto Lopez Eguren and Leire Escajedo San Epifanio edited by Springer ISBN 978 3 642 27716 0 ISBN 978 3 642 27717 7 eBook Ramon Marimon 23 March 2017 Cataluna Por una descentralizacion creible El Pais Retrieved 24 March 2017 Fiscal Federalism 2016 Making Decentralization Work OCDE Mallet Victor 18 August 2010 Flimsier footings Financial Times Archived from the original on August 22 2009 Retrieved 25 August 2010 registration required A survey of Spain How much is enough The Economist 6 November 2008 Archived from the original on September 10 2009 Retrieved 25 August 2010 subscription required 1 Archived September 4 2011 at the Wayback Machine Que al funcionario le cunda mas Edicion impresa EL PAIS El Pais Elpais com 2011 07 30 Retrieved 2012 04 30 Keatings Michael 2007 Federalism and the Balance of power in European States PDF Support for Improvement in Governance and Management Organisation for Economic Co operation and Development Inc Retrieved 28 January 2012 a b c d e f g h i j k l Smith Andy Heywood Paul August 2000 Regional Government in France and Spain PDF University College London Retrieved 11 July 2022 a b Junco Jose Alvarez 3 October 2012 El sueno ilustrado y el Estado nacion El Pais Retrieved 23 October 2012 a b c d Piketty Thomas 2017 11 14 The Catalan Syndrom lemonde fr Retrieved 2017 11 14 Varias autonomias meditan devolver competencias por el bloqueo del gobierno ABC 29 July 2011 Retrieved 29 January 2012 Catalonia Europe s next state A row about money and sovereignty The Economist 22 September 2012 Retrieved 29 September 2012 Tremlett Giles Roberts Martin 28 September 2012 Spain s cultural fabric tearing apart as austerity takes its toll The Guardian Retrieved 29 September 2012 Two thirds of the Catalan Parliament approve organising a self determination citizen vote within the next 4 years Catalan News Agency 28 September 2012 Archived from the original on 1 October 2012 Retrieved 29 September 2012 Ley Organica 2 1980 de 18 de enero sobre Regulacion de las Distintas Modalidades de Referendum Congress of the Deputies Spain 18 January 1980 Retrieved 29 September 2012 Spain heads towards confrontation with Catalan parliament The Guardian 27 September 2012 Retrieved 29 September 2012 Calvo Vera Gutierrez Pais El 24 September 2012 Rubalcaba a favor de cambiar la Constitucion para ir a un Estado federal El Pais Retrieved 29 September 2012 Navarro presenta la seva candidatura aquesta tarda a Terrassa El Periodico de Catalunya 28 September 2012 Retrieved 29 September 2012 The Federal Option and Constitutional Management of Diversity in Spain Xavier Arbos Marin page 395 included in The Ways of Federalism in Western Countries and the Horizons of Territorial Autonomy in Spain volume 2 edited by Alberto Lopez Eguren and Leire Escajedo San Epifanio published by Springer ISBN 978 3 642 27716 0 ISBN 978 3 642 27717 7 eBook a b c d de Carreras Serra Francesc 2005 El Estado de las Autonomias en Espana Descentralizacion en Perspectiva Comparada Espana Colombia y Brasil Plural Editores ISBN 978 9990563573 Retrieved 12 October 2012 Castelao Julio June 2005 Sinopsis articulo 137 Constitucion espanola con sinopsis Congress of the Deputies Retrieved 14 October 2012 a b c Aja Eliseo 2003 El Estado Autonomico de Espana a los 25 anos de su constitucion PDF Congreso Ibeoramericano de Derecho Constitucional Archived from the original PDF on 22 December 2009 Retrieved 22 October 2012 How much is enough Devolution has been good for Spain but it may have gone too far The Economist 6 November 2008 Retrieved 14 October 2012 subscription required Madrid aporta al Estado mas del doble que Cataluna Cinco Dias 29 November 2007 Retrieved 1 April 2012 Ministerio de Hacienda y Administraciones Publicas Ministry of the Treasury and Public Administrations Regimen foral Retrieved 1 April 2012 a b Toboso Fernando 1 April 2001 Un Primer Analisis Cuantitativo de la Organizacion Territorial de las Tareas de Gobierno en Espana Alemania y Suiza El Trimestre Economico Archived from the original on 18 May 2013 Retrieved 21 October 2012 via HighBeam Research subscription required Preamble to the Constitution Cortes Generales 27 December 1978 Spanish Constitution President of the Government of Spain and the Council of Ministers Retrieved 6 August 2022 Third article Cortes Generales 27 December 1978 Spanish Constitution Tribunal Constitucional de Espana Archived from the original on 17 January 2012 Retrieved 28 January 2012 Spain The CIA World Factbook Central Intelligence Agency Retrieved 22 October 2012 VI Enquete Euskal Herria 2016 in French Lewis M Paul ed 2009 Aragonese Ethnologue Languages of the World Sixteenth Edition Dallas TX SIL International Retrieved 25 November 2012 Lewis M Paul ed 2009 Asturian Ethnologue Languages of the World Sixteenth Edition Dallas TX SIL International Retrieved 25 November 2012 Lewis M Paul ed 2009 Basque Ethnologue Languages of the World Sixteenth Edition Dallas TX SIL International Retrieved 25 November 2012 Lewis M Paul ed 2009 Catalan Ethnologue Languages of the World Sixteenth Edition Dallas TX SIL International Retrieved 25 November 2012 Lewis M Paul ed 2009 Galician Ethnologue Languages of the World Sixteenth Edition Dallas TX SIL International Archived from the original on 28 March 2008 Retrieved 25 November 2012 BOE es Documento BOE A 2001 7994 Declaration of Principles on Local Autonomy Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe 20 September 1970 Retrieved 11 July 2022 Estatutos de Autonomia comparados por materias Secretaria de Estado de Administraciones Publicas in Spanish Ministerio de Hacienda y Administraciones Publicas Gobierno de Espana Archived from the original on 6 October 2014 EL MODELO DE FINANCIACIoN DE LAS COMUNIDADES AUToNOMAS DE REGIMEN COMUN Liquidacion definitiva 2009 Ministerio de Politica Territorial y Administracion Publica in Spanish November 2011 p 13 Archived from the original PDF on 18 March 2015 Retrieved 2 December 2018 External links EditInformation about Spain s Autonomous Communities from rulers org Relations between tiers CityMayors feature Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Autonomous communities of Spain amp oldid 1138847033, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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