How Tourism Pushed Barcelona to Breaking Point, and How Social Movements Are Fighting Back
https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2025/06/how-tourism-pushed-barcelona-to-breaking-point-and-how-social-movements-are-fighting-back.htmlOpen linkView original on lemmy.world
'Key demands included ending public subsidies for tourism promotion, regulating short-term rentals to prevent housing loss, cutting cruise ship traffic, and improving labour conditions with fair wages and stable work schedules.' - This sounds strangely sane. It's hard to believe that e.g. greatly reducing the ability of mega cruise ships to dump thousands of tourists at once into the city every day would be unfeasible to implement.
Blame the people in control of the system, not the random person who would like to see a bit of the world while they can.
This has been a long-standing problem in the Mediterranean and mostly in Spain, where many Europeans rent or even own houses that they only use a few months a year. I believe the Spanish government has been enabling this for economic reasons.
This even led to a ghetto effect, where most tourists from one country tend to gather on a certain part of the coast. And Spaniards have been traditionally unfriendly to tourists. Maybe willing and accomodating on the coast, but go inland, you immediately notice it, esp. if you try to converse in English (personal experience).
Let's hope other European (mostly mediterranean) countries follow suit. And let's hope this does not just lead to shifting the suffering to further places.
I am an european resident and home owner in Spain and living here full time (I’ve moved here with my family around 5 years ago) and I agree with its citizens. Vacation homes have been a nuisance on peoples lives for a whole now for multiple reasons:
All of the above is ofc IMO and subjected to dispute, but this is a general feeling among a lot of people.
Last time I was in Spain this wasn't even a thing yet the problem already existed.
But where I live now I have experienced it first hand: I wanted to live in this picturesque village, but Airbnb Tourism has pushed rents to the point that they're just as expensive as in the capital, and I had to move 1 village over where they're half that. Consequently there's fewer true villagers and more and more visitors and actually living in that village is more and more defined by wealth.
Good read. I hope this grows.
Tragedy of the commons all over again.