The deputy of the Partido Popular for the Balearic Islands, José Vicente Marí Bosó, has defended this Saturday in A Coruña an industrial competitiveness plan promoted by the PP with the aim of creating jobs, improving wages and strengthening the economic structure of Spain. The proposal, focused on boosting the weight of industry and the manufacturing sector, seeks to promote sustainable growth based on productivity.
Marí intervened in the PP Interparliamentary, under the slogan Por lo importante, in the panel entitled Un país en el que valga la pena trabajar, moderated by the deputy secretary Alberto Nadal. From there, the deputy spokesman of the Popular Group in Congress defended that “we must stop talking about the minimum wage that condemns citizens and start talking about bringing the average salary to 50,000 euros”.
Competitiveness, energy and innovation
According to the Ibizan deputy, the new economic model must prioritize five key axes: energy, innovation, administrative simplification, talent and decarbonization without fundamentalism. In this sense, he announced that the PP will propose to raise tax deductions in innovation within the Corporate Tax and to guarantee investments by protecting the binding nature of project certifications.
Marí also criticized the bottlenecks in energy infrastructures: “We need a government that ensures energy supply, guarantees access to the grid and places sustainability at the same level as costs”.
In his speech, the parliamentarian defended a transition to renewable energies based on technological neutrality, with “specific financing mechanisms that go beyond the current productive industrial investment fund”.
Against “populism” and in favor of active employment policies
During his speech, Marí accused the central government of resorting to populism and “making up employment figures”, and committed himself to a profound reform of active employment policies. The PP, he said, will promote employability maps, continuous training and dual vocational training as part of its commitment to a more dynamic and qualified labor market.
“Alberto Núñez Feijóo’s commitment is that, for every regulation approved, three will be repealed,” Marí recalled, highlighting the regulatory simplification initiatives implemented by the autonomous communities governed by his party.
“This way, for sure, it will be worth it”, concluded Marí in his speech, defending that the future of the Spanish economy depends on a new industrial impulse.









