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You can receive up to 1,450€ in Social Security if you fulfil these requirements
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Many people in Alicante are finding it harder and harder to make ends meet as a result of growing rents, inflation, and everyday expenses that take up our pay cheques without our knowledge.
In order to ease the impacts of the economic crisis brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic, the Spanish government implemented the so-called Minimum Vital Income (IMV) in June 2020 as a structural solution and extra assistance.
Due to strong demand from families in need and its significance as a supplemental source of income for survival, this aid has been provided ever since.
According to the most recent data released by the National Social Security Institute, 94,398 people in Alicante received benefits last January.
The benefit, which benefits 31,100 people in Alicante, averages 562.95 euros per month per household, with 60% of those households having minor children.
IMV: What is it?
Since the Minimum Vital Income is a non-contributory benefit, receiving it does not require having made any prior contributions. The amount varies depending on the number of family members and their conditions, and it is awarded based on the assets and income of the individual or cohabitation unit.
However, there are some restrictions on how it can be combined with other sources of income and work. Applying for it requires going via Social Security, either in person or online.
However, who is eligible for the Minimum Vital Income?
Conditions
Both general criteria and particular prerequisites must be met in order to apply for the IMV, according to the Ministry of Inclusion, Social Security, and Migration.
Possessing a valid residence in Spain for a minimum of one year before submitting an application is one of the primary prerequisites. Nonetheless, victims of sexual exploitation and gender-based violence are exempt.
Additionally, candidates need to fulfil the following requirements:
• Be in the age range of 23 to 65.
• Have assets and income below the specified thresholds (which are available on the Ministry of Inclusion, Social Security, and Migration’s website).
• Show that you are independent in your home.
• Have a job seeker’s registration.
• Not serving as a director of a business.
Both individuals and cohabitation units are eligible to receive the Minimum Vital Income. A couple who live together is referred to as a cohabitation unit, which grants access to a certain percentage of the benefit.
The government has announced a 9% rise in the IMV payments for 2025, bringing the monthly individual Guaranteed Basic Income to 658.81 euros. This change would result in the following aid amounts for the next year:
• The monthly guaranteed basic income for each individual beneficiary is 658.81 euros.
• Monthly cost for two individuals (two adults or one adult and one minor): 856.46 euros.
• The monthly cost for three individuals (two adults and one minor, three adults and two minors, or one adult and two minors) is 1,054.10 euros.
• Monthly cost: 1,251.75 euros for four persons (one adult and three minors, two adults and two minors, three adults and one minor, or four adults). • Monthly cost: € 1,449.39 for five or more people (four adults and one minor, three adults and two or more youngsters, two adults and three or more minors, or one adult and four or more minors).
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In 2024, the number of bankruptcy cases involving individuals and independent contractors rose by 120%
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The Registry of Forensic Economists (Refor) of the General Council of Economists showed that bankruptcy proceedings for people and self-employed workers increased by 120% to 35,510 in 2024, while those for businesses increased by 23% to 5,589 in the same year.
The Economists point out in a note that of the 41,099 bankruptcies that occurred in 2024, 86% of them were of individuals or self-employed people, significantly more than those of businesses, which accounted for 14%.
According to the College of Economists’ analysis of last year’s data, 84% of bankruptcy proceedings involve no assets, indicating that the excessive debt is already unsustainable because there are no assets to face the bankruptcy and liquidation is required. This suggests that bankruptcy proceedings are being used when it is already too late.
Despite a 7% increase in procedures implementing restructuring plans in January of this year, this mechanism “has not yet taken off in our country” because, in 2024, there will be 334 restructuring plans, which is 2% fewer than the 341 in 2023.
When comparing Spain’s figures to those of other nations in our region, we find that bankruptcies have increased in nearly every instance: in Germany, France, Italy, Spain, Portugal, and France, they have increased by 23.7%, 17.5%, 13.3%, and 7.29%, respectively, while in the UK, they have reduced by 5%.
Competitions’ development since before the epidemic
According to economists who have examined data on bankruptcies since 2019, prior to the coronavirus epidemic, company bankruptcies have increased by 38% and individual and self-employed worker bankruptcies by 1,300%, meaning that they have essentially multiplied by 14.
Refor suggests that the use of second chance procedures may be the cause of the little increase in bankruptcies.
Between 2023 and 2024, the number of micro-enterprise electronic processes tripled, from 463 to 1,380.
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Sextortionists caught by the National Police
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Several members of a Nigerian criminal organisation that threatens Spanish citizens with the publication of pornographic videos have been apprehended by the National Police during Operation Teknon.
In particular, victim complaints have been found in Valladolid, A Coruña, Gijón, Albacete, Alicante, Cáceres, and Las Palmas Gran Canaria.
According to the Canary Islands Police Headquarters, this group made phoney social media profiles featuring pictures of gorgeous women and then reached out to individuals, asking for intimate images and videos once they had gained some trust.
After claiming to have access to all of their contacts because they had previously taken the material from their social networks, they demanded payment in order to keep the files private and avoid being reported to the authorities for paedophilia (identifying themselves as minors).
Sextortion
In particular, victim complaints have been found in Valladolid, A Coruña, Gijón, Albacete, Alicante, Cáceres, and Las Palmas Gran Canaria.
The National Police noted that in certain instances, the victims paid to keep their private photos hidden.
When victims lacked the financial means to pay, they were compelled to work as mules for the organisation. They accept money from other victims and transfer it to the criminal organization’s wallets, thereby participating in the original crime and possibly committing another money laundering crime.
Lastly, using specialised applications for tracking cryptocurrency assets, the National Police’s Economic and Tax Crime Unit was able to identify the ultimate destination of the illicitly transferred funds, which were always wallets belonging to Nigerian nationals aged 20 to 35.
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In Alicante, a motorcyclist runs over a pedestrian and a worker falls from scaffolding
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Numerous incidents that necessitated the involvement of emergency services have occurred in the province of Alicante yesterday. The initial incident happened in Elda’s Calle Padre Manón. A call regarding a worker falling from a scaffold was received by the Emergency Information and Coordination Centre (CICU) around 8.40 am. The 38-year-old victim was taken to Elda Hospital with multiple bruises after an ambulance from the Basic Life Service (SVB) was sent out almost away.
Twenty minutes later, at approximately nine in the morning, the CICU got another call, this time from Alicante’s Avenida Conde de Lumiares. A man, age 21, sustained bruising after being involved in a car-motorbike collision. After treating the victim at the scene of the accident, the Emergency Medical Service (SAMU) medical team took him to Alicante General Hospital.
The hectic day ended at 2:00 pm when a new warning was issued on a hit-and-run incident on Avenida Joan Fuster in Dénia in which a motorbike had ran over a pedestrian. According to the Emergency Information and Coordination Centre, the motorbike rider and the pedestrian were both hurt in the double accident.
The 65-year-old woman who was driven over had a fracture and a head injury, while the 16-year-old biker sustained a head injury. Due to the severity of both situations, the victims have been sent to the Dénia Hospital and are being cared for by the SVB and SAMU.
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