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Policy2026-06-20

Spain Opens Regularization for Migrants and Turns Inclusion into Economic Policy

Spain Opens Regularization for Migrants and Turns Inclusion into Economic Policy
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A new temporary residence program could regularize at least 500,000 people and reinforces a rare European trend: using migration policy to address labor shortages, boost tax revenue, and reduce informality.

What happened

Spain has opened a window for migration regularization that could change the lives of hundreds of thousands of people — and also the dynamics of the country's own labor market. The government's plan provides for a one-year, renewable residence permit for undocumented foreigners who can prove a minimum period of stay and no criminal record. It is estimated that at least 500,000 people could benefit, many of whom already work informally in sectors such as elder care, agriculture, and hospitality — areas heavily dependent on migrant labor.

Why this matters

In practice, the measure pulls workers out of the gray zone: it reduces vulnerability to wage abuse, expands access to formal contracts, bank accounts, rental agreements, and social security contributions. For those in the system, the gain is immediate in terms of protection. For the state, the gain is structural: more tax revenue, more predictability, and less informality in sectors that already rely heavily on migrant labor. The most important point here is the signal of public policy. At a time when parts of Europe are tightening borders and residency rules, Spain is betting on a pragmatic path: integrating those already working in the country and turning de facto presence into formal economic participation.

This decision aligns with a broader trend of population aging and a global competition for workers. Countries that can combine migration control with legal pathways for integration tend to gain productivity, fiscal stability, and social cohesion in the medium term. Spain's strategy could serve as a model for other nations facing labor shortages and demographic aging.

What to watch for

There are still risks: domestic political pressure, implementation by decree, and the need for oversight to prevent new cycles of exploitation. Success will depend on the government's ability to ensure that regularization is not merely a stopgap but a sustainable route to integration. Additionally, it will be necessary to monitor whether the measure effectively reduces informality and increases tax revenue without causing distortions in the labor market. If well executed, the measure could become a benchmark for progressivism in practice: less rhetoric, more institutional design with real impact on daily life.

Sources

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