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Working in cafes etc
Hi
My boyfriend and I are looking into moving to Spain (we hope to buy a place in Benidorm area). I am wondering how easy it is to get a job in a cafe/hotel part time in the Benidorm area. Neither of us speak much Spanish at the moment but we are planning to learn. We have visited a few times and noticed that alot of the cafes and hotels in Benidorm cater very much for the English and thought that maybe, English speaking employees could be an advantage!!! Maybe we are being naive though. I would appreciate your thoughts. Thanks Wendy |
Re: Working in cafes etc
I live in the Benidorm area...people who have lived here for years are struggling for jobs. Work is thin on the ground. Benidorm is very, very quiet at the moment and singers, dj's, bar workers, cafe workers are all struggling to find jobs. If you are depending on finding work to make a living then forget it....unless you have some money to live on for a few months..or a year or so.... then you don't stand a chance. Sorry to burst your bubble but that is the stark truth.
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Re: Working in cafes etc
Thank you for your reply.
Is that because Spain are in a recession like we are here? I know that Banbury usually has loads of jobs but at the moment there is nothing at all and many people are out of work. We are only looking for 2 or 3 days work each at the most. Wendy |
Re: Working in cafes etc
Originally Posted by Banburycross
(Post 7361377)
Thank you for your reply.
Is that because Spain are in a recession like we are here? I know that Banbury usually has loads of jobs but at the moment there is nothing at all and many people are out of work. We are only looking for 2 or 3 days work each at the most. Wendy |
Re: Working in cafes etc
Originally Posted by Banburycross
(Post 7361377)
Thank you for your reply.
Is that because Spain are in a recession like we are here? I know that Banbury usually has loads of jobs but at the moment there is nothing at all and many people are out of work. We are only looking for 2 or 3 days work each at the most. Wendy |
Re: Working in cafes etc
Ok thanks.
Its not looking good then for Benidorm!!!! Its a shame but this is the area we are buying in because family live close by - although they only live in Benidorm 6 months of the year. We are coming over in a week or so and plan to have a good look round then. Are there such things as "recruitment agencies" like they have in the UK? Wendy |
Re: Working in cafes etc
Originally Posted by Mitzyboy
(Post 7361389)
Its said that the recession will be worse here in Spain than the UK. Many people in the building trade have been layed off and are looking for work.
There's plenty of work to ne found for those willing to do it, and for those willing to take a pay cut. The high unemployment figures in Spain are not sole to do with the recession. There's a generational problem too. Not too many years ago, a man would accept whatever job was available to feed his family. Now, a bricklayer or painter for example will refuse a job as general labourer as a) it is not what he wants, and b) he sees it as a step down. |
Re: Working in cafes etc
Originally Posted by Banburycross
(Post 7361431)
Ok thanks.
Its not looking good then for Benidorm!!!! Its a shame but this is the area we are buying in because family live close by - although they only live in Benidorm 6 months of the year. We are coming over in a week or so and plan to have a good look round then. Are there such things as "recruitment agencies" like they have in the UK? Wendy |
Re: Working in cafes etc
Originally Posted by Banburycross
(Post 7361431)
Ok thanks.
Its not looking good then for Benidorm!!!! Its a shame but this is the area we are buying in because family live close by - although they only live in Benidorm 6 months of the year. We are coming over in a week or so and plan to have a good look round then. Are there such things as "recruitment agencies" like they have in the UK? Wendy I'm not saying you wont get a job ..... but just be realistic about your chances :) |
Re: Working in cafes etc
Thanks to you all for the info.
Yes we are prepared to work hard and will take what we can get!!! Will have a look near the market - thanks :) |
Re: Working in cafes etc
That's ok, we wanted realistic answers and that's what we got, so thank you for your honest replies.
Wendy |
Re: Working in cafes etc
Originally Posted by Banburycross
(Post 7361468)
Thanks to you all for the info.
Yes we are prepared to work hard and will take what we can get!!! Will have a look near the market - thanks :) |
Re: Working in cafes etc
Originally Posted by Mitzyboy
(Post 7361456)
Wendy Im sorry if we sound negative, but if you take into consideration that in Feb unemployment was 3.48 million here, you begin to get the picture .... thats with a population of about 40 million. Building companies are closing down left right and centre, the holiday trade has dipped, and jobs go generally to Spanish first.
I'm not saying you wont get a job ..... but just be realistic about your chances :) |
Re: Working in cafes etc
We will probably stay with family.
Wendy PS - was the indoor market the one in the old town part of Benidorm you mean? |
Re: Working in cafes etc
Originally Posted by Banburycross
(Post 7361505)
We will probably stay with family.
Wendy PS - was the indoor market the one in the old town part of Benidorm you mean? |
Re: Working in cafes etc
Originally Posted by Fortaleza
(Post 7361500)
Mitz - come on!!! You've been in Spain long enough to know that there isn't anywhere near 3.48m out of work really, regardless of the official figures!!!!!!!!!
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Re: Working in cafes etc
There are plenty out of work around here and they are the ones not even counted on the list.
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Re: Working in cafes etc
Thanks Lionda, will check that out :)
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Re: Working in cafes etc
Originally Posted by Banburycross
(Post 7361468)
Thanks to you all for the info.
Yes we are prepared to work hard and will take what we can get!!! Will have a look near the market - thanks :) |
Re: Working in cafes etc
My daughter has just got a job doing bar work 5 euro an hour... but if the bar doesn't empty at the end of the night you don't leave until it does....no extra money! Holidaymakers take note....don't hang around in a bar at the end of the night, the bar staff are on extra time for zilch! :thumbdown:
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Re: Working in cafes etc
Glad to hear that jeanc, thanks :thumbup:
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Re: Working in cafes etc
Originally Posted by jeanc
(Post 7361540)
Could I just say that after reading on this, and other forums over the last few months I was not sure what to expect on my trip over last week, but to my suprize Spain is alive and well!!! We went to Benidorm for the day and stayed over night in a hotel that took over 30 mins to check in because it was that busy. Glad the hotel had its own parking or we would have still been driving round now and a very enjoyable night out taking in some wonderful acts in quite busy bars. Yes not as busy as August but after all it is winter
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Re: Working in cafes etc
Originally Posted by Mitzyboy
(Post 7361521)
So you'd say they'll get a job no problem then?
Originally Posted by Lionda
(Post 7361554)
No it isn't busy...it's dead. Picking up a little but very slow and according to people who have lived here for years Benidorm is having it's worst winter for years.
Lionda, whilst I don't doubt that it is quiet to what you have become used to, every year I've been here you will hear bar/restaurant owners bemoan how it is the worst year ever. Yet curiously when you speak to them in October/November they've always done 'alright'. But I can understand why a place as overextended as Benidorm might feel the pinch in lean times - they have far too many bars & restaurants than it can sustain |
Re: Working in cafes etc
Originally Posted by Fortaleza
(Post 7361630)
You're right Mitz, those two will have a nightmare finding a job - but they would have had that, recession or not.
Lionda, whilst I don't doubt that it is quiet to what you have become used to, every year I've been here you will hear bar/restaurant owners bemoan how it is the worst year ever. Yet curiously when you speak to them in October/November they've always done 'alright'. But I can understand why a place as overextended as Benidorm might feel the pinch in lean times - they have far too many bars & restaurants than it can sustain |
Re: Working in cafes etc
Strange thing is, a guy that runs a letting agency I know has the most advanced bookings he has ever had, this year.
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Re: Working in cafes etc
Originally Posted by Lionda
(Post 7361554)
No it isn't busy...it's dead. Picking up a little but very slow and according to people who have lived here for years Benidorm is having it's worst winter for years.
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Re: Working in cafes etc
Have a look at this just to give you a taste of problems facing some of the labour market. :ohmy:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/7887055.stm And Mitzboys figures were about right. ;) http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/7846895.stm http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/7920734.stm Re the article below some of the comments are worth a look. The English bars are taking a political pounding from the anti karaoke/Knees up mother Brown establishment. http://www.costa-news.com/index.php?...1&limitstart=1 |
Re: Working in cafes etc
Work .... one the guy who live next door to me was tell me that the company he works at that havent sold one unit this month are last month there in the footwear industry
Commercial Business across the city is slow , 1,000 shoe factories, being one of the most important footwear industries in Spain and the rest of Europe . you waer it been throught here . At present , they are using new strategies based on brands, design, fashion, quality, research, respect for the environment, new technologies and high standards of service. lots have been layed off there jobs here . design house are just doing the odd job , companies supplying component parts, raw materials and accessories are cryying out for work and bussines . last year i had cash in my walit now i fine cash is not space and not buyying treats , driving , watching my fill ups and prices . el corte ingles is only get the window shopping , and as for the Hipercor not buyying much there any more , down two Mercadona Carrefour are Eroski for there name brands , thinks are hard here and afraid of losing there jobs are have done , banks wont help out the lettle companys here aswell and for remortgaging you havnt n chance here .... |
Re: Working in cafes etc
Whilst I don't deny there is rising unemployment, this links are misleading in that they have come from a UK source looking at it through Brit eyes. Normally not necessarily a problem but here, an understanding of Spanish psyche is essential.
First up....
Originally Posted by poshnbucks
(Post 7361788)
Have a look at this just to give you a taste of problems facing some of the labour market. :ohmy:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/7887055.stm Spaniards in this area go to the fields EVERY year. True, in recent years with so much construction, they were required elsewhere. But go up to any of the fields in any given year and you will find the waiters, cooks etc who served you in the summer, happily taking the good money the strawberry (and other fruit & veg) offer - whilst simultaneaously pocketing their handsome dole cheques too. Some prefer to take the winter easy and don't bother. Some who want to make a special purchase - car, holiday etc - will do a month or however long they need to reach their target. During Feb, fishing had to stop here, as it does every year, as they gove the sea time to replenish stocks. People who rely on fishing find themselves unemployed for a month. Those luck enough to be OFFICIALLY contracted full time, will recieve a payment for each day they are not working. Most however will claim dole for the month, and some will head off to the fields until they go back out again. Reading press closer to home by local journalists and one gets a better idea than a BBC man passing through. In Andalucia, according to the latest figures, unemployment grew at a slower rate than anywhere else in Spain growing at 3.93% on the previous month compared to the national average of 4.63%. Huelva province saw the lowest growth in Andalucia in that time at 1.86%, making it one of the three (might be two but can't find that figure now) provinces out of Spain's fifty with the lowest unemployment growth. One would also think then from the BBC report that the immigrants are having a tough time given that all these pesky Spaniards are muscling in and taking their jobs. Not necessarily so. There are 53,207 unemployed immigrants in the whole of Andalucia. But once again Huelva registered one of the lowest numbers in the Autonomous Region with just 2,859 or just 5% of the Andalucian total. Compare that to Malaga with 18,688 unemployed immigrants (with an estimated 40% of those from EU countries) Next up:
Originally Posted by poshnbucks
(Post 7361788)
And Mitzboys figures were about right. ;)
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/7846895.stm http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/7920734.stm There are lots of similar stories about people who are doing well out of the social. It is something that has existed for donkey's years and governments have meddled with this at their peril. Mr Bean's current lot vowed to clean this all up and for the first few years, there were crackdowns all over the place. Funnily enough, this has all seemed to stop now as they too, like many governments before them, are once again turning a blind eye. It would be political suicide now for any government to try and meddle with dole claimers who are also working. They would not only be soon out of power, they'd be faced with massive rioting. Right or wrong, there it is. And remember, just like last year, the spring & summer months will see these figures altered again with many of the unemployed going back to their seasonal jobs - for hotels and and many high profile bars & restaurants these workers will have to come off the dole as these jobs won't pay off the books. And finally....
Originally Posted by poshnbucks
(Post 7361788)
Re the article below some of the comments are worth a look. The English bars are taking a political pounding from the anti karaoke/Knees up mother Brown establishment.
http://www.costa-news.com/index.php?...1&limitstart=1 Ahem...!!!! Lovely, balanced reporting, eh, with no slant whatsoever!!!!!!! A law just doesn't APPEAR out of thin air. The council will have to have proposed it, discussed it, passed it - all of which would have been reported in the local press, and would certainly have been talked about among traders themselves. That the local Brit paper maybe did not send their correspondent to the relevant council meetings - or even simply translate the press release or story from another Spanish paper - to run so that the Brit bars could learn about it, is a sorry oversight. Quote: "local police have been given orders to stop these events from taking place" No, local police have been told to check that the relevant permits are in place. These bars should consider themselves lucky that their entertainment was just stopped from going ahead - they could have been fined instead. As for the bars who are carrying out illegal gambling on their premises, they should keep quiet and think themselves lucky they were able to get away with it for so long. Quote: British bar owners are asking if it is down to the crisis that Brit bars being targeted in order to force people into other establishments. Or could it be that down to the crisis, councils across the land who need extra cash are simply enforcing laws available to them that in other times they might have ignored them. In my town where there are (thankfully) no Brit bars or fish & chip shops, the bars & restaurant owners have been subjected to inspections recently too. The police are also being more ticket happy when it comes to parking, whereas before they were quite relaxed. More traffic controls for on the spot fines for speeding, seatbelt, insurance etc - curiously at the moment, they don't care if you drive drunk as they get to fill the council coffers with the other fines. |
Re: Working in cafes etc
Originally Posted by jeanc
(Post 7361691)
Sorry I must be telling lies then? Just reminded me again why I stopped posting....
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Re: Working in cafes etc
It will not pick up whilst everyone keeps telling folk not to come. Everyone's painting such a bleak picture of the area..
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Re: Working in cafes etc
Originally Posted by jeanc
(Post 7363105)
It will not pick up whilst everyone keeps telling folk not to come. Everyone's painting such a bleak picture of the area..
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Re: Working in cafes etc
Originally Posted by Lionda
(Post 7363125)
Who is telling folk not to come to Benidorm :confused: Benidorm needs the tourists to come and provide work for the many who are currently unemployed. What Benidorm doesn't need is more people coming to look for work as there just isn't enough work.
I think that should be rephrased Benidorm doesn't need the usual type of Brits with no Spanish going there looking for work in only English speaking jobs - of which you say are sparce. If you were a Brit with perfect or near perfect Spanish, there's no reason no to go there as having had a quick glance there seems to be a whole range of jobs on offer. Native English speakers with a good knowledge of Spanish are highly valued by Spanish employers - as no matter how many classes they send their Spanish staff to, they know they will never match absolute fluency of a decently educated Native English speaker. |
Re: Working in cafes etc
Originally Posted by Fortaleza
(Post 7363164)
I think that should be rephrased Benidorm doesn't need the usual type of Brits with no Spanish going there looking for work in only English speaking jobs - of which you say are sparce.
If you were a Brit with perfect or near perfect Spanish, there's no reason no to go there as having had a quick glance there seems to be a whole range of jobs on offer. Native English speakers with a good knowledge of Spanish are highly valued by Spanish employers - as no matter how many classes they send their Spanish staff to, they know they will never match absolute fluency of a decently educated Native English speaker. |
Re: Working in cafes etc
Seems to me maybe that some of us should take just a little notice of someone who actually lives there and can see whats going on :) Otherwise whats the point of asking questions here in the first place :D
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Re: Working in cafes etc
Originally Posted by Fortaleza
(Post 7363164)
I think that should be rephrased Benidorm doesn't need the usual type of Brits with no Spanish going there looking for work in only English speaking jobs - of which you say are sparce.
If you were a Brit with perfect or near perfect Spanish, there's no reason no to go there as having had a quick glance there seems to be a whole range of jobs on offer. Native English speakers with a good knowledge of Spanish are highly valued by Spanish employers - as no matter how many classes they send their Spanish staff to, they know they will never match absolute fluency of a decently educated Native English speaker. |
Re: Working in cafes etc
Originally Posted by jackytoo
(Post 7363768)
Not so on the CDS. I know a lot of Anglo-Spanish families. Some bi-lingual people cannot get jobs either.
I'm sure I specified decently educated ;) |
Re: Working in cafes etc
Originally Posted by jeanc
(Post 7363105)
It will not pick up whilst everyone keeps telling folk not to come. Everyone's painting such a bleak picture of the area..
tourists is what we need but when you have hotels pubs restaurants that been over charging over last few years now dropping there prices it now good time to take a holiday in spain |
Re: Working in cafes etc
Hi, just back from Madrid. Judging by how packed the metro was this morning at 8.30, most people there still have a job - and the cafe bars were as busy as ever. However outside the capital, many car plants are like the UK ones ie in deep freeze mode. If we're talking about somewhere like Benidorm, then as mentioned above, it depends on how many tourists come this year. Germans and Swedes, as well as Brits. You never know, there may be a big influx of Poles! I suspect that deep down no-one really knows.
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Re: Working in cafes etc
some off the Thread here like " Just ONE SENTENCE why we should STAY in Spain ! " , "Successfull in Spain." , "Finding jobs in Spain " , and last "People Leaving and handing keys back to the bank"
donst paint a good picture and dont get me started on the tourists airport figgers are down 10 - 17 % in area , SPANISH tourism board promoted a picture of an Australian beach , freefall, admits minister , tourism industry The minister for tourism industry Canary Islands , Madrid capital of Spain. under 4,million is population 2007 third-most populous municipality in the European Union , Metro easy way to get around Madrid , lot do used it , god hope all have jobs there are unemployed jump up 7-8 million mark jurdy |
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