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THE CORRIDOR OF TRUTH

In one of Aesop’s fa­bles, a wolf wish­ing to eat a lamb puts for­ward the lamest rea­sons to do so while the lat­ter de­bunks each one… To no avail: in the end the wolf fol­lows its in­stincts and kills the lamb. This dark fable has stood the test of time be­cause of the bit­ter truth it con­veys: the pow­er­ful will ful­fil their wishes with any ex­cuse, so their ac­tions mat­ter much more than their words.

Enter the Mediter­ranean Cor­ri­dor de­bate. Spain’s Mediter­ranean coastal re­gions – and par­tic­u­larly Cat­alo­nia – gen­er­ate 45% of Spain’s GDP, half of its ex­ports and two thirds of its seaborne freight traf­fic. Spain’s gov­ern­ments should ob­vi­ously be ex­tremely in­ter­ested in build­ing high-per­for­mance in­fra­struc­tures to fa­cil­i­tate trans­port along this axis and to­wards Eu­rope, es­pe­cially if, as is the case, the Eu­ro­pean Union is will­ing to fi­nance be­tween 20% and 40% of the cost. Yet the op­po­site is all-too-often true in Spain.

In 2003, for ex­am­ple, as the EU started to de­sign its fu­ture Trans-Eu­ro­pean Trans­port Net­work, the Span­ish gov­ern­ment pro­posed a sin­gle freight rail­way cor­ri­dor across the Iber­ian Penin­sula from Al­ge­ci­ras, in the south, through Madrid and the cen­tral, hideously de­pop­u­lated, high­lands to a cy­clo­pean tun­nel that would be drilled under the Cen­tral Pyre­nees to link up with the most de­pop­u­lated part of France. This plan stu­diously avoided all the most in­dus­trial, ex­port­ing re­gions of Spain, in­clud­ing Cat­alo­nia and Va­len­cia as well as the Basque Coun­try. Pre­pos­ter­ous as it was, such was Span­ish gov­ern­ment pres­sure that in 2005 the Eu­ro­pean Com­mis­sion in­cluded this de­sign in its first draft Eu­ro­pean rail­way plan. Lu­di­crous. It was not until 2011 that the Cen­tral Pyre­nees tun­nel was fi­nally ruled out and the Mediter­ranean Cor­ri­dor ap­proved in­stead. Yet the tricks were not over. In 2013, the rest of the Cen­tral Cor­ri­dor re­turned to the plan, now re­la­belled as the “cen­tral branch” of the Mediter­ranean Cor­ri­dor. Then, in 2017, a study found that 80% of the funds ear­marked for the Mediter­ranean Cor­ri­dor were in­vested in this cen­tral route in­stead of the coastal one, which is by far where most of the traf­fic is. Pri­or­i­ties are shock­ingly lop­sided. For in­stance, while pharaonic in­vest­ments take place across Spain in lo­ca­tions with far lower traf­fic, the Mediter­ranean Cor­ri­dor’s de­sign for Cat­alo­nia, which is where traf­fic flows meet from the south (Va­len­cia), the east (Aragon), the north (France), two major ports (Barcelona-Tar­rag­ona) and Cat­alo­nia’s own in­dus­trial out­put (26% of Spain’s), is so low-cost, so on-the-cheap, that it is al­ready cre­at­ing a huge bot­tle­neck that negates the ben­e­fits this in­vest­ment was meant to pro­vide.

Aesop would have un­der­stood this at once: the pow­er­ful (in this case Span­ish gov­ern­ments of var­i­ous po­lit­i­cal al­le­giances) will use any ex­cuse to act ac­cord­ing to their wishes. Hence, warm ex­pres­sions of sup­port by Span­ish politi­cians to their Mediter­ranean re­gions’ cit­i­zens take place at the same time as act­ing against their wel­fare, as de­scribed above. But why? There is a clear method in this mad­ness. Spain is the West­ern Eu­ro­pean coun­try with the stark­est im­bal­ance be­tween densely-pop­u­lated, high-po­ten­tial re­gions (par­tic­u­larly along the Mediter­ranean coast) and sparsely-pop­u­lated, in­creas­ingly-aban­doned ones (“empty Spain”). This poses a major chal­lenge for a state whose po­lit­i­cal core has tra­di­tion­ally been pre­cisely in this quickly hol­low­ing-out re­gion. So the wolf might fear that the lamb will grow so much that it even­tu­ally be­comes dif­fi­cult to man­age and, since this lamb’s wool is too valu­able, and the wolf has got too used to fleec­ing it over and over, it might have cho­sen to starve the woolly beast just enough to ar­rest its growth. Just a fable? Per­haps. Yet good fa­bles al­ways hide a ker­nel of truth.

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