Barcelona DATA SHEET 2020 — Main economic indicators for the Barcelona area 04 Privileged location Contents 05 Population and surface area 05 Foreign-resident population 06 Accessible and well-connected 07 Airport 07 Port 08 Driving force of a large, diversified economic area 09 Economic activity 10 Productive specialisation 10 Foreign investment 12 Exports 13 Diversified economic activity 15 M anufacturing industry and Industry 4.0 16 I CT Sector / Information and Communication 16 G reen and Circular Economy 18 Social Economy 19 Commerce 19 Tourism 19 Congresses 20 Digital city, Quality of life and creativity, 32 sustainability research and 33 Quality of life innovation 33 Climate 22 Innovation ecosystem 33 Energy and environment 23 Creative industries 34 Sustainable mobility 34 C ultural and educational offer 24 Centre for generating and attracting talent 35 International positioning as a 25 Jobs in Barcelona city that adds value 26 P articipation in the job market 26 Salaries 26 U niversity training and attraction 27 Entrepreneurial city with competitive costs 28 Entrepreneurial activity 29 Real Estate 29 Cost of living 29 Logistics land 30 Compact city with social cohesion 31 Family income 31 Foreign-resident population by district 31 Poverty and social exclusion Catalonia Barcelona Province Barcelona Metropolitan Region Barcelona Barcelona Metropolitan Area (AMB) European mega-regions GDP per capita (€) < 15,000 25,001 - 30,000 15,001 - 20,000 > 30,001 20,001 - 25,000 04 Privileged location Barcelona, at the centre of a • The current development of metropolitan regions goes mega-region with 27 million beyond their geographical area, creating mega-regions or polycentric agglomerations of cities as natural units of inhabitants economic influence in a geographical area. Most notable is the Southern European mega-region formed by the • Barcelona, the capital of Catalonia, has a population of Barcelona-Lyon corridor, which encompasses 27.3 million over 1,660,000 people and is at the heart of a metropolitan inhabitants and has a production of over €700,000 million, region covering some 2,500 km2 with almost 5,000,000 giving it a significant critical mass among the twelve inhabitants, representing 63.4% and 10.3% of the Catalan European mega-regions. and Spanish population, respectively. • Barcelona has easy access to very dynamic large markets: • In relation to consolidated metropolitan agglomerations, the EU's common market, which provides access to 510 the population of the metropolitan region of Barcelona is million people. It also forms part of the Mediterranean approximately 25% that of New York, while it is greater than corridor, a Trans-European Network for transporting goods the areas of Berlin, Montreal and Stockholm. that has a direct impact on an area of 250 million inhabitants (50% of the EU’s population). Improving this connection • The cosmopolitan, diverse and intercultural spirit of would be a strategic opportunity for increasing the market Barcelona is reflected in the fact that 21.7% of the city's share of the port traffic of goods coming from Asia. It also population are foreign nationals - the highest percentage offers the strategic potential of relations with the 43 member in history - and for the first time ever, this demographic countries of the Union for the Mediterranean, which includes segment has risen above 360,000 residents. territories in Eastern Europe, Africa and the Middle East. Population and surface area Population and surface area 2020 POPULATION PROPORTION SURFACE DENSITY JANUARY 2020 OF SPANISH AREA (INHABITANTS/ (INHABITANTS) POPULATION (%) (KM2) KM2) Barcelona 1,666,530 3.5% 102.2 16,154.6 10.3% Metropolitan Region* 4,895,876 10.3% 2,464.4 1,986.6 Catalonia 7,727,029 16.3% 32,108.0 237.3 of the Spanish Spain 47,329,981 100.0% 505,968.4 92.8 population in the * Data from 1 January 2019. Barcelona regions of Baix Llobregat, Maresme, Vallès Oriental and Vallès Occidental. Metropolitan region Source: Barcelona City Council's Department of Statistics and Data Dissemination, Idescat, INE. Population in 20 metropolitan agglomerations around the world 2019 0M 10M 20M 30M 40M Tokyo-Yokohama Jakarta Foreign-resident population Delhi New York Percentage of foreign nationals Los Angeles out of total population Buenos Aires 25% Paris 21.7 20.2 20% London 17.8 18.5 17.4 17.4 16.3 16.6 Hong Kong 15% 05 Boston-Providence Toronto 10% Madrid San Francisco 5% 1.9 Milan Barcelona 4,895,876 2000 2008 2013 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 Sydney NB: data from 1 January of each year. Berlin Source: Department of Statistics and Data Dissemination, Barcelona City Council. Seattle Montreal Population of foreign nationals in Stockholm Barcelona by country of origin 2020 For Barcelona, Idescat data, 1 January 2019. 0% 2% 4% 6% 8% 10% 12% Source: Demography World Urban Areas: 15th Annual Edition April 2019. Italy 11.0% Pakistan 6.3% Demographic indicators China 6.2% for Barcelona France 4.8% Age structure 2020 Morocco 4.3% 0-14: 12.3% 15-64: 66.6% 65 and over: 21.1% Life expectancy (2017) Colombia 4.2% 83.9 Men: 80.7 Women: 86.7 Honduras 3.9% Birth rate (2019) Fertility rate (2018) Venezuela 3.6% 7.7‰ 34.0‰ Peru 3.4% Mortality rate (2019) (Births per 1,000 women aged 8.8‰ between 15 and 49) Philippines 2.7% Source: Barcelona City Council's Department of Statistics, Public Health Argentina 2.5% Agency, Barcelona Health Consortium. Source: Department of Statistics and Data Dissemination, Barcelona City Council. Accessible and well-connected Great potential as a logistics hub for the Mediterranean • With regard to access and economic infrastructures, within an area of 5 kilometres, the city offers an international airport, the port, the trade fair, Zona Franca and a logistics platform, a combination that offers huge potential as a Mediterranean logistics centre. • In 2019, a record figure of 52.7 million passengers passed through El Prat airport, an increase of 5.0% on the previous year. This figure means that among the main European airports, the city is listed 6th in the Airport Council International's 2019 ranking, one place higher than the previous year. The dynamism of international passenger traffic at El Prat means that it now makes up almost three- quarters (73.3%) of the total. • Port activity registered 3.3 million TEUs and 66 million tonnes transported in 2019, which shows a degree of stabilisation (-3.2% and -0.1%, respectively) in year-on-year 06 terms, after the upward trend of previous years. Helsinki Hällsberg Stockholm Saint Petersburg Copenhaguen London Hamburg Brussels Duisburg Mediterranean Corridor Clobenza Mediterranean Corridor Dijon FERRMED Network Metz Transport by ferry Bern Friburg Ports Lyon Source: FERRMED Geneva Irun Avignon Milan Montpellier Genova Marseille Madrid Tarragona Perpignan Castellón Barcelona Valencia Murcia Motril Alicante Algeciras Malaga Cartagena Almeria Rabat Airport AVE high-speed train, Barcelona-Madrid 2018 2019 Barcelona Airport Passengers (millions) 4.3 4.4 2018 2019 Journey duration 2 hours 30 minutes Total number of passengers 50,172,689 52,686,314 Source: Renfe. Goods (in tonnes) 172,940 177,271 Source: Spanish Airports and Air Navigation (AENA). Port Main European airports by passenger Traffic (data in millions) volume 2019 CITY (AIRPORT) 0M 15M 60M 45M 60M 75M 90M Traffic (data in millions) 2018 2019 London Heathrow (LHR) 80,888,637 Goods (tonnes) 66.0 65.9 Paris Roissy (CDG) 76,171,198 Containers (TEU*) 3.4 3.3 Amsterdam (AMS) 71,706,999 Passengers 4.5 4.6 Frankfurt (FRA) 70,556,072 Infrastructures Madrid (MAD) 61,704,993 Land surface area: Wharfs and moorings: 1,081 ha 22 km Barcelona (BCN) 52,663,623 *TEU: Measure of sea transport capacity equivalent to a twenty-foot container. Istanbul (IST) 52,461,982 Source: Barcelona Port Authority. Moscow (SVO) 49,932,752 Munich (MUC) 47,942,348 Cruise-ship indicators London Gatwick (LGW) 46,572,595 Source: Airports Council International. Airport Traffic Report, 2019 and Barcelona Air 2018 2019 Routes Development Committee (CDRA). Cruise-ship passengers 3,042,217 3,137,918 Embarkation 834,986 877,622 07 Passenger evolution by origin Disembarkation 832,037 875,600 2019 Transit 1,375,194 1,384,696 NUMBER OF YEAR-ON-YEAR PASSENGERS 2019 VARIATION 18/19 Cruise ship visits 830 800 Domestic tourism 14,006,067 4.2% Source: Barcelona Port Authority. European Union tourism 27,962,043 4.2% Intercontinental tourism 6,270,578 14.5% Other international tourism 4,447,626 8.4% Source: Barcelona Airport and Spanish Airports and Air Navigation (AENA). Passenger evolution by country 2019 NUMBER OF PASSENGERS 2019 YEAR-ON-YEAR VARIATION 18/19 Spain 14,017,125 4.2% United Kingdom 5,142,201 4.8% Italy 4,852,490 6.5% 6th busiest airport France 3,947,683 3.4% in Europe by passenger Germany 3,905,670 1.8% traffic in 2019 United States 1,763,221 9.8% (Airport Council International) Portugal 1,727,723 13.4% Switzerland 1,662,163 -0.3% The Netherlands 1,618,657 -4.2% Source: Barcelona Airport and Spanish Airports and Air Navigation (AENA). 08 Driving force of a large, diversified economic area Barcelona is a dynamic distribution of gross added value by sector— according to economic driving force with the 2019 estimate - the most notable factor is the weighting of business services (27.5%), commerce and repairs a diversified structure and (17.2%), education, healthcare and social services (10.2%), international recognition real estate activities (8.2%), construction (8.1%) and the hospitality sector (6.1%). • Barcelona continues to work on strengthening its capacity for attracting companies, employment, talent and foreign • In 2019, Catalonia generated a GDP of €250,597 million, investment, with the support of the city's good international representing 20.1% of Spain's total GDP. In the same year, positioning. Catalonia's per capita GDP exceeded the European Union's GDP by 12%. • In 2018, the City of Barcelona's gross domestic product (GDP) was €46,600 per inhabitant. With regard to the • In 2019, the City of Barcelona and Catalonia's GDP grew by +2.3% and +1.9% respectively, in real terms. Barcelona has an open Economic activity economy connected to the world Gross Domestic Product at market prices* 10 (GDP) 2018 (current prices in millions of €) • Barcelona's attractiveness for foreign investment is GDP GDP PER INHABITANT confirmed by various prestigious rankings: according to the KPMG Global Cities Investment Monitor 2019, Barcelona was MILLIONS THOUSANDS INDEX OF EUROS OF EUROS CATALUNYA-100 listed 7th among the world's main urban areas for attracting greenfield foreign investment projects in 2018, two places Barcelona (a) 74,978.2 46.6 145.0 higher than the previous year. One of the contributing Barcelona Metropolitan 161,179.9 33.6 107.5 factors for this rise is the city’s favourable positioning for Region (2017) attracting R&D projects, a sphere where it is ranked as the * Base 2010. Valuation at market prices. 4th global area, with 29 projects, only coming below Paris, Source: Catalan Institute of Statistics. Singapore and Bangalore. • According to the EY Attractiveness Survey Europe 2019, Evolution of Gross Domestic Product Barcelona is the 9th most attractive city for international (current prices in millions of €) investors, in a context where the uncertainty associated CATALONIA SPAIN (%) CAT/SP with Brexit is affecting the volume of foreign investment throughout Europe. Furthermore, Barcelona is the 10th 2016 224,751 1,118,743 20.1% European city for most economic potential and the 3rd 2017 234,651 1,166,319 20.1% in terms of connectivity among large European cities, 2018 241,687 1,202,193 20.1% and it is the 2nd Southern European city with regard to best prospects for 2020-2021, according to FDi Cities and 2019 250,597 1,244,757 20.1% Regions of the Future 2020/21 report (Financial Times Source: Statistical Institute of Catalonia and INE (National Statistics Institute). group). • Productive foreign investment1 in Catalonia was €3,221.5 Harmonised per capita GDP in million in 2019. Foreign investment from within the purchasing power parity 2019 European Union makes up nearly four-fifths of foreign investment in Catalonia (78.1% of the total). The United INDEX (EU 28=100) 120 Kingdom, the United States and Germany are the main 112 investors in Catalonia. 110 105 100 09 90 • Between 2015 and 2019, Catalonia was the 1st FDI tech 90 destination in Spain, with 241 projects, €2,363.2 million invested and 13,537 jobs created. These figures represent 80 43.3%, 33.6% and 43.2% of the Spanish total, respectively. 70 Furthermore, according to an ACCIÓ report based on 60 data from FDi Markets (Financial Times group), during the 2014- 2018 period, Catalonia attracted a total of 665 50 foreign investment projects —with a volume of €16,295 Catalonia Spain Euro Zone M— creating 63,005 direct jobs, and it is ranked 3rd in the Western European region for job creation. Source: Catalan Institute of Statistics. • Catalonia was home to the headquarters of more than 8,900 foreign companies in 2019. The main countries of Evolution of GDP in Barcelona origin were France (13.1%), Germany (13.0%) and the United at constant prices 2011-2019 States (12.3%). VARIATION RATE FOR VOLUME (%) • In 2019, exports from the province of Barcelona reached 5.0 €57,163.2 million, achieving a new record, according to 3.8 3.8 4.0 3.6 available historical data series. In comparison with the 2.7 previous year, the Barcelona area's external sales grew by 3.0 3.5 3.4 2.3 2.1 3.6 3.3%, in a context of a global trade slowdown. Between 2.0 2.5 2009 and 2019, there was uninterrupted growth in exports, 1.9 1.9 with an accumulated increase of 76% in current terms. 1.0 0 • The area of Barcelona continues to lead the exports -1.0 ranking for Spain, accounting for nearly one-fifth (19.7%) of -1.0 total sales abroad and 42,022 export companies, which is a -2.0 -1.4 fifth of the total for Spain as a whole (20.1%). 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 (a) Barcelona Catalonia Source: Barcelona City Council's Department of Statistics and Data Dissemination,and the 1 Productive investment is considered to be investment that does not take Catalan Institute of Statistics. ETVEs into account, which are companies established in Spain that hold securities of foreign companies. The operations of these types of companies involve transfers within the same business group. The existence of ETVEs correspond to fiscal optimisation strategies within the same group. Productive specialisation Main areas of activity according to GVA in Barcelona 2018 (% of total) 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 Salaried workers by economic sector (%) 2019 Business services 14.4% BARCELONA Commerce 12.8% METROPOLITAN BARCELONA REGION CATALONIA SPAIN Information and communications 8.7% Agriculture 0.0 0.1 0.3 0.5 Hospitality Industry 6.3 13.4 15.9 13.8 8.2% Construction 2.6 4.2 4.9 5.6 Education 6.1% Services 91.1 82.3 78.9 79.8 Health and Social Services 5.6% Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 Transport and storage 5.4% Source: Barcelona City Council's Department of Statistics and Data Dissemination and Social Security. Public administration 5.3% Real estate activities (excluding imputed 5.4% Companies classified by income) economic sector in Barcelona 2019 Financial and insurance activities 4.3% % OF TOTAL 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 Manufacturing Industry 4.3% Business Services* 27.5% Construction 3.2% Commerce and repairs 17.2% Energy, water and waste 2.6% Education, health and social services 10.2% Artistic and recreational activities 2.3% Real-estate activities 8.2% Source: Barcelona City Council’s Municipal Data Office. Construction 8.1% Hospitality 6.1% Other services 5.1% Foreign investment Transport and 10 storage 5.0% Information and communication 4.0% Foreign investment (in millions of €) Artistic, recreational and entertainment activities 3.2% 2018 2019 % CAT/SPAIN Manufacturing Industry 2.8% Catalonia 3,233.2 3,221.5 14.4 Financial and insurance Spain 49,549.4 22,376.6 activities 2.2% NB: Total gross investment excluding Foreign-Securities Holding Companies (ETVE in Energy and water 0.2% Catalan). Source: DataInvex. Ministry of Industry, Commerce and Tourism. * Business services include professional, scientific, technical, administrative and auxiliary services. Source: INE. Central Business Directory (DIRCE). Investment abroad (in millions of €) 2018 2019 % CAT/SPAIN Catalonia 5,368.2 995.1 6.6 Spain 32,727.4 15,126.0 NB: Total gross investment excluding Foreign-Securities Holding Companies (ETVE in Catalan). Source: DataInvex. Ministry of Industry, Commerce and Tourism. 20% of Spanish exports come from the Barcelona area Foreign investment in Catalonia by last country of origin 2019 % OF TOTAL 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 United Kingdom 28.3% United States 17.6% Germany 10.8% France 6.2% 7th urban area Netherlands 4.0% in the world for receiving Luxembourg 3.1% foreign investment Japan 2.9% projects China 2.9% (KPMG, 2019) Singapore 1.9% Switzerland 1.6% Italy 1.4% Mexico 1.4% Andorra 1.2% Lebanon 0.9% NB: Total gross investment excluding Foreign-Securities Holding Companies (ETVE in Catalan). Source: DataInvex. Ministry of Industry, Commerce and Tourism. Main urban areas in the world receiving international investment projects 2018 Number of foreign companies 2017 POSITION URBAN AREA 2018 POSITION established in Catalonia 1 London 1 COUNTRY OF ORIGIN 2019 % OF TOTAL 3 Paris 2 France 1163 13.1 2 Singapore 3 Germany 1157 13.0 4 Dubai 4 11 United States of America 1096 12.3 (USA) 6 New York 5 Other 812 9.1 5 Shanghai 6 Italy 808 9.1 9 Barcelona 7 United Kingdom 779 8.7 6 Hong Kong 8 Netherlands 622 7.0 23 Düsseldorf 9 Switzerland 421 4.7 16 São Paulo 10 Luxembourg 350 3.9 15 Madrid 11 Denmark 291 3.3 11 Amsterdam 12 Japan 267 3.0 14 Tokyo 13 Belgium 250 2.8 10 Dublin 14 Portugal 178 2.0 12 Sydney 15 Sweden 142 1.6 26 Mexico 16 China 115 1.3 8 Bangalore 17 Austria 109 1.2 24 Warsaw 18 Total 8,908 100 17 Frankfurt 19 Source: ACCIÓ. Government of Catalonia. 21 Melbourne 20 Source: Global Cities Investment Monitor 2019, KPMG. Exports Distribution of exports for the Province of Barcelona by technological content 2019* Exports (in millions of €) Not classified High 10.2% technological 2018 2019 PERCENTAGE OF YEAR-ON-YEAR level SPAIN 2019 VARIATION 2018/2019 Low technological 13.0% Barcelona* 55,335.6 57,163.2 19.7 3.3% level 17.0% Catalonia 71,200.3 73,878.8 25.5 3.8% Spain 285,260.5 290,089.1 100.0 1.7% * Provincial data. Source: Ministry of Industry, Commerce and Tourism. Evolution of exports Medium-low Medium-high technological technological in the Province of Barcelona level level 1996- 2019*(in thousands of millions of €) 13.6% 46.2% 57.2 * Provisional data. 60 Source: Compiled by the Department of Studies at the Manager's Office for Economy, Resources and Economic Promotion, Barcelona City Council, based on data from the Ministry of Industry, Commerce and Tourism. 50 40 30 20 10 14.7 0 1995 2000 2005 2010 2012 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 12 * Provisional data. Source: Ministry of Industry, Commerce and Tourism. Barcelona’s main export countries 2019 (percentage of total) 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 France 15.0% Germany 10.2% Italy 8.4% Portugal 6.5% United Kingdom 6.0% Switzerland 5.2% United States 3.6% Netherlands 2.9% Mexico 2.4% Poland 2.1% China* 2.0% * Includes China, Hong Kong and Macau. Source: Ministry of Industry, Commerce and Tourism. Diversified economic activity A territory with a powerful Commitment to digital industrial base technology and ICTs • In 2019, industry generated 19.3% of Gross Added Value • The city, with over 64,700 jobs and more than 3,000 in Catalonia, a weighting that exceeds that of the European companies with staff working in ICTs, is the central core Union (18.7%) and, more clearly, of Spain (15.7%), as it is the of the sector, accounting for 58.6% of its employment Spanish autonomous community with the highest industrial and 50.5% of its business community in Catalonia. development. It is estimated that in 2018, the information and communications sector, which encompasses ICTs, • In 2018, Catalonia was ranked as the 4th European region generated 8.7% of Barcelona's Gross Added Value. for jobs in manufacturing which involve medium-high to · According to the Barcelona Digital Talent 2020 report, high technological intensity, with 230,000 people working the digital sector accounted for 5% of all professionals in these activities, exceeding the figures for regions such working in the city and 13% of job offers. 26% of the city's as Piemont (Turin), Rhône-Alpes (Lyon) and Darmstadt digital professionals are women. (Frankfurt). In the same year, Catalonia was also ranked the 4th region in the continent for female employment in these · 31% of Barcelona's digital professionals have come activities. from other cities. Barcelona has more competitive digital salaries than other European cities, accounting for • Barcelona has a major industrial sector and the approximately half of the salaries in the digital hubs of metropolitan area - with 18.1% of the working population London and Amsterdam. employed in the industry- is home to more than half (59%) · These digital professionals are distributed among of this employment in Catalonia. Key areas include the companies in various Barcelona sectors, including 13 chemical and pharmaceutical clusters, automobiles, food information technologies (with two-fifths of the total), production, paper and graphic arts, and waste treatment. the media, business services, manufacturing and finance. Website developers are the professionals who are most • Barcelona and its area are working to develop industry in demand in the job market (with an increase of 24% 4.0, using elements such as the impetus of Big Data, the compared to 2018), while cyber security, cloud and big rising number of companies and organisations in initiatives data are the profiles that present the greatest tension in related to 3D printing and the work of Fab Labs to introduce Barcelona's job market: there are only one or two available digital manufacturing to schools, companies, entrepreneurs professionals for each job offer. and community projects. In 2019, over 444,400 jobs in the Barcelona Metropolitan Area were in activities potentially · The new ranking Top 10 Tech Cities of the Future 2020/21 associated with industry 4.0, after creating more than from the prestigious FDI magazine lists Barcelona in 8th 77,500 jobs in these areas since 2011, an accumulated place in the global classification among the European percentage increase of +21.1%. technological cities of the future and in 5th place in terms of better prospects for attracting investments in innovation, technology and start-ups, just behind London, Dublin, Paris and Amsterdam. According to this source, Barcelona and Catalonia have the 2nd best strategy in Europe for attracting technological investments. • Furthermore, according to the Tech Cities in Motion 2019 report by Savills, Barcelona is the 8th European City and 8th the 21st world city for technology, taking into account the business ecosystem, the technological business ecosystem, Barcelona, well-being, talent, property prices and mobility. European technological city of the future 2020/21 (FDi) Towards the transformation of Barcelona is committed to the productive model local, high-quality commerce • The city of Barcelona is advancing towards a plural, • With 15,543 companies and 153,239 jobs, commerce is innovative and socially-inclusive economic model, based one of the major sectors in Barcelona's economic structure. on sustainability at all its levels: economic, social and At the end of 2019, the sector accounted for 20.2% of environmental. With this goal in mind, and under the companies with employees and 14% of employment in the leadership of Barcelona Activa, the 2020-2030 strategy for city. There were 22,010 establishments in the retail sector economic promotion prioritises impetus for the following in 2019, which represents 35.8% of the city's active ground- strategic sectors, which form the backbone of the entire floor premises. municipal policy and the transformation of the productive model: the manufacturing industry, the digital economy, • Municipal markets, with a surface area of over 288,218 creative sectors, the green and circular economy, health and m2 and 2,143 establishments, are one of the benchmarks bio and, as a factor that cuts across them all, the social and of Barcelona’s trade model, due to their economic and solidarity economy. social significance in the city's neighbourhoods, and they represent the largest network of food markets in • The city is progressing towards an economic model that continental Europe. uses resources efficiently and has a capacity for innovation based on boosting the green and circular economy, with a decreasing energy consumption per unit of GDP between International reference 2013 and 2017 and a sustained increase in environmental certificates obtained by the city's various economic for urban tourism and the stakeholders over the last five years. organisation of congresses · In the fourth quarter of 2019, the health and bio sector included 95,822 jobs and 3,132 companies with employees • In Barcelona's hotel tourism sector, there were 8.5 million in Barcelona, representing 8.8% and 4.1% of the city's visitors and 21.3 million overnight stays in 2019, with total, respectively. This sector features various different, year-on-year variations of 5.7% in both cases compared to yet related components: 82.2% of jobs in the sector are 2018. In regard to tourist-use flats, they accommodated concentrated in healthcare activities, while those linked 3.5 million tourists, with a total of 11.4 million overnight to health-related social services account for 8.4% of stays and year-on-year variations of +13.9% and +4.3%, employment and the pharmaceutical industry is close to respectively. 9.4% of the sector. • Various rankings underline how attractive Barcelona 14 · The pharmaceutical and biotechnology industry is for foreign visitors: The European Cities Marketing constitutes a dynamic cluster with a notable capacity Benchmarking Report 2019 ranks Barcelona in 7th for research and innovation. Catalonia is home to 27% position in Europe for international overnight stays, while of the biotech companies in Spain, leads in investment Trip Advisor ranked it as the 6th most attractive tourist in biotechnology R&D and has 15 university hospitals, 9 destination in the world in 2020. Finally, according to research institutes and 6,000 researchers in this field. Euromonitor International’s Top Cities Destination Ranking · The social and solidarity economy —with individuals and report, in 2019 Barcelona was the 36th most visited city by groups as the centre of activity—, has a major presence in international tourists, out of 100 cities around the world, Barcelona, and there are a total of 4,449 companies and and the 8th most-visited among European cities. organisations in this sector, 4,242 of which are social and solidarity economy organisations and 207 are community • With regard to business tourism, according to the economies. In the legal sense, the sector is made up of International Congress and Convention Association (ICCA), in associations (52.8%), cooperatives (22.3%), workforce- 2019 Barcelona was the 4th city worldwide for the number owned companies (5.2%) and community economies of international congresses organised and the 1st city for (4.7%) that offer a significant capacity for social the number of participants in those events. According to innovation. Between 2016 and 2019, 267 new cooperatives the Barcelona Tourism Observatory, the city hosted 1,743 were set up in Barcelona, and those created during each gatherings in 2019, with 664,607 delegates attending. of these years we double the number set up in 2015 (31). Furthermore, the city has 53 special employment centres • In 2019, with 3.1 million cruise ship passengers, Barcelona and 13 recruitment companies which enable the social held onto its position as the top base port in Europe and in and labour market inclusion of people with specific needs. the Mediterranean for cruise ships, and it is the 4th most important base port in the world. Manufacturing industry Areas of development in and Industry 4.0 the new industry Weighting of industry in the GVA (%) 2019 22 19.3 18.7 20 Line Llobregat 18 15.7 B-30 Corridor 16 14 12 10 Catalonia Spain Euro Zone Source: Idescat. Besòs Llobregat Delta Main industrial segments for jobs* in Catalonia and the Metropolitan Area 2019 0 40,000 80,000 120,000 Metallurgy and the production of machinery 82,139 Source: AMB. and electrical and 132,322 electronic equipment Chemical and 66,854 People employed in high and medium-high pharmaceutical industry 96,535 technological manufacturing 2018 Food 26,545 86,059 REGION (CITY) % PEOPLE EMPLOYED EMPLOYED WOMEN TOTAL PEOPLE / TOTAL (THOUSANDS) EMPLOYED (THOUSANDS) Transport material and 33,724 metal products 43,690 Stuttgart 19.1 97 426 15 (STUTTGART) Paper and 23,648 Lombardy 9.0 107 398 graphic arts 40,462 (MILAN) Upper Bavaria 12.9 82 327 Textiles, clothes manufacturing, leather 21,575 (MUNICH) and footwear 33,154 Catalonia (BARCELONA) 6.8 71 230 Metropolitan Region Catalonia Istanbul 3.9 44 228 * Those registered with the general Social Security system, including self-employed workers, in the fourth quarter of the year. (ISTANBUL) Source: Produced by the Studies Department of the Manager's Office for Economics, Resources and Economic Promotion, Barcelona City Council, based on data from Piedmont (TURIN) 11.1 49 203 Barcelona City Council's Statistics and Data Dissemination Department. Emilia-Romagna 10.2 48 202 (BOLOGNA) Jobs potentially associated Karlsruhe 13.8 46 202 (KARLSRUHE) with industry 4.0 in the Barcelona Metropolitan Area Bursa, Eskişehir, 11.8 29 178 Bilecik 500,000 Düsseldorf 7.0 41 173 (DÜSSELDORF) 450,000 444,483 Tübigen 17.3 41 173 (TÜBIGEN) 400,000 366,900 Upper Silesia 9.1 57 170 350,000 (KATOWICE) 300,000 Rhône-Alpes 5.9 47 169 (LYON) 250,000 Source: Eurostat. 200,000 150,000 100,000 0 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 Source: Produced by the Studies Department of the Manager's Office for Economics, Resources and Economic Promotion, Barcelona City Council, based on data from Barcelona City Council's Statistics and Data Dissemination Department. ICT Sector / Information and Percentage of professionals in Communication the most in-demand jobs Business Intelligence 2.6% Cloud 1.0% Jobs* in ICT activities Agile / Scrum 2.6% API 0.9% in Barcelona Big Data 3.7% Cybersecurity 70,000 4.5% 64,741 App Development 60,000 7.7% Website 50,000 Development 38.3% 40,000 39,767 CRM & ERP Consultant 30,000 11.3% 20,000 10,000 UX/UI 27.3% 0 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 Source: Barcelona Digital Talent, Digital Talent Overview 2020. * Those registered with the general Social Security system and self-employed workers. Source: Produced by the Studies Department of the Manager's Office for Economics, Resources and Economic Promotion, Barcelona City Council, based on data from Barcelona City Council's Statistics and Data Dissemination Department. Green and Circular Economy 2011-2019 evolution of jobs* and companies with employees in Barcelona (%) Energy intensity* (Mwh/Meuro) 2013-2017 70% +62.8% 350 60% +55.7% 298.4 300 50% 16 250 40% 190.3 200 30% 150 20% +14.2% 100 10% +5.3% 50 0 Jobs in Total jobs BCN Businesses Total 0 ICT ICT Barcelona companies 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 * Those registered with the general Social Security system and self-employed workers. * Energy consumption per unit of GDP. Source: Produced by the Studies Department of the Manager's Office for Economics, Source: Barcelona City Council's Department of Statistics and Data Dissemination, City of Resources and Economic Promotion, Barcelona City Council, based on data from Barcelona Statistical Yearbook, 2019. Barcelona City Council's Statistics and Data Dissemination Department. Number of environmental Top 10 Tech Cities of the Future certificates* 2013-2018 in Europe 2020/21 POSITION CITY 350 323 1 London 300 2 Paris 250 3 Dublin 200 4 Amsterdam 150 125 5 Berlin 6 Munich 100 7 Bucharest 50 8 Barcelona 0 9 Belfast 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 10 Cambridge * Summation of certificates for urban planning, tourism management, ecological products and business and organisational management. Source: FDI. Source: Barcelona Sustainability Indicators Report, 2018. Culture and Sustainability Strategy. Urbana Ecology, Barcelona City Council. Social Economy Social and Solidarity Economy companies, associations and initiatives, Barcelona 2019 Other Cooperatives 15.1% 22.3% The annual creation Community economies of cooperatives between 4.7% Workers' cooperative 2016 and 2019 is double 5.2% the figure for 2015 Associations 52.8% Source: Barcelona City Council (2019), the Social and Solidarity Economy in Barcelona. Social and Solidarity Economy companies, associations and initiatives in Barcelona by district 2019 (Number and %) Health and Bio Nou Barris 246 / 5.4% Distribution of the Health and Bio sector Horta-Guinardó in Barcelona, by segment 2019 (% / Total) Sant Andreu 271 / 5.9% 249 / 5.5% Jobs Social services Pharmaceutical industry Sarrià- 17 linked to healthcare Sant Gervasi 9.4% Gràcia Sant Martí 8.4% 539 / 12.3% 417 / 9.2% 477 / 10.5% L’Eixample Les Corts 1,115 / 24.6% 230 / 5.1% Ciutat Vella 526 / 11.6% Sants-Montjuic 439 / 9.7% Healthcare 82.2% Source: Barcelona City Council (2019), the Social and Solidarity Economy in Barcelona. Companies and salaried employees Social services Pharmaceutical industry Number of cooperatives established linked to healthcare 2.2% 9.1% in Barcelona 2014-2019* 80 78 72 70 61 61 60 50 40 40 31 30 20 Healthcare 10 88.6% 0 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 * Those registered with the general Social Security system, including self-employed workers (jobs) and companies that charge Social Security contributions (companies). Source: Barcelona City Council's Cooperative, Social and Solidarity Economy and Food Source: Produced by the Studies Department of the Manager's Office for Economics, Policy Directorate. Resources and Economic Promotion City Council, based on data from Barcelona City Council's Statistics and Data Dissemination Department. Commerce Evolution of online shopping in Barcelona 2000-2019 (% of consumers) Commerce in Barcelona* 70 66.6 2019 Commerce 60 Number of companies with salaried Jobs: 50 employees: 152,351 15,983 40 Municipal markets 30 Food: Special: 20 39 4 Number of establishments: Total surface area: 10 2,143 288,218m2 5.9 0 * Data from the 4th quarter. 2000 2005 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017* 2018* 2019* Source: Barcelona City Council's Department of Statistics and Data Dissemination and the Municipal Institute of Markets. * From 2017 onwards, data from June. Source: Municipal Òmnibus Survey. Barcelona City Council's Department of Commerce, Catering and Consumer Affairs. Rate of commercial supply to Barcelona neighbourhoods (Nº. establishments / 100 residents) Tourism Tourists and overnight stays in Barcelona 2018 2019 VARIATION 2019/18 Tourists staying at hotels 8,044,444 8,503,334 5.7% Overnight stays at hotels 20,201,537 21,348,430 5.7% 18 Tourists staying in HUTs* 3,055,364 3,480,060 13.9% Overnight stays in HUTs 10,962,058 11,433,427 4.3% * Tourist flats. Source: Department of Statistics and Data Dissemination, Barcelona City Council. Indicators for range of hotels on offer 2018 2019 VARIATION 2019/18 >2 (21) FROM 2.01 TO 3 (19) FROM 3.01 TO 4 (16) FROM 4.01 TO 5 (7) 5.01 OR MORE (10) Establishments 648 683 5.4% Source: Barcelona City Council. 2019 Commercial Census. Places (beds) 81,377 83,849 3.0% Source: Department of Statistics and Data Dissemination, Barcelona City Council. Ground floor establishments in Barcelona, by activity 2019 Country of origin of tourists 2019 (% of total) Retail Services 0 4 8 12 16 20 commerce 54.3% 35.8% Spain 17.0% 61,558 United States 11.6% establishments United Kingdom 8.1% France 7.7% Italy 6.2% Germany 5.5% Other Source: Department of Statistics and Data Dissemination, Barcelona City Council. 9.9% Source: Barcelona City Council. 2019 Commercial Census. Congresses Main European professional trade fairs held in Barcelona 2019 PARTICIPANTS Indicators of congress activities 2019 ITMA (Textile Technology) 127,000 Total meetings Conventions and incentives Mobile World Congress 109,000 1,728 1,248 Smart City Expo World Congress 29,124 Congresses, conferences and Total delegates courses European Society for Medical Oncology 651,335 (ESMO) 29,000 480 INFARMA 25,000 Source: Barcelona Tourist Consortium and Barcelona City Council’s Department of Statistics. 4YFN - Four Years From Now 23,000 BB Construmat 20,466 Main cities in the world for number European Association for the Study of of delegates in international congresses Diabetes (EASD) 15,000 2019 IBTM 15,000 CITIES CONGRESSES CITIES DELEGATES International Logistics Exhibition 15,000 Paris 237 Barcelona 156,754 Graphispag 14,516 Lisbon 190 Paris 124,063 Cisco Live 14,400 Berlin 176 Madrid 91,900 34 Annual EAU. European Association of Urology 14,000 Barcelona 156 Lisbon 91,406 United European Gastroenterology (UEGW) 14,000 Madrid 154 Vienna 89,009 VM World Europe 14,000 Vienna 149 Berlin 85,089 IOT Solutions World Congress 11,484 Singapore 148 London 76,114 Piscina & Wellness Barcelona 10,833 Source: International Congress and Convention Association (ICCA). Industry 7,584 Valmont Barcelona Bridal Fashion Week 7,364 World Conference on Lung Cancer (WCLC) 7,000 Source: Fira de Barcelona. 19 4th city in the world for organising international congresses in 2019 (ICCA) Digital city, creativity, research and innovation Barcelona leads Spain's • In 2019 the Barcelona area generated 13.5% of the advance towards a knowledge applications for utility models and 12.6% of the patents in Spain as a whole. Catalonia is the region with the economy highest number of innovative companies in Spain (25.2%) and accounts for 27.1% of Spain's total expenditure on • Barcelona aims to become a leader in the field of innovative activities. technology, in order to improve quality of life in a global context in which mobile technology is a key vector for the • Barcelona remains 5th in Europe and 23rd in the world for growth of the economy as a whole. In this context, the role scientific production in 2019, according to data prepared of Barcelona as Mobile World Capital presents a strategic by the Polytechnic University of Catalonia using the Science opportunity to position the city in this field. Citation Index. • Today, Barcelona offers one of the most dynamic • Expenditure on R+D in Catalonia was 1.52% of its GDP in ecosystems for technological entrepreneurs in Europe, and 2019, lower than the average for the European Union but the 2019 StartUp Heatmap Europe lists it as the 3rd most higher than that of Spain and regions such as Lombardy and preferred European city for establishing a start-up, behind London. There are 52,137 employees dedicated to research London and Berlin, while it remains the fifth best hub for and development in Catalonia. 20 start-ups in Europe in 2020, according to the EU-Start- ups classification. It is also the 4th most innovative city in • Creative activities in Barcelona accounted for over 147,309 Europe and the 21st in the world, in the Innovation Cities jobs in 2019, representing 13.4% of employment in the city Index 2019 ranking. and half (51.1%) of the creative jobs in Catalonia. It should be pointed out that, according to the latest urban research, • As regards the distribution of investment in start-ups by there is a strong correlation between a higher percentage sector in Barcelona, most notable is the capital invested of employees in creative industries and a higher level of in the mobile sector (55% of the total), followed by production per inhabitant. e-commerce (25%) and those of a social nature (10%). • The European Commission's Cultural and Creative Cities Monitor Report 2019 lists Barcelona as the 9th large city with the most creative vibrancy. Index of innovative cities 2019 CITIES WORLD RANKING CITIES EUROPEAN RANKING 2019 2019 New York 1 London 1 Barcelona, 4th Tokyo 2 Paris 2 London 3 Berlin 3 most innovative city Los Angeles 4 Barcelona 4 in Europe Singapore 5 Vienna 5 (Innovation Cities Index 2019) Paris 6 Munich 6 Chicago 7 Madrid 7 Boston 8 Milan 8 San Francisco – San 9 Amsterdam 9 José Toronto 10 Stockholm 10 Business innovation and Melbourne 11 Moscow 11 research Berlin 12 Oslo 12 Dallas-Fort Worth 13 Istanbul 13 Seoul 14 Rome 14 Innovation indicators Sydney 15 Hamburg 15 Seattle 16 Copenhagen 16 APPLICATION FOR UTILITY-MODEL APPLICATIONS PATENTS Houston 17 Dublin 17 2019 % OF SPAIN 2019 % OF SPAIN Atlanta 18 Manchester 18 Barcelona* 171 12.6 370 13.5 Washington DC 19 Helsinki 19 Catalonia 202 14.9 450 16.4 Miami 20 Prague 20 Spain 1,358 100.0 2,737 100.0 Barcelona 21 Zurich 21 21 * Provincial data. Source: Spanish Office of Patents and Brands. Montreal 22 Frankfurt 22 San Diego 23 Brussels 23 Companies and innovation Philadelphia 24 Lyon 24 Vienna 25 Düsseldorf 25 NUMBER OF INNOVATIVE TOTAL EXPENDITURE ON COMPANIES INNOVATIVE ACTIVITIES Beijing 26 Athens 26 2019 % OF SPAIN 2019 % OF SPAIN Munich 27 Budapest 27 (THOUSANDS OF €) Madrid 28 Stuttgart 28 Catalonia 6,723 25.2 5,246,846 27.1 Milan 29 Rotterdam 29 Spain 26,724 100.0 19,389,865 100.0 Amsterdam 30 Cologne 30 Source: INE. Source: 2thinknow Innovation Cities™ Index 2019. Barcelona's positioning as an innovative city 2010-2019 0 5 4 8 10 13 13 13 16 20 19 21 26 27 25 27 30 30 40 50 56 60 2010 2011 2012-13 2014 2015 2016/17 2018 2019 European ranking World ranking Source: 2thinknow Innovation Cities™ Index. Innovation ecosystem Leading international scientific and technical facilities in Barcelona The top 10 Barcelona Supercomputing Centre - Centro Nacional de Supercomputación (BSC-CNS) European start-up hubs Maritime Research and Experimentation Wave Flume (CIEM) 2018 RANKING CITY 2019 RANKING Institute of Photonic Sciences (ICFO) 1 London 1 Barcelona Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Laboratory (LRB) 2 Berlin 2 White Room of the Barcelona Microelectronics Institute (IMB-CNM) 3 Barcelona 3 ALBA Synchrotron - Cells 4 Paris 4 National Centre for Genomic Analysis (CNAG) 6 Amsterdam 5 Source: Ministry of Education and Science, Map of Unique Scientific and Technical facilities. 5 Lisbon 6 7 Munich 7 8 Milan 8 Top cities in the world for academic scientific production 2019 --- Tallinn 9 CITY WORLD RANKING EUROPEAN RANKING PUBLICATIONS --- Stockholm 10 2019 2019 2019 Beijing 1 115,587 Source: StartUp Heatmap Europe, 2019 StartUp Heatmap Europe Report. Shanghai 2 56,751 London 3 1 53,592 Capital invested in start-ups, by sector in Barcelona (%) 2018 Nanjing 4 45,264 New York 5 44,485 Health and Media Science 1% Boston 6 41,949 Companies 3% 3% Seoul 7 40,017 Social Guangzhou 8 37,648 10% Tokyo 9 37,237 Paris 10 2 36,761 22 Wuhan 11 33,733 E-commerce Mobile Xi'an 12 31,565 25% 55% Chengdu 13 26,065 Madrid 14 3 25,661 Hangzhou 15 25,015 Other 3% Moscow 16 4 24,797 Chicago 17 22,891 Source: Start-up Ecosystem Overview, 2018. Mobile World Capital Barcelona. Philadelphia 18 22,452 Toronto 19 22,383 Expenditure on R+D 2018 (% of GDP) Baltimore 20 21,887 Melbourne 21 21,846 1 2 3 4 Houston 22 21,841 Berlin 3.41% Japan 3.28% Barcelona 23 5 21,833 USA Cambridge, (USA) 24 21,657 2.82% China 2.14% Los Angeles 25 21,542 European Union São Paulo 26 20,617 2.11% Catalonia* 1.52% Rome 27 6 20,484 Lombardy Milan 28 7 19,538 1.34% Spain* 1.25% Hong Kong 29 19,211 London 1.16% Singapore 30 18,073 * Data for 2019. Berlin 31 8 17,860 Sources: INE, Eurostat and OECD. * Data extracted in November 2020. Source: Polytechnic University of Catalonia-Centre of Land Policy and Valuations, http://www-cpsv.upc.es/KnowledgeCitiesRanking. Creative industries Employment in creative activities* in Barcelona 2019 2019 WEIGHT BCN/CATALONIA Activities linked to heritage 3,437 73.9% Architecture and Engineering 18,323 37.9% 13.4% Graphic art and printing 3,666 18.7% of Barcelona’s Cinema, video and music 4,973 60.6% employment in 2019 Design and photography 18,490 54.4% Publishing 8,254 68.1% in creative Writers, performing and visual 8,040 52.6% activities arts, and artisans Fashion 1,872 12.0% Radio and television 1,014 21.0% Traditional creative (cultural) 68,069 41.8% industries Creative research and 11,449 48.9% development Advertising 17,825 65.4% Software, video games and 49,966 66.5% electronic publishing Non-traditional creative 79,240 63.0% industries TOTAL creative industries 147,309 51.1% % Creative Ind. / total in 13.4% Barcelona Total 1,103,180 33.0% NB: Those registered with the general Social Security system, including self-employed 23 workers, in the fourth quarter of the year. Source: Produced by the Department of Studies in Barcelona City Council's Manager's Office for Economy, Resources and Economic Promotion, based on data from the Government of Catalonia's Employment and Productive Model Observatory. Creative and cultural cities of Europe 2019 2019 RANKING CITY CREATIVE VIBRANCY INDEX 1 Paris 66.0 2 Munich 41.2 3 London 36.1 4 Milan 35.3 6 Berlin 34.0 5 Vienna 33.4 7 Budapest 32.8 8 Prague 32.7 9 Barcelona 31.2 10 Hamburg 29.1 11 Madrid 27.9 12 Warsaw 27.0 13 Cologne 26.6 14 Rome 26.3 15 Lyon 25.9 Source: Cultural and Creative Cities Monitor 2019, European Commission. Centre for generating and 24 attracting talent Barcelona's job market has • Barcelona is at the medium-low end of salary levels among a critical mass and qualified the more developed cities and, according to the Union of Swiss Banks, the average net salary was 49.6% of that of human capital New York in 2018. • There are 1.1 million jobs in the city and 2.6 million in the • According to the Decoding Digital Talent 2019 report, Barcelona area. Barcelona’s rates of activity (79.9%) and Barcelona is the 5th most attractive global city for working employment (73.1%) are higher than the Catalan, Spanish in the digital field, only behind London, New York, Berlin and and European averages. Amsterdam. • More than half of the jobs in Barcelona (55.1%) correspond • Catalonia has 12 universities with over 252,000 students, to high-knowledge activities, and the city is the centre while the Barcelona Metropolitan Area accounts for 87.5% of this economic segment in Catalonia, as 42.7% of the of enrolled students, in its 8 public and private universities. high-knowledge jobs are to be found here, while Barcelona In the 2017-2018 academic year, the universities in the accounts for 35.1% of Catalonia's employed population. Barcelona area had over 53,000 people studying masters and PhD courses. • Barcelona has a job market with critical mass in sectors with high added value: In 2018, Catalonia was listed as the 4th • In 2019, more than half (53.6%) of female workers and European region for the most people working in manufacturing 48.4% of the people working in Catalonia had a university that involves medium-high to high technological intensity, 5th education, figures that are clearly higher than the European in terms of people working in science and technology - with and Spanish averages. more than 875,000 jobs in this area— and 7th in intensive cutting-edge knowledge and technology services. • In the area of education, it should be noted that Barcelona is the only city with two teaching institutions among the 10 best business schools in Europe: IESE and ESADE are listed 4th and 7th in Europe and 13th and 24th in the world, respectively, in Global MBA 2020. published by the Financial Times. Jobs in Barcelona Employees* according to knowledge intensity of the activity in Barcelona 4th quarter 2019 (%) Workers registered with Social Security 2019* Industrial sectors with Industrial sectors with a high technological level a medium-high TOTAL % OF SPAIN 0.9% technological level 2.8% Barcelona 1,133,542 5.9 Barcelona province 2,621,316 13.6 Catalonia 3,430,796 17.8 Spain 19,261,636 100.0 * Data from the 4th quarter. Source: Department of Statistics and Data Dissemination, Barcelona City Council. % of workers with university Low-knowledge Knowledge- and unclassified intensive qualifications 2019* activities services 44.9% 51.3% WOMEN TOTAL Catalonia 53.6% 48.4% * Those registered with the general Social Security system. Source: Produced by the Department of Studies in Barcelona City Council's Manager's Office for Economy, Resources and Economic Promotion, based on data from the Government of Catalonia's Spain 50.6% 44.8% Employment and Productive Model Observatory. European Union 42.2% 37.7% * % of the population aged between 25 and 64 with university qualifications. Source: Eurostat. The world’s most attractive cities for digital talent for working abroad 2019 1 London 2 New York 3 Berlin 25 4 Amsterdam Barcelona, 5th 5 Barcelona most attractive 6 Dubai global city for working 7 Los Angeles in the digital sector 8 Paris (Decoding Global Talent 2019) 9 Sydney 10 Abu Dhabi 11 Tokyo 12 Toronto 13 San Francisco 14 Zurich 15 Singapore Source: Boston Consulting Group, Decoding Global Talent 2019. Participation in the job University training and market attraction Participation in the job market Training and universities 4th quarter 2019 (% of population aged 16-64 2017-2018 80 Total number university students in Catalonia 252,107 Total number university students in the Area of 220,592 60 Barcelona Masters offered by Universities in the Area of 586 40 Barcelona Master's and PhD students at Universities in the 53,031 20 area of Barcelona Foreign students at universities in the Area of 24,476 0 Barcelona Activity rate Employment rate Unemployment rate * Includes bachelor's degree and master's students. Source: Area of Support for Planning, Analysis and Evaluation in the Area of Universities Barcelona Catalonia Spain European Union* and Research. Secretary of Universities and Research. The Government of Catalonia's Department of Business and Knowledge and Barcelona City Council's Department of Statistics. Source: Labour Force Survey and Eurostat. Best European business schools 2020 Salaries EUROPEAN BUSINESS SCHOOL CITY WORLD RANKING 2020 RANKING 2020 1 Insead Fontainebleau 4 Salary levels in cities around the world 2018 2 London Business School London 7 3 HEC Paris Paris 9 GROSS SALARY (NEW CITY NET SALARY (NEW YORK YORK - 100) - 100) 4 IESE Business Barcelona 13 129.8 Zurich 153.8 School 131.5 Geneva 133.1 5 University of Cambridge 19 Cambridge: Judge 26 89.6 Chicago 94.9 6 University of Oxford: Oxford 21 101.3 Copenhagen 92.3 Saïd 86.3 Munich 87.0 7 ESADE Business Barcelona 24 School 79.2 Tokyo 85.3 8 IMD Lausanne 25 77.3 Berlin 79.0 9 SDA Bocconi Milan 29 68.5 London 76.0 10 Warwick Business Coventry 43 80.9 Montreal 73.5 School 60.3 Hong Kong 72.4 Source: Global MBA Ranking 2020, Financial Times. 68.6 Paris 69.4 66.5 Lyon 67.0 73.9 Amsterdam 64.2 65.2 Milan 59.5 58.3 Madrid 50.0 58.4 Barcelona 49.6 30.0 Athens 28.1 Source: UBS, Prices and Earnings 2018. 79.9 78.5 75.1 74.2 73.1 70.3 64.7 69.6 8.5 10.6 13.9 6.2 Entrepreneurial city with competitive costs Barcelona has a dynamic and Barcelona has a competitive flexible business activity real estate supply for businesses • The area of Barcelona is home to the headquarters • In regard to the cost of living, Barcelona is listed 102nd of 477,734 companies, 14% of those in Spain. They are among the cities analysed by the annual study produced mainly SMEs and micro-companies, characterised by by Mercer Consulting in 2020 (which takes New York as higher flexibility and a capacity for adapting to complex a reference value). This means it has more competitive environments. Almost 40% of the business headquarters of costs in comparison to other cities around the world, after the province are in the city. dropping 11 places compared to the previous year. • The entrepreneurial activity rate (TEA) of the resident • In recent years, there has been an upward trend in rental population (aged 18-64) in the Province of Barcelona was prices for Barcelona's commercial premises, offices 7.1% in 2019, a figure that is above the Spanish average and industrial buildings due to the economic situation (6.1%). The rate for Catalonia (8.3%) is also higher than that between 2016 and 2019, the strength of demand and of Sweden (8.2%), Germany (7.6%) and Italy (2.8%). the city's increasing attractiveness in global markets. However, Barcelona has maintained a competitive position in regard to rental prices for industrial land, offices and 27 commercial premises, which makes Barcelona attractive for doing business for both new companies starting up and companies that have already become established. Entrepreneurial activity Entrepreneurial activity rate in countries around the world 2019 (% of population aged 18-64) 0 5 10 15 20 25 Catalonia has an Brazil 23.3% entrepreneurial activity Canada 18.2% rate higher than those United States 17.4% of Sweden, Germany and Slovakia 13.3% the average for Spain Israel 12.7% Ireland 12.4% (GEM 2019) Morocco 11.4% Netherlands 10.4% Switzerland 9.8% EU average 9.4% United Kingdom 9.3% China 8.7% Businesses Taiwan 8.4% Catalonia 8.3% Greece 8.2% Businesses according to the number Sweden 8.2% of salaried employees January 2020 Slovenia 7.8% BARCELONA* % OF TOTAL BARCELONA % OF TOTAL PROVINCE** Germany 7.6% Without 28 salaried 112,396 60.5 282,558 59.1 Barcelona 7.1% employees Spain 6.1% With salaried employees: Poland 5.4% 1 - 9 employees 64,548 34.7 172,159 36.0 Italy 2.8% 10 - 199 * Provincial data. employees 8,342 4.5 21,877 4.6 Source: Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM), Executive brief for Catalonia 2019-20. Over 199 employees 571 0.3 1,140 0.2 Total businesses 185,857 100.0 477,734 100.0 Source: INE, Central Business Directory (DIRCE). Company headquarters January 2020 NUMBER OF COMPANIES % OF SPAIN Barcelona 185,857 5.4 Barcelona Province 477,734 14.0 Catalonia 629,876 18.5 A business network Spain 3,404,428 100.0 of over Source: INE, Central Business Directory (DIRCE). 477,000 companies Real Estate Cost of living Offices market Cost of living in cities around the world 2019* 2020 Total office stock 6,617,761m² 2019 RANKING CITY 2020 RANKING Available offices offer 265,000 m2 1 Hong Kong 1 Availability rate 4.30% 7 Ashgabat 2 * Data from the 4th quarter. 2 Tokyo 3 Source: Marketbeat, Cushman and Wakefield. 5 Zurich 4 3 Singapore 5 Office rental prices (€/m2/month) 9 New York 6 4th Q. 2019 6 Shanghai 7 1 5 10 15 20 25 30 12 Bern 8 Greater Barcelona 13.5 13 Geneva 9 New areas of business 25.5 8 Beijing 10 Business district 91 Barcelona 120 (consolidated centre) 21.8 Source: Cost of Living survey. City Ranking 2020, Mercer Human Resource Consulting. Prime zone (Pg. Gràcia-Diagonal) 27.5 Source: On point, Jones Lang Lasalle. Logistics land Office rental prices in European cities 2020 Rental prices for logistics land CITY YEAR-ON-YEAR VARIATION OFFICE RENTAL in European urban areas 2019 2020/2019 (%) 1ST QUARTER 2020 (€/M2/YEAR) CITY COUNTRY LOGISTICS LAND RENTAL (€ / M2/ YEAR) London (City) 2.2 1,429 London (Heathrow) United Kingdom 191.8 Paris (CBD) 4.9 860 29 Geneva Switzerland 159.3 Moscow 0.0 684 Zurich Switzerland 123.9 Dublin 0.0 646 Oslo Norway 118.4 Luxembourg 2.0 612 Helsinki Finland 111.0 Milan 2.6 600 Stockholm (south) Sweden 108.4 Paris (La Défense) -1.8 540 Edinburgh Scotland 105.2 Frankfurt 3.8 498 Dublin Ireland 100.0 Munich 3.8 492 Luxembourg Luxembourg 96.0 Amsterdam (South Axis) 0.0 450 Glasgow Scotland 92.8 Berlin 8.8 444 Hamburg 3.6 348 Amsterdam (Schiphol) Netherlands 90.0 Düsseldorf 1.8 342 Bristol United Kingdom 89.7 Barcelona 5.8 330 Birmingham United Kingdom 86.6 Brussels 0.0 315 Manchester United Kingdom 86.6 Source: Cushman&Wakefield Research, The DNA of Real Estate. IT2020. Munich Germany 84.0 Barcelona Spain 81.0 Average housing prices in Barcelona Cardiff Wales 80.4 4th quarter 2019 Copenhagen Denmark 80.3 Rental: Sale of second-hand dwellings: Leeds United Kingdom 77.3 €1,005.8 /month €4,115.0/m2 Gothenburg (Arendal) Sweden 75.4 Sale of new housing: €4,947.2/m2 Source: Cushman&Wakefield Research, The DNA of Real Estate. 2nd quarter 2019 (Europe). Source: Barcelona City Council. Compact city with social cohesion Barcelona, committed to • In 2017, Barcelona had an estimated per capita Disposable reducing inequalities Household Income of €20,800. The period of crisis widened territorial inequalities, and the value of per capita disposable household income per district ranges between a rate2 of • During the 2019- 2023 term of office, Barcelona City 182.8 for Sarrià- Sant Gervasi and 55.0 for Nou Barris. Council’s official commitment to sustainable development goals is demonstrated by both the municipal government's • Following the unfavourable evolution of living conditions structure —with the creation of a Deputy Mayor's Office and and rising inequality in recent years, the poverty risk or Commissioner for the 2030 Agenda— and the alignment of social exclusion rate (AROPE) for Catalonia was 18.8% in municipal policies with the 2030 Agenda —starting with 2018, which is below the rate for Spain (25.3 %) and the the action plan for this term of office— and the fostering EU-28 (21.4%). of alliances with civil society and economic sectors that reinvest in order to improve the quality of people's lives, • 60% of foreign nationals residing in the city are improve social cohesion and create a city that is more concentrated in Ciutat Vella, the Eixample, Sant Martí and environmentally-friendly. Sants-Montjuïc, but they represent more than 14% of the resident population in all the city's districts. 2 The index values are calculated in relation to the city's average value, set at 100, and they are obtained by combining the different weightings of five variables that are indicative of the population's level of income. 30 Family income Per capita Disposable Household Income in the districts of Barcelona 2017 (Index. 100 average for Barcelona) A municipal strategy Nou Barris 55 aligned with Horta-Guinardó Sant Andreu the 2030 Agenda 78 74.6 Sustainable Sarrià- Development Sant Gervasi Gràcia Sant Martí 182.8 105.3 88.1 Goals L’Eixample Les Corts 122.4 137.3 Ciutat Vella 84.3 Sants-Montjuic 84.6 Poverty and social exclusion Source: Department of Statistics and Data Dissemination, Barcelona City Council. Population at risk of poverty or social exclusion in European regions 2019 COUNTRY REGION (PRINCIPAL CITY) AROPE RATE Foreign-resident population (%) by district Czech Republic Prague (Prague) 7.9 Slovakia Bratislavský kraj (Bratislava)* 7.9 31 Finland Helsinki-Uusimaa (Helsinki) 10.1 Foreign-resident population Romania Bucuresti - Ilfov (Bucharest) 14.0 in Barcelona districts 2020 (% /total) Sweden Stockholm (Stockholm) 14.8 Nou Barris Italy Lombardy (Milan)* 15.7 20.3% Germany Bavaria (Munich)** 16.1 Horta-Guinardó Sant Andreu Norway Oslo og Akershus (Oslo) 16.2 16.6% 15.2% Poland Wojewodztwo Mazowieckie (Warsaw) 16.8 Sarrià- Denmark Hovedstaden (Copenhagen) 17.5 Sant Gervasi Gràcia Sant Martí 14.2% 19.7% 20.4% Netherlands Netherlands - West (Amsterdam) 17.7 L’Eixample Portugal Lisbon Metropolitan Area 17.8 Les Corts 24.4% 14.5% Ciutat Vella Spain Catalonia (Barcelona) 18.8 51.5% Spain Community of Madrid (Madrid) 19.0 Sants-Montjuic Ireland Ireland - east and centre (Dublin)* 19.4 23.8% Switzerland Espace Mittelland (Bern) 21.0 EU-28 average (e) 21.4 Bulgaria Bulgaria - south-west (Sofia) 22.6 Germany Berlin (Berlin)** 24.1 Source: Department of Statistics and Data Dissemination, Barcelona City Council. Greece Attica (Athens) 24.8 Spain 25.3 Austria Vienna (Vienna)* 27.5 Italy Laci (Rome)* 27.5 Belgium Brussels 37.8 * Data from 2018. ** Data from 2017. NB: The ‘At Risk of Poverty or Social Exclusion’ rate (AROPE) indicates the percentage of the population that is, at a minimum, in one of the following circumstances: at risk of poverty, severe material deprivation or living in households with very low labour intensity. Source: Eurostat. Quality of life and sustainability Barcelona, international • Barcelona is listed 4th out of the 50 cities around the benchmark for quality of life world evaluated in the Ranking of Sports Cities 2021, produced by the Burson Cohn and Wolfe agency. The city has • In regard to the environment, as a compact, Mediterranean moved up three places compared to 2020, and has retained city, Barcelona favours sustainable mobility - which accounts its position among the top ten sports cities since the first for 85% of its internal journeys - and the city stands out in edition was published (2012), a record shared only by other prestigious rankings such as the Sustainable Cities Mobility Olympic cities such as London and Tokyo. Index 2020, where it is listed as the 18th city in the world and the 9th in Europe for developing a mobility ecosystem in • Barcelona is the fifth city in the world for tolerance and the city. Furthermore, in 2019, Barcelona had over 200 km of inclusion, first for the number of holiday days, and it is cycle lanes. placed in an intermediate position (13th) for social, well- being and physical fitness expenditure, according to the • It should be noted that Barcelona is currently the leading Cities for the Best Work-Life Balance 2020 ranking, while European city in regard to saving water. Domestic water in the general work-life balance ranking, it comes 35th, in consumption per inhabitant and day was 107.5 litres in circumstances that were conditioned by the significant impact of the Covid-19 pandemic. 2019, which is 8.9% lower than in 2006. Barcelona also presents a relatively low volume of CO2 equivalent emissions per inhabitant, compared to other cities around the world. • The city has an extensive and high-quality offer in culture Barcelona is the 22nd city in the world and the 18th in and education. The city has 40 public libraries. Furthermore, Europe, according to the 2018 Arcadis global sustainability Barcelona has nine UNESCO World Heritage Sites: seven cities index. buildings designed by Gaudí, the Palau de la Música and Hospital de Sant Pau. 32 Climate Climate indicators for Barcelona 2019 4th Average annual temperature Extreme maximum temperature most 18.4 ºC 35.4 ºC sporting city Annual hours of sunshine Lowest minimum temperature in the world 2,954.3 3.4 ºC (Burson Cohn & Wolfe, 2021) Source: Barcelona City Council's Department of Statistics and Data Dissemination, City of Barcelona Statistical Yearbook, 2020. Energy and environment Indicators for green areas in Barcelona Quality of life 2019 Urban parks (green areas Urban greenery (green spaces for public use) inside the urban area) 583.6 ha. 1,165.0 ha. Ranking of the most sporting cities in the world 2021 Urban green space per capita Woodland green areas 7.1 m2/resident 1,688.7 ha. RANKING CITY Urban green space and 1 New York woodland per capita 17.5 m2/resident 2 London Source: Barcelona City Council's Department of Statistics and Data Dissemination, City of 3 Los Angeles Barcelona Statistical Yearbook, 2020. 4 Barcelona 5 Paris Beaches 6 Lausanne 2018 33 7 Manchester Occupation Length 3,844,029 4.8 km 8 Munich Number 9 Tokyo 10 10 Madrid Source: Barcelona City Council's Department of Statistics and Data Dissemination, City of Barcelona Statistical Yearbook, 2019. Source: Burson Cohn&Wolfe, Ranking of Sports Cities 2021. Water consumption Cities with the best (Litres/inhabitant and day) work-life balance 2020 Number of 1 holiday days Paid maternity/paternity 25 182.8 leave 161.5 Global work-life balance 35 index 118.1 Tolerance and inclusion 5 index 107.5 Social 13 expenditure 64.7 54.0 Well-being and 13 physical fitness index Air 19 pollutants 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 Impact of 46 Covid Total water Domestic Industrial consumption consumption consumption and others Source: KISI, Cities for the Best Work-Life Balance 2020. Source: Department of Statistics and Data Dissemination, Barcelona City Council. Evolution of selective waste collection Cultural and educational in Barcelona (% of total) offer 38.8% Cultural and educational offer 2019 Public libraries Museums, collections, exhibition (number and users in millions) centres and places of architectural 40 / 6.7 interest (number and users in millions) 11.1% 71 / 26.8 Performing arts, music and Public sports facilities cinema audiences (millions) (number and members in 9.5 thousands) 1,912 / 192.9 2000 2005 2007 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 Pre-school, primary and Source: Barcelona City Council's Department of Statistics and Data Dissemination, secondary schools City of Barcelona Statistical Yearbook, 2019. 885 Source: Barcelona Institute of Culture and Barcelona City Council’s Department of Statistics. Sustainable mobility Performing arts, music and cinema audiences 2019 Modes of transport for travelling Performing arts, music and 9,522,659 inside Barcelona 2018 (% of total) cinema audiences Performing arts 2,543,028 Private transport Music, large venues 1,160,661 14.7% Cinema 5,818,970 World heritage sites 34 in Barcelona Palau de la Música Catalana On foot and by Sant Pau Hospital Public transport bicycle 30% 55.3% Parc Güell Palau Güell Casa Milà Source: Working Day Mobility Survey 2018. Metropolitan Transport Authority (ATM). Casa Vicens The Nativity façade and the crypt of the Sagrada Familia Cycle lanes and users Casa Batlló 2018-2019 Crypt of the Colònia Güell 2018 2019 Source: UNESCO. Cycle lanes 195.2km 210.8 Km Bicing users 102,323 111,911 Source: Director of Mobility Services, Barcelona City Council. Over 85% of the mobility for journeys within the city is sustainable 35 International positioning as a city that adds value • In an international and European context, Barcelona continues to be an advanced, competitive city with a good reputation, which in addition to its traditional assets - high quality of life, culture, health, attractiveness for tourists, etc.— also has a growing potential for attracting investments and talent, particularly in the area of technological companies and the digital economy. • Barcelona is a centre of attraction for economic activity that generates trust in the area of international investment, 2nd and it was listed 7th among the main urban areas around the world for attracting foreign investment projects, Southern European city according to KPMG (Global Cities Investment Monitor with the best future 2019). Its global competitiveness should also be noted —it is listed as the 21st world city in the Mori Foundation's prospects 2020/21 prestigious Global Power City Index 2020—, which means (FDi) that for the fifth year running, it is among the 25 most competitive cities in the world. • In the area of entrepreneurship and knowledge, the city has made notable advances as a hub for technological innovation and attracting talent in digital entrepreneurship, positioning Barcelona as the 4th European city for innovation (Innovation Cities index 2019) and 3rd for attracting start-ups (Start-up Heatmap Europe); it is the 5th most attractive city in the world for digital talent and the 8th among European technological cities of the future. Top 10 Tech Cities of The city's remarkable positioning in academic scientific the future 2020/2021 production should also be noted. 8th technological city of the future • As regards tourism, the ICCA rankings of international 5th city with the best investment prospects for congresses and delegates for business tourism, the innovation, technology and start-ups Euromonitor International ranking on the number of international visitors and the ranking of cruise-ship 2nd best strategy for attracting technological 36 passengers in European and global ports, all give Barcelona investments a leading position. Its 1st position in the world for the number of delegates and 4th place for the number of international congresses organised in 2019, according to the International Congress and Convention Association are Innovation Cities Index especially noteworthy, as the city has been among the top 5 2019 of this organisation's ranking for 20 years running. 4th European city in innovation • Barcelona’s image as a city for developing life projects has 21st city in the world in innovation helped it to be considered an attractive place for working; it is the 7th most preferred city for international workers, according to the Expat City Ranking 2019, as well as for investing and developing new business ideas. Furthermore, Top 30: Europe’s biggest the city is perceived as an innovative metropolis, linked to Start-up Hubs 2020 its creativity and the areas of culture, fashion, architecture, art and modernity and sport. 5th biggest start-up hub in Europe Decoding Digital Talent 2019 5th most attractive city to work in for digital talent Decoding Global Talent 2018 4th most attractive city to work in for global talent Ranking of Sports Cities Main Cities for International 2021 Congresses and Delegates 2019 4th most sporting city in the world 4th city in the world for organising international meetings 1st city in the world for number of participants in international meetings Cities for the Best Work-Life Balance 2020 35th International city in the world for work-life balance Tourists 2019 5th city in the world for tolerance and inclusion 8th city in Europe 36th city in the world Global Power City Index 2020 9th Best Cities for European city for global competitiveness Expats 2019 21st in the world for global competitiveness 7th best city for international professionals Global Cities Investment Monitor 2019 Popular Destinations 2020 7th in the world for foreign investment projects in 2018 9th city among the 25 main tourist destinations around the world FDI European Cities and Regions of the future 2020/2021 World-wide cost of living survey 2020 37 Catalonia 1st Southern European region with the best 102nd city in the world for the cost of living prospects for the future Barcelona 2nd Southern European city with the best prospects for the future Top ten start-up hubs in Europe 2019 3rd favourite European city for establishing a start-up Cultural and Creative Cities Index 2019 9th cultural and creative city in Europe Urban Mobility Readiness Index 2020 18th in the world for mobility preparedness Barcelona GREEN DEAL The economic agenda of a resilient, fair and sustainable Barcelona These strategic sectors are vital for various reasons, such as future technological development, their impact on culture and identity - tractiveness of the city, as well as the possibility of syn- ergies within the reach of Barcelona's economic fabric. They are as follows: The digital sector The creative sector The local economy The visitor economy Competitiveness, sustainability and equity are the Industry 4.0 strategic cornerstones for the development of Barcelo- Health and Bio na's economic agenda. At the end of 2019, the indica- These sectors have to be strengthened through sec- situation that indicated notably good growth prospects. toral promotion policies and - um-term measures to be developed as part of the stra- The Covid-19 crisis has accelerated a transformation that tegic formulation and economic planning of the coming cities had already started undergoing in recent years. Cit- decade. - ment and the driving forces for social, cultural, economic, The global pandemic and the economic crisis it has 38 technological, health and environmental change, in order caused have had a very serious negative impact that has to provide a response to the great challenges facing hu- changed Barcelona's economic forecasts and increased manity and the planet established in the UN’s 2030 Agenda. levels of uncertainty. The economic evolution is seen as a V-shaped asymmetric The urban transformation of cities is undoubtedly a stage, where there is a very quick destruction and decel- form of competitive leverage. Cities behave like living or- eration of the economy, and then activating the econom- ganisms; they evolve and transform themselves in order to ic network and promoting measures for its revitalisation adapt to their surroundings. Today, Barcelona is a global will make a progressive acceleration of the economy pos- city immersed in processes of urban transformation linked sible, until the pre-crisis levels are reached. to economic competitiveness, social equity and public health. Being a connected city, with a metropolitan The Barcelona Green Deal constructs a robust strat- dimension and having a coordinated urban-planning egy, beyond the economic agenda, in order to respond agenda are key factors in the task of rethinking the social to the city's present and future challenges. Sustaina- and territorial project we wish to carry out. ble growth, climate change, identity and culture, digital and international leadership are just some of the present The impetus provided by large-scale projects for the challenges. new Barcelona will make it possible, during the deploy- ment of the present Green Deal (2030), to complete or re- The Covid-19 crisis has created a new challenge, both with regard to public health and the economy, and it demands metropolitan rail transport, re-economise the city centre, plan a new 22@ in Nou Barris, create new centres of eco- the Economic Response Coordination Centre (CECORE) nomic activity, coordinate synergies and plan new strat- with the aim of establishing a coordination mechanism egies for facilities that are unique in the world, such as Montjuïc and La Fira de Barcelona, and to energise new measures and actions required for Barcelona’s economic industrial hubs, generating new urban centres. recovery. Barcelona's economic ecosystem is diverse and it has a In order to tackle the challenges posed by the econom- ic agenda, we must consider the activation of Barcelo- six strategic sectors stand out, either because of their na's forms of competitive leverage, in line with future weighting in terms of their impact on the city's economy, trends, in order to design a plan that is in accordance with or because of their value in regard to international repu- the main changes in society, the environment, technol- tation and positioning. ogy and the economy of the future. In order to ensure a holistic vision and to consider re- Mission sponses to all the challenges and obstacles, the strate- gic lines are based on 10 strategic objectives that contain The Economic Agenda’s mission is to construct a - comprehensive, long-term executive road map that sponsible City Council body and a series of key goals to is open to public debate while providing a series of on the economic recovery curve, and are geared towards them. The mission coordinates the city’s 5 aspira- ensuring an economic evolution that is in line with the tions: A city that is international, sustainable, respon- Green Deal's vision. sible, feminised and a creator of green employment. Beyond marking a clear path for the city, the Economic Agenda also acts as a Plan of Plans, a catalyst for all of Main areas and strategic goals the initiatives that are already under way, in order to en- The construction of a comprehensive road map is sure synergies, acting as an umbrella for other econom- achieved by establishing 3 Strategic Lines featuring ic plans in the city, integrating actions and providing an alignment framework for all of the actions undertaken, lead to tangible results for Barcelona’s economic growth. among programmes are maximised. The Green Deal’s 3 strategic lines: competitiveness, Vision sustainability and equity, correspond to the key fac- tors of the economic agenda that were mentioned at To position Barcelona as an international benchmark the start, in order to transform Barcelona. for all the city’s main social and economic lines of ac- tion, establishing a socio-economic pact among all in- stitutions, companies, organisations and the general public. Let Barcelona City Council become your best partner to land in Barcelona 39 Landing in a new city is not easy! We provide you with strategic guidance to plan your arrival correctly. Additionally, we offer you a portfolio of ser- vices adapted to your needs. VISIT meet.barcelona/business For companies For entrepreneurs For international newcomers Are you looking to Are you looking to Are you moving to expand your business start up your business Barcelona? in Barcelona? in Barcelona? Barcelona is vibrant and a crea- The Business Landing Service Barcelona Activa provides you tive magnet for international provides full assistance to set with personalised itineraries talent. A welcoming city that up your business in Barcelona. that will guide you to success- facilitates personal landing and • Online business incorpora- fully develop your business the connection with the local tion service activity in Barcelona, a path community through: • Support for recruitment that will allow you to follow, step • Webpage with all the infor- and business location by step, the different stages in mation you need to know • Connection with other the entrepreneurial process of when moving to city players in the business starting up a company in Bar- • Seminars, workshops, expat ecosystem celona. Sign up for a welcome breakfasts, city business session in English! tours. CONTACT US AT CONTACT US AT CONTACT US AT barcelonactiva.cat/businesslanding barcelonactiva.cat/entrepreneurship barcelona.cat/internationalwelcome © Barcelona Activa, Barcelona City Council 2020 Design: Doctor Magenta Translation: Linguaserve Internacionalización de Servicios S.A.