The spokesperson for the Canarian Coalition in the Congress of Deputies, Cristina Valido, has valued the approval, today, Wednesday, in the drafting stage for its parliamentary debate, of the bill for a modification of the Economic and Fiscal Regime (REF) of the Canary Islands that allows its investment in the construction of homes on the islands.
The reform seeks to incentivize the rental of homes for habitual use, especially with regard to the reserve for investments in the Canary Islands (RIC).
With this parliamentary procedure in the Congress of Deputies, this modification of the REF is now taking its final steps so that the opinion for its modification is definitively approved in committee in the coming weeks.
The approval of this modification of the Canarian REF, which was marked as one of the objectives for the legislature by the Canarian Coalition in the agreements signed around the Canarian Agenda, will mean compliance with the political demand of the Canarian nationalists to see the use of the REF modified definitively before the parliamentary summer holidays.
In this scenario, Cristina Valido has highlighted "the rigorous work" developed by both the Government of the Canary Islands and the nationalist parliamentarians in Congress and Senate to allow the use of the Canarian REF in work for the promotion and construction of homes in the archipelago.
In this context, the modifications proposed by the spokesperson for the Canarian Coalition for what Cristina Valido has defined as a "substantial improvement of the economic and investment potential" of the REF of the Canary Islands have achieved majority support from the parliamentary groups of the Congress of Deputies.
In this sense, Valido has valued the commitment of work of representatives of all political groups to, in the near future, move forward with this modification of the Canarian REF definitively. "We continue to defend the adaptation of our economic and fiscal instruments, in this case those of the REF, to respond to first-order social needs such as access to housing in the archipelago," the deputy stressed.