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  1. Asturias Health Service (SESPA), with a budget of over €1.713 billion in 2018, is a. leading “company” in the region, with 16,000 direct jobs and nearly 39% of the regional budget. SESPA interacts with over 250 companies in several productive industries with turnover exceeding €400 million. Prominent entities.

  2. The main regional industry in For centuries, the backbone of the Asturian economy was agriculture and fishing. Milk production and its derivatives was also traditional, but its big development was a by-product of the economic expansion of the late 1960s.

  3. Asturias covers about 2% of Spain territory and about 2% of its population General information about Asturias | Location and basis information It is located in the north of Spain. • Population: 1,019,993 • Capital: Oviedo, but the most populated city is Gijón. • Asturias is one of the most important regions of Spain in the mining industry.

  4. Nov 13, 2018 · The economy of Asturias grew 3.5% in 2017, but will moderate it to 2.5% in 2018 and 2.6% in 2019. The unemployment rate will reduce to 11.2% in 2019, although some risks are more likely to materialize now, than they were some months ago. While pre-crisis per capita GDP will be reached, absolute GDP will not; better and stronger job creation remains as a challenge.

    • BBVA Research
  5. Industrialization in Asturias developed from strong extractive and productive foundations, encouraged by a rich and diverse body of companies from different industrial sectors. For over two centuries Asturias fostered the development of a number of industries, quite diverse as far as their location, activity and structural type.

  6. 13 April, 2018 Professionals of Business Tourism in Asturias had an important appointment today: the celebration of Global Meetings Industry Day 2018 , which for the first time has been organized jointly by the three professional MICE associations in Asturias.

  7. here and there, the tracks of the main historic industrial activity in our region, an activity that seems to inexorably have its days counted, but which continues to define the Asturian region, its people and its culture. This fossil fuel soon became a dominant energy source obtained with extremely hard work and,