Ministry of Development (Spain)


The Ministry of Transport, Mobility and Urban Agenda , traditionally known as the Ministry of Development, is the department of the Government of Spain responsible for preparing and implementing the government policy on land, air and maritime transport infrastructure and the control, planning and regulation of the transport services on this areas. It is also responsible for guaranteeing access to housing; urban, soil and architecture policies; planning and controlling the postal and telegraph services, directing the services related to astronomy, geodesy, geophysics and mapping, and planning and programing the government investments on infrastructure and services related to this scope. The Ministry's headquarters are in the New Ministries government complex.
MITMA is headed by the Minister of Transport, Mobility and Urban Agenda, who is appointed by the King of Spain at request of the Prime Minister, after hearing the Council of Ministers. The Minister is assisted by two main officials, the Secretary of State for Infrastructure, Transport and Housing and the Under Secretary of Transport, Mobility and Urban Agenda. Other senior officials of the ministry include the Secretary General for Infrastructure, the Secretary General for Transport and the Secretary General for Housing. The current Minister is José Luis Ábalos Meco since 7 June 2018.

History

First years

The Ministry of Development was created in 5 November 1832 with the name of Secretary of State and of the Dispatch of General Development of the Realm. and with Victoriano de Encima as Acting Minister. Its scope of competence was very broad and included areas of government policy that, over the years, would be splintered in the Ministries of Education, Culture, Agriculture, Interior, Health, Industry and Trade. On 13 May 1834 the ministry was renamed «of the Interior» and in December 1835 «Secretary of State and of the Dispatch of the Governance of the Realm».

New ministries

The first time that the competencies split was in January 1847. The competencies of the Ministry of the Governance of the Realm over public works, education and charity were transferred to the new Ministry of Trade, Instruction and Public Works and in 1851 officially acquired the name of Ministry of Development. Around 1869 the Ministry was composed of the Directorate-General for Public Instruction and the Directorate-General for Public Works, Agriculture, Industry and Trade. A year later the National Geographic Institute was created, which is incorporated from the first moment to this Ministry.
In 1900, the Education and Culture areas were torn apart from Development, when the Ministry of Public Instruction was created. For five years, the Department was named Agriculture, Industry, Trade and Public Works, with powers over railroads, roads, canals, ports, lighthouses and beacons, as well as agriculture, industry and trade. These last three areas of activity were attributed to the new Ministry of National Economy in 1928, maintaining public works, railways, mines, forestry, fishing and hunting.
After the advent of the Second Republic, and by virtue of the Decree of 16 December 1931, the name of the Ministry of Public Works was adopted. It had an Undersecretariat and three Directorates-General: Railways, Trams and Mechanical Road Transport; Roads and Hydraulic Works and the Central Service of Ports and Maritime Signals. The structure was maintained for almost half a century, albeit with partial modifications: in 1968 the Technical General Secretariat was created; the Directorate-General for Railways, Trams and Mechanical Transport by Road was renamed Directorate-General for Land Transport and the Directorate-General for Roads and Hydraulic Works was renamed Directorate-General for Roads.

Democratic stage

Major changes occur during the Constituent Legislature. Between July 1977 and March 1991, the competences of the original department remain divided in two: On the one hand, the Ministry of Public Works and Urbanism and on the other hand, the Ministry of Transport and Communications. In 1990, the environmental issue was given greater importance, with the creation of the General Secretariat for Environment.
It was not until the third government of Felipe González when the merger occurred again, by Royal Decree 576/1991, of 21 April, with Josep Borrell as minister of the Department. With the arrival of José María Aznar to the Government, the old denomination of Ministry of Development was recovered and it is created, for the first time in Spain, a Ministry of Environment which assumed those competences.
Since then, the competencies has been practically the same with little modifications like the loss of the telecoms functions in 2000 and the loss of housing functions between 2004 and 2010.

Structure

The Ministry of Development employs the following bodies:
Minister of Communications
Minister of Public Works
Minister of Public Works and Communications
Minister of Communications and the Merchant Navy
Minister of Communications, Transport and Public Works
Minister of Communications and Transport
Minister of Public Works and Urban Development
Minister of Public Works, Transport and the Environment
Minister of Development
Minister of Agriculture, Industry, Trade and Public Works
Minister of General Development of the Realm
Minister of Trade, Education and Public Works
Minister of Inner Affairs
Secretary of State and of the Dispatch of General Development of the Realm
Minister of Transports and Communications
Minister of Transports, Tourism and Communications