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Unit 4 Macro: Pain in Spain as Fiscal Austerity Bites

Geoff Riley

1st April 2012

Over a million people supported a general strike in Spain last week in protest at the announcement of the deepest fiscal squeeze in Spain’s post-Franco history. Corporation tax has been increased (in contrast to the UK where business profits tax is being cut), departmental budgets are being slashed and energy bills are rising. There are wage cuts for civil servants and unemployment benefits are being held - cut in real terms. This is fiscal austerity on a huge scale and carries big political risks.

Faisal Islam from Channel 4 wrote in his blog that “to inflict numerical statistical austerity on a country with mass unemployment and already in recession is shock therapy that I cannot remember for an industrialised nation.” One cannot help make comparisons with the stronger economic situation in Germany where it has just been announced that public service salaries will rise 6.3 % over the enxt two years. This will boost consumption, increase demand & contribute to growth as Germany continues to recover from the 2009 recession.

I have put together a selection of charts on key recent developments in the Spanish economy focusing on growth, unemployment, the size of the fiscal deficit and other key macro indicators. There are also some links to newspaper coverage of the budget cuts and some news video clips.

Spain unveils ‘most austere’ Budget in democratic history

Spain budget: Cuts to total 27bn euros this year (BBC)

EU austerity drive country by country (BBC)

Spain unveils deep budget cuts

Inside Story - How deep will austerity measures cut Spain?

Spanish co-op weathers financial storm

Spanish unemployment

Geoff Riley

Geoff Riley FRSA has been teaching Economics for over thirty years. He has over twenty years experience as Head of Economics at leading schools. He writes extensively and is a contributor and presenter on CPD conferences in the UK and overseas.

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