2 June 2010

Spain digs into their debt mountain

If you thought the new British coalition government was off to a flying start to cut the growing debt mountain and save the nation, better look at what the Spanish Government has been up to in the same period.

Two countries trading on over-priced properties and suffering from the fact the affordability level has been reached; two countries suffering from their highest unemployment levels; two countries pole-axed by Left-wing Socialist public sector overspending; two countries sharing the biggest tourism market in Europe as Brits continue their three decades relationship - and the Spanish get the lolly and the jobs.

Now the UK has seen the light and a new Government is promising to turn things around and the Spanish Government, with a general election due within the year, has seen what has happened to fellow impoverished travellers Greece and to the UK's failed Labour Government and decided enough is enough.

So there’s to be a new wealth tax on people with “high-economic capacity” as a sop to the less well off, who like their UK counterparts, are likely to be hammered under new austerity measures designed to reduce the Spanish deficit from 11.2% to 3% by 2013. Likely revenue is around EUR 2 billion, based on similar wealth tax abandoned in 2008.

The Spanish Government has got approval for a EUR 15 billion austerity package that includes wage cuts of 5% for civil servants just when the economy, like that of the UK, is just crawling out of the red. With the third largest deficit in Euroland Spain is hoping the move with have a calming effect…

Spanish banks, feeling the pain of their excessive lending in the property sector for the last decade made their first big move as four Spanish regional savings banks, led by Caja de Ahorros de Mediterraneo, reached a preliminary agreement to merge some of their operations.

The agreement, which also includes Cajastur, Caja de Extremadura and Caja Cantabria, would aim to create a joint banking group that seeks to “strengthen solvency and assets of the participating banks”. The move followed the Bank of Spain taking control of another savings bank Cajasur after trade unions blocked a planned merger with Unicaja.

Finally, there is to be a massive clampdown on motorist lawbreakers with increased on the spot fines and non payment collection extended to four years because 40% of traffic fines have never been paid in Spain. The Interior Minister said: This doesn’t mean that we think that we are going to make more money out of fines”. Where have we heard that before?

The property market is strengthening as increasing numbers of bargain hunters fly to buy in Spain and find Spanish bank repossessions at discounts of up to 50% and such outstanding loan to values that 90% mortgages are on offer.

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