Economic
refugees fleeing Spain: Why we should worry about Spain’s economic
pain
1
May, 2012
We
should all be very worried about what’s going on in Spain. Because
Spain isn’t Greece. The Greek crisis was most likely not a direct
threat to the survival of the monetary union. Its economy was simply
too small. The danger was in the possible contagion effect Greece
might present if it outright defaulted or bolted from the union.
Spain, the zone’s fourth-largest economy (after Germany, France and
Italy) can do a lot of damage all by itself. If Spain ultimately
requires a bailout, it would strain the resources available in the
zone’s rescue fund (the European portion of which was recently
boosted to a total of $925 billion) and put pressure on the zone to
fatten up the fund even more, which Germany and others have been
reluctant to do. Such an event would also be the biggest blow to the
future of the euro yet, likely reigniting the crisis in Italy and
making other bailouts more likely (especially for Portugal). With
emerging markets slowing down, Europe in the toilet, the U.S.
recovery uncertain, and energy prices high, a Spanish meltdown is
exactly what the global economy doesn’t need right now. Watching
developments in Spain since the beginning of April has been source of
non-stop déjà vu for anyone who spent 2010 watching events unfold
in Ireland. There are a number of striking similarities between the
position in which the Spanish government now finds itself and the
Irish government’s situation in November 2010, just before it was
forced into an EU/IMF bailout programme. Based on Ireland’s
experience, a bailout for Spain seems inevitable.
–Time
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