Spain announces harshest budget reforms
Spain
has announced its plan for drastic economic reform, and a tight 2013
budget, where cutting spending rather than lifting taxes will be the
focus. The Spanish government is set to pass 43 new laws to reform
the economy within the next six months.
28
September, 2012
The
new budget entails 58% spending cuts and 42% increased taxes.
Reuters
quotes Spain's Deputy Prime Minister Soraya Saenz de Santamaria as
saying Spain will set up an independent fiscal authority to help
oversee its deficit cutting promises.
Government
ministry spending is going to be cut by 8.9%, or about €40bln,
according to Luis De Guindos, Spain’s Finance Minister. This
shouldn’t hurt “social spending”, with 64% of the total budget
going on pensions, benefits, the Finance Minister added.
Budget
Minister Cristobal Montoro expects 2013 to be the last year of
crisis, with negative GDP growth in the region of – 0.5%.
Meanwhile,
European leaders as well as the business community are speculating
whether the reforms will result in a request for an international
bailout. The final decision should depend on the results of the audit
of Spanish banks, with the exact date of the report to become public
expected to be announced on Friday. The Government earlier forecast
the gap in Spanish banking would stand at about €60bln.
Budget
discussions took place at a time when Spain was overwhelmed with
street protests and separation sentiment by the Catalan region, which
escalated earlier on Wednesday.
....
For Zero Hedge's take on this article GO HERE
Europe's
betrayal of Spain
We
discover – yet again, you might say – that Germany, Holland, and
Finland will not stand behind their solemn pledge of solidarity when
push comes to shove.
Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
28
September, 2012
Spain’s
premier Mariano Rajoy has been betrayed. Nobody should be entirely
surprised if he and the Spanish arch-nationalists in his circle offer
a condign riposte, and bring down the entire temple on the heads of
the creditor powers.
He
bit the bullet and agreed to the highly intrusive terms of a €100bn
eurozone rescue for the Spanish banking system on a specific
understanding: that the ESM bail-out fund would ultimately take over
the burden by recapitalising Spain’s banks directly.
This
deal has been breached. Can we believe anything that the Chancellor
of Germany, the prime minister of Holland, and the prime minister of
Finland say from now on? The EMU rescue edifice is built on sand.
You
might say Mr Rajoy had no choice. But he did. There were those
whispering in his ear that Spain should instead retake control over
its own monetary, exchange, and sovereign policy levers, and break
out of its debt-deflation trap.
Such
a course might or might not be disastrous for Spain, depending on
your analysis of EMU’s structural flaws, but it would certainly be
disastrous for German and Dutch banks. (Given that it would cause the
collapse of monetary union in the worst possible way).
The
Spanish bubble was after all a joint venture. Spain was flooded with
cheap capital from Germany and Holland that it could not prevent or
control under the EMU system. Did the German and Dutch regulators
recognise the danger, or try to stop the excesses? Not really. They
were complicit.
The
ECB’s uber-loose money (to help Germany when it was in slump) led
to negative real interest rates for Spain – minus 2pc for years –
that fuelled a massive credit boom. Policy was far too lax for a
fast-growing Tiger economy.
Did
the Spanish make big mistakes? Of course. But the ECB and the
European Commission did not make that critique at the relevant
moment. They too were smoking weed.
Be
that as it may, Mr Rajoy now learns that the AAA trio will not permit
direct recapitalisation of the Spain’s "legacy" banks by
the ESM, even after the new European bank regulator is up and
running.
The
burden will fall entirely on Spain, or so it seems. Spain must raise
€60bn in fresh debt on the capital markets to plug the hole, or
nearer €150bn if City sceptics are right.
The
accord signed by EMU leaders in June is crystal clear, as the
European Commission remind the Northern powers yesterday. The purpose
was to break the "vicious circle" between banks and
sovereign states.
EURO
AREA SUMMIT STATEMENT
29
June 2012
We affirm that it is
imperative to break the vicious circle between banks and sovereigns.
The Commission will present Proposals on the basis of Article 127(6)
for a single supervisory mechanism shortly. We ask the Council to
consider these Proposals as a matter of urgency by the end of 2012.
When an effective single supervisory mechanism is established,
involving the ECB, for banks in the euro area the ESM could,
following a regular decision, have the possibility to recapitalize
banks directly. This would rely on appropriate conditionality,
including compliance with state aid rules, which should be
institution specific, sector-specific or economy-wide and would be
formalised in a Memorandum of Understanding. The Eurogroup will
examine the situation of the Irish financial sector with the view of
further improving the sustainability of the well-performing
adjustment programme. Similar cases will be treated equally.
We urge the rapid
conclusion of the Memorandum of Understanding attached to the
financial support to Spain for recapitalisation of its banking
sector. We reaffirm that the financial assistance will be provided by
the EFSF until the ESM becomes available, and that it will then be
transferred to the ESM, without gaining seniority status.
The
Germans, Dutch and Finns (in particular) say they were bounced into
this deal. It would not surprise if they were outmanoeuvred by
Italy’s Mario Monti, and if too-clever-by-half Council officials
tweaked the language at the last minute. But this was the accord.
It
was a key foundation of the global market rally of the last two
months. The Nordics have now ripped it up. Investors in Asia and the
Middle East might justifiably conclude that the Chancellor of Germany
is blowing smoke in their eyes, that Germany will not in fact "save
the euro". Eurozone rhetoric is a sham.
So
we are back to crisis.
I
have no idea what Spain will do, but emotions are running high and
the country – in the words of Confidencial this morning – risks
"disintegrating". We watch and wait to see whether the
Basque revolt or the Catalan revolt will detonate first, and whether
the Spanish will really use "all means" to hold the union
together.
The
newspapers ABC and La Razon both called on the government to deploy "
the arms of the state" to stop Catalonia holding an independence
referendum.
It
is as if the Daily Telegraph were to call for coercion to stop
Scottish independence. Imagine the response in Scotland.
Mr
Rajoy’s authority is collapsing. Some 84pc of Spaniards have lost
confidence in his leadership. The current course is becoming
hopeless.
Today
he will announce a fresh round of austerity measures to meet EU
targets that cannot be met, adhering to reactionary strategy of
"internal devaluation" imposed by Germany that is
destroying his country.
And
now he has just been betrayed by the German bloc anyway. Es el colmo.
If he were to request full sovereign rescue, he would most likely be
shafted again. Who can blame him for dragging his feet?
The
temptation to tell the Germans and Dutch to go to Hell – and to
pull the pin on their banking systems – must be growing mightily.
Desperate men do desperate things.
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