Isn't it interesting that each country is guilty of bad decisions or some other unique factor – so that the collapse of European economies have nothing in common?
Wouldn't
it be great if CNN asked the very same questions – about the US
economy.
Spain set to reveal the pain in its books
CNN,
25
September, 2012
Spain,
a eurozone behemoth, is in the crosshairs of Europe's financial
crisis. The country is suffering from soaring borrowing costs, a
banking system leaking cash and unemployment rates at devastating
levels.Greece might be risking expulsion from the eurozone but
Spain's situation is a focus of concern. If such a major economy were
to fail, the repercussions could cause unprecedented havoc across
Europe -- and the globe
Greece
might be risking expulsion from the eurozone but Spain's situation is
a focus of concern. If such a major economy were to fail, the
repercussions could cause unprecedented havoc across Europe -- and
the globe.
Just
how bad is the pain in Spain?
On
Thursday, Spain will reveal its 2013 budget, which is expected to
introduce harsh new austerity measures. Reports have suggested they
could match the potential requirements of a full sovereign bailout.
According
to Michala Marcussen, Societe Generale economist, "substantial
efforts" will be required to meet a budget deficit target of
4.5%.
Pension
reforms are possible, such as fast-tracking plans to increase the
retirement age to 67 from 65, while taxation and labor markets could
also be targeted, Marcussen noted.
The
budget is followed by Friday's release of the country's banking
audit, which is expected to reveal details of the sector's financial
needs. Consensus sits at €60 billion and "too low a number
will raise concerns that there are more hidden losses to come -- all
the more given the very frail economic backdrop," Marcussen
wrote in an analysis note.
The
audit follows an agreement by eurozone finance ministers in June to
give aid to Spain, tagging up to €100 billion to shore up its
banking sector. At the time, Spain's prime minister, Mariano Rajoy,
said the deal meant "European credibility won, the future of the
euro won [and] Europe won."
The
country has been facing credit issues after its financial problems
were thrown into sharp relief by the bailout of Bankia, the country's
fourth-largest bank.
Bankia
was forced to call for €19 billion ($23.7 billion) in assistance in
May, panicking markets. It sent Spain's cost of borrowing (for the
sovereign 10-year bond) toward 7% -- a level which is regarded as
unsustainable and has precipitated bailouts of other euro countries.
But
Spain -- in its second recession since 2009 -- has been dubbed "too
big to bail, too big to fail."
The
Spanish economy is the eurozone's fourth-largest -- after Germany,
France and Italy -- making up around 11% of the bloc's GDP.
To
put that in perspective, Greece, Portugal and Ireland -- the three
eurozone countries which have already been bailed out -- combined
make up less than 6% of the bloc's economy.
A
request for aid would likely create a backlash in the markets and
test the European Central Bank's plan to buy up sovereign bonds on
the secondary market.
How
did Spain reach this point?
Spain's
banking sector is facing up to years of bad investments, largely in
real estate, which was buoyed by cheap credit and the country's sunny
climate.
Its
housing boom-times of 2002 to 2008 were fed, in part, by retired
north Europeans buying up second houses in places such as Valencia
and Murcia, according to political scientist Julio Embid, of
think-tank FundaciĆ³n Alternativas.
Real
estate prices have now fallen some 30% to 50% from their highs,
leaving Spain's banks, or cajas with housing stock on their books
whose current value is much lower than the original.
Meanwhile
hundreds of thousands of houses built during the boom remain unsold,
and people wanting to buy may find it difficult to get credit.
Embid
also points to the cajas' politically-driven executive appointments
as a contributing factor to the crisis. "Many senior bankers
were low-profile regional politicians or majors, without any
financial experience or bank background," he said.
What
has Spain done to try and sort through this mess?
The
government set up the FROB (Fund for Orderly Bank Restructuring) in
2009, to help reorganize its banking sector, and has received
international recognition for its efforts to date.
According
to April's International Monetary Fund report, the country has
reduced the number of financial institutions from 45 to 11. The
report noted: "The authorities are, rightly, focusing on
strengthening the banking sector."
It
said the authorities were showing "an appropriate sense of
urgency" but also warned that "unless the weak institutions
are quickly and adequately cleaned up, the sound banks will suffer
unnecessarily by a continued loss of market confidence in the banking
sector."
As
it stands, the banks have an estimated €300 billion of problem
loans on their books, with the full cost of recovery not yet clear.
What
other headaches does Spain face?
In
addition to the financial sector's problems, Spain could be liable
for the debts of several regional governments, which have been hit
with ratings downgrades.
Spain
also has an unemployment crisis, with more than half those under 24
out of work, and almost one in four people overall. Spain's jobless
rate has helped pushed the eurozone's total unemployment rate to 11%
-- its highest since the eurozone was created in 1999.
Why
is the economy collapsing now?
The
situation in Spain has developed like a perfect storm, with money
being pulled out of the country, despite the desperate need to stem
capital flight and support its banking system.
This
leaves Spain in a precarious financial state, driving investors away,
pushing up its borrowing costs and making it more likely to need a
bailout.
It's
a reminder of how governments are inextricably tied to their
country's banking systems, essentially the lifeblood of their
economy.
In
Ireland, the banking sector's similar gorge on property forced the
country to take a €67.5 billion bailout in 2010.
The
mood of the markets may, ultimately, dictate Spain's ability to pull
itself from its financial hole. Investors already twitchy about the
prospect of a "Grexit" -- a Greek exit from the euro --
will react badly to further bad news out of Spain.
Ratings
agency Standard & Poor's has put the chance of Greece exiting the
euro at around one in three, but says the impact of such an outcome
on other countries is not yet clear.
The
struggles in Europe have been exacerbated by continued miserable news
out of the U.S.
Where
does Madrid stand when it comes to making cuts to public services?
Spain's
emergence as the crisis epicenter has again fed debate over the value
of austerity over stimulus.
Greece,
the first euro country to take a bailout, has been swallowing
austerity medicine since 2010. But its economy has slid further into
recession, and initial hopes it could detach itself from external
life-lines within two years now look wildly optimistic.
Spain
has also been implementing austerity measures to try and combat its
crisis. Rajoy, who won a landslide victory over the Socialist Party
in November 2011, focused on cost cutting and labor reforms. But, as
with other fragile countries within the euro bloc, Spain's economy
remains weak and its unemployment levels continue to rise.
Some
European leaders are now voicing concerns against austerity measures
and in the U.S., the Federal Reserve has moved towards more stimulus,
with further quantitative easing.
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