Spain:
the pain of austerity deepens
Unemployment
in Spain already stands at 26%. Crowds scavenge the streets at night
for food. And life is about to get tougher still
A
family prepares to sleep on the street in Madrid. Oxfam says that by
2022, 38% of the Spanish population could be in poverty. Photograph:
Susana Vera/Reuters
1
January, 2013
Forget,
for a moment, the Greek tragedy. The tale of social woe set to play
out in Spain this year is both bigger and more important to the
world. For the drama of rescuing the euro, or letting it sink, will
be played out on Spanish soil.
That
is not to say Spaniards will have it worse than Greeks, though
Eurostat figures show only Bulgaria and Romania now have a higher
percentage of people deemed at risk of poverty. Spain's economy will
shrink, once more, by 1.5% – a dramatic enough figure, though one
most Greeks would happily settle for. But Spain represents a
quantitative leap in Europe's ongoing tale of misery. Its economy is
five times bigger than Greece's – accounting for 12% of the
eurozone. And there are almost twice as many Spaniards as there are
people in bailed-out Portugal, Ireland and Greece together.
As
Spain enters another year of recession, Europe's politicians offer
only one remedy. It must swallow more of the harsh medicine of
austerity. But will it survive the cure? And will the spiral of
decline really come to a halt towards the end of the year, as Prime
Minister Mariano Rajoy promises?
Already
the country's social fabric is tearing. Family networks keep the
working class going as unemployment hits 26%. Fewer than half of
those aged under 25 find work. Anecdotes of misery abound.
Grandmothers with memories of the "hungry" 1950s cook up
large pots of lentils to feed unemployed grandchildren. At night,
small crowds gather outside supermarkets in poorer neighbourhoods of
Madrid, seeking thrown-out produce. In middle-class neighbourhoods
ghostly figures wander the streets rummaging through bins by night.
Middle-class
friends face new dilemmas. How do you look after a now terminally ill
90-year-old aunt and her son with mental health problems, asks one,
when both have lived off her €600-a-month pension? Another has
given her spare room to a 57-year-old graphic designer friend who
cannot find work and does not qualify for dole payments. How long
will he stay? A doctor – and single mother – admits that she
worked before Christmas with flu because she could not afford to take
(unpaid) sick days. "I tried not to breathe over my patients,"
she says.
Anecdotal
evidence of Spaniards' suffering is backed by hard figures. When
crisis struck in 2008, families began to save madly. Four years later
savings rates are tumbling again – too many families are having
trouble getting to the end of the month. Average household disposable
income has already dropped, in real terms, by almost 10% since 2008.
In poorer regions such as the Canary Islands, Andalucia and
Extremadura, almost a third of the population is below the
at-risk-of-poverty line, according to the National Statistics
Institute. In a damning report, Oxfam says that previous crises in
Latin America and Asia point to serious long-term damage if austerity
measures remain in place. "Poverty and social exclusion may
increase drastically," it says. "By 2022, some 18 million
Spaniards, or 38% of the population, could be in poverty."
Rajoy's
year-old conservative government no longer calls the shots, if it
ever did. In 2012 it tried to obey Brussels and Berlin, raising taxes
and chopping spending on health, education, social services and
almost everything else. Pensioners and civil servants became poorer.
Yet early figures suggest that, by the time money borrowed to
bail-out banks is included, the deficit remained above 8%. In 2013
Rajoy promises to do better. And that means even more cuts.
With
a quarter of this year's budget to go on servicing debt, Spain itself
now needs a bailout. In 2013 it looks set to test the new "soft"
bailouts now on offer from eurozone partners. That will be a
make-or-break moment in the euro crisis. If it works and helps set
Spain on the road to recovery, the euro is safe. If it does not,
there are few solutions left. A soft bailout will be less painful
than those inflicted on Greece, Portugal and Ireland – because it
comes with a European Central Bank (ECB) promise to buy Spanish bonds
in order to keep borrowing costs down. But it will still come with
one chief condition – more austerity.
Restricted
by the euro straitjacket and unable to devalue its currency, Spain is
on the slow, painful path of internal devaluation. That means
Spaniards must become poorer – accepting lower wages, lower
pensions and worse public services. That way, they are told, their
economy can become more competitive, making cheaper goods to consume
itself or sell to the rest of the world. "We can only get out of
this crisis by working more and, unfortunately, earning less,"
said former employers' federation leader Gerardo Díaz Ferrán two
years ago. He was not, of course, talking about himself. Díaz
Ferrán's own companies have since gone bust and the workers sacked.
But prosecutors claimed Díaz Ferrán stole money from his companies
first – ensuring himself a high-end lifestyle that included a
Rolls-Royce and two luxury apartments overlooking New York's Central
Park. In 2013, Spaniards will undoubtedly find out more about the
former leader of Spain's most powerful business lobby – a man who
allegedly paid no income tax in 2009 or 2010. But his grim recipe for
the future still holds.
Spaniards
are more likely to fret about jobs, incomes and the shrinking value
of what they own. Last year, some 800,000 people lost their jobs. In
2013, unemployment will rise further as another half a million or
more jobs are lost. A new labour law offers workers in companies with
falling revenues either wage cuts, sackings or both. And house prices
will continue to tumble in a country where 80% own their homes.
Prices dropped 15% last year – the biggest fall since a housing
bubble burst in 2008. The stock of houses up for sale is growing
thanks to foreclosures. A rash of suicides among those about to lose
their homes saw new legislation introduced to protect the most
vulnerable at the end of last year.
"Things
are improving in Spain," Mario Draghi, the powerful ECB boss,
said before Christmas – according to Spanish translations of his
words. "2012 was a year of painful gains. And 2013 should also
be one." The pain, at least, is guaranteed.
Greek
debt crisis 'far from over'
Country
faces year of destiny, with doubts about survival of government and
of its eurozone membership as austerity bites
Greece's
finance minister, Yannis Stournaras, has said Greece still faces the
possibility of bankruptcy. Photograph: Yorgos Karahalis/Reuters
2
January, 2013
In
the three years that Greece has been engulfed by the drama of its
debt, crises have come and gone. But the next 12 months are likely to
be more critical yet with politicians and pundits predicting that
2013 will ultimately define whether Athens remains in the eurozone.
For once, Greeks are in accord with the German chancellor, Angela
Merkel, who, adding to the prevailing pessimism, emphasised in her
new year address that the worst crisis to ravage Europe since the
second world war "is far from over".
Few
doubt that the continent's most powerful leader had Greece – the
country she recently confessed to thinking more about than ever
before and not "without a certain inner involvement" – in
mind. The uncertainty that has enveloped the nation since the debt
drama erupted beneath the Acropolis has not been alleviated by the
passage of time.
After
five straight years of recession, the eurozone's weakest link moves
into 2013 with an economy set to further contract, unemployment at a
record 26%, one in three living on or below the poverty line, and the
worst of austerity yet to come. In the runup to Christmas, even the
Greek finance minister, Yannis Stournaras, felt fit to admit that
despite being the recipient of €240bn in EU and IMF rescue funds –
the biggest bailout in global history – Greece could still default
on its massive pile of debt, a move that would result automatically
in exit from the 17-nation bloc.
"We
still face a possible risk of bankruptcy," he told the FT,
adding that Athens's fate would undoubtedly be determined by the
ability of the prime minister, Antonis Samaras's fragile coalition to
survive the unrest that will inevitably erupt with enforcement of
cuts worth €9.2bn in the new year alone.
Much
would depend on whether the debt-stricken country meets the
expectations of international creditors keeping insolvency at bay.
And whether Greeks have the stamina, and their government the
resolve, to accept and enact painful reforms.
"We
can make it [in 2013] if we stick to the programme agreed with the EU
and IMF," said Stournaras. "What we have done so far is
necessary but not sufficient to achieve a permanent solution for
Greece."
Analysts
speak of a year of two parts, with the German general elections in
September expected to play a pivotal role. Only then, say observers,
will a newly installed government in Berlin – the main bankroller
of bailout funds to date – be prepared to take the potentially
costly decision of endorsing an official sector writedown of Athens's
staggering €340bn debt load.
For
while the fiscal adjustment made by Greece is by far the biggest of
any OECD country in modern times, there is no one who believes that
its debt load is anywhere near managable. "By about June
everyone will be talking again about the inability of Greece to
perform economically," said Giorgos Kyrtsos, a rightwing
political commentator. "If the economy is to function again and
the country to remain in the eurozone it has to be absolved of at
least 50% of its debt. Currently, the situation is hopeless with debt
at 180% of GDP."
On
31 January pensioners and civil servants will experience their first
real wage cuts – on top of ever-growing taxes and utility prices –
in more than a year.
"A
lot of people, especially in the middle class, are going to find they
have no salaries at all, as reductions, ranging from 15 to 20%, are
applied retroactively," said Kyrtsos, an opponent of the growth
through austerity policies that lenders have placed as the price of
further aid. "All the measures we have been talking about for
the past six months," he said, referring to the budget reforms
the governing coalition has been forced to draft since its election
in June, "will have to be implemented and that will create all
kinds of side-effects. Unemployment will rise to 30. No civilised
society can function like that."
With
the country so dependent on cash handouts from foreign creditors,
Samaras is acutely aware that there is no room for relaxation. The
government is hoping that a long-delayed €34bn package of rescue
loans, disbursed in December, will finally help energise Greece's
near lifeless economy. "But," says Aliki Mouriki, a
sociologist at the National Centre for Social Research, "the
money that will be thrown into the Greek economy will take a very
long time to trickle down to the people. Joblessness will continue to
grow, the recession will get worse, more businesses will close. The
big question will be who will survive?"
With
many predicting a backlash by austerity-weary Greeks, there is
speculation over whether the ruling alliance will last longer than
the spring. An opinion poll released by the Kapa research group this
week showed 77.3% were unhappy with the coalition.
Last
year's double elections took the heat out of a population that long
ago reached boiling point, pundits say.
"It
delayed the expression of unrest," said Mouriki. "But
unless people see a way out of this deplorable situation there will
be an explosion. Anger and despair are building up. The explosives
are there."
Many
believe a clampdown on tax evasion and the perceived privileges of
the rich, as well as a successful privatisation campaign and foreign
direct investment will be critical to keeping chaos at bay. "In
June the tourist season will begin and that will help," added
Mouriki. "But until then we will have to hold our breath."
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