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Spains draft budget presages escalating social conflict
By Paul Bond
27 October 2004
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When Economy Minister Pedro Solbes presented his draft budget
proposals for next year to the Spanish Congress, he described
them as squaring the circle through creating
more employment by being more productive. The resort to
such rhetoric sums up the problem faced by the Spanish Socialist
Workers Party (PSOE) government of Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero.
The PSOE was returned to power in March by a wave of popular
revulsion at the policies of the right-wing Popular Party (PP)
government of Jose Maria Aznar. Zapateros incoming government
was acutely aware of the need to distance itself from the PPs
politics. Yet its actual differences with the PP are of a purely
tactical character.
Solbes budget proposals reflected the need to make sympathetic
noises towards the Spanish people, whilst trying to reassure big
business where their true loyalties lie. For example, Labour and
Social Affairs Minister Jesus Caldera, defending the budget in
the Senate, said that proposals such as an 11.5 percent increase
in family benefits are aimed at ensuring citizens can combine
their family lives with their work commitments.
Last week Congress unanimously voted through a bill to protect
the victims of domestic violence. The PSOE faces rather more debate
on its proposals to legalise gay marriage, but once again this
is a measure which allows the government to establish its liberal
credentials without incurring a cost to big business.
Unemployment remains among the highest in the European Union,
with adult unemployment standing at 10.93 percent in the second
quarter of this year. The unemployment rate for women is 15 percent.
August saw the first rise in unemployment figures for six months.
Additionally, nearly one third of all those in employment are
employed on temporary contracts, the highest rate in Europe.
The Aznar government boasted of its record on economic growth.
This was achieved at the expense of the mass of the Spanish population,
the PP government had one of the worst records in Europe for social
spending. In 2000 they spent 20.1 percent of gross domestic product
(GDP) on social spending against a European average of 27.3 percent.
Family and child assistance in the same year amounted to 2.7 percent
of GDP, against a European average of 8.2 percent.
Throughout the Aznar government, Spain was a major recipient
of European Union aid. But with the accession of ten eastern European
countries this year, Spain moved away from the bottom of the EUs
economic scale. Spain is poised to become a net contributor to
the EU rather than a net beneficiary for the first time.
Economic growth was also based on a property boom that began
late in 1996. House prices in Spain have doubled over the last
five years, and the Bank of Spain is warning that the property
market is overvalued by about 20 percent. Last year alone prices
rose 18.5 percent for new houses and 16.7 percent for existing
ones.
Property accounts for some 40 percent of capital investment
in Spain. Nearly 90 percent of houses are owner-occupied, the
highest in Europe. There are some three to four million properties
empty, and an estimated similar number used as second homes. Property
is beyond the reach of many young Spaniards. There are reports
of workers turning down job offers that would involve moving house
because of the lack of available accommodation.
This pushes up the levels of household debt, which has risen
over 20 percent in the last year alone. The value of mortgage
debt has risen by 23.6 percent over the last year, and according
to the Economist, nearly half of the average familys
disposable income goes on servicing housing debt. The Bank
of Spain is warning that there is a high risk of exposure
to debt, and that an increase in interest rates could have drastic
consequences for the economy. This follows similar concerns from
the International Monetary Fund and the Organisation for Economic
Cooperation and Development.
Solbes proposals involve a 6.5 percent increase in expenditure
over the next year. Just over half of the 234.91 billion euro
budget is earmarked for social spending, reflecting the necessity
to demonstrate a difference from the PP. Caldera told the Senate,
for example, that the minimum state pension had been frozen by
the PP between 2000 and 2004, and therefore that shortfall needed
to be addressed.
The social spending also includes a 32.9 percent increase to
the Housing Ministry. Before the budget, there was some talk of
setting up a government-run rental agency to encourage the use
of some of the empty buildings. That plan has now been shelved,
although the ministry is extending the subsidies available for
rented accommodation. Instead the government has announced legislation
that would regulate the use of land in accordance with the
general interest, thus avoiding any speculation.
Such tightening of controls on land use amounts to a safeguarding
of the rights of property developers. The Housing Ministry announced
that it was planning an 87 percent increase in direct state aid
to assist with down payments on house purchases. Aimed particularly
at young couples, the scheme will disburse between 5 and 11 percent
of the price of a property, depending on the income of the applicants.
This is an attempt to resolve the housing crisis by tying those
hardest hit to an unstable property market. Anticipating a slowdown
in the Spanish market one real estate developer, Fadesa, has recently
announced plans to start building work in Hungary.
Housing Minister Maria Antonia Trujillo also announced plans
to use six million square metres of available land across the
country for building social housing, although she gave no timetable
for the project, nor any concrete details. The project is to be
overseen by the Public Corporate Entity for Land (SEPES), which
has hitherto been predominantly concerned with the industrial
sector.
This reflects other concerns within Solbes proposals.
He is proposing a 25 percent increase in funding of research,
development and innovation, as well as encouraging investment
in equipment to begin moving away from construction as the mainspring
of economic growth.
The provision that received the most attention, though, was
Solbes plans to increase employment by two percent over
the next year, with the creation of 332,000 jobs. However, that
target is predicated on growth in GDP of three percent and consumer
inflation of two percent.
The predicted GDP growth, in particular, has been criticised
by the Spanish bourgeoisie as being overly optimistic. The PP
are critical of any concession to popular sentiment, and have
attacked the ending of their successful model of the
economy. In a poll of business leaders, nearly three quarters
said they believed economic performance would worsen, while 85
percent of them believed the government would not balance the
budget.
The PP have a particular agenda, but Solbes model for
growth is extremely unlikely. His three percent growth in GDP
is based on crude oil at $34 per barrel, although some analysts
project a growth of only 2.5 percent with oil at that price. In
any case, at the time of the budget announcement crude was nearing
$50 per barrel. Solbes argues that an expected upturn across Europe
would compensate for oil remaining high, although he detailed
how fluctuating prices would affect growth predictions. He told
a meeting of the IMF that every three dollars above $34 per barrel
would add one decimal point to Spanish inflation, and correspondingly
bring down predicted economic growth.
The two percent inflation target (which Solbes has admitted
may not be achievable) is a target set by the European Central
Bank for the whole of the Euro-zone. Ultimately, whatever budget
provisions are met will depend on the standing of the Spanish
economy within an international context. As such this may well
be the honeymoon period financially for the Spanish population
with the PSOE government. When they run out of cheap reforms,
or reforms which meet the requirements of big business, the PSOE
will not hesitate to turn their full force on the Spanish population.
In this respect it is worth noting that the budget also made provision
for increasing police intelligence. The National Intelligence
Centre is to see a budget increase of 17.1 percent next year to
meet the new risks and threats of this century.
See Also:
Spain: Zapatero chooses a
business-friendly cabinet
[2 April 2004]
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