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: Spain
Construction slowdown threatens Spains economic boom
By John Vassilopulos
19 September 2006
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Economists are predicting a slowdown in Spains construction
industry in 2007, which has been at the heart of the countrys
decade-long economic boom. They warned that unless the disproportionate
role the construction sector occupies in the economy is addressed,
Spain may soon be on track for economic mediocrity.
According to a recent report by the International Monetary
Fund, the Spanish economy has become increasingly lopsided
over the last few years. Whereas the construction boom saw 700,000
new homes built in 2004 (more than the combined total in France,
Germany, Belgium, Holland and Luxemburg), the manufacturing sector
has declined by 0.4 percent in 2005 and export growth has remained
stagnant.
The decline in the manufacturing sector can be traced back
to the 1980s, when Spains traditional low-wage status was
under threat from locations in Asia and Latin America. This put
pressure on Spains main exportsclothing, textiles
and leather.
More recently, renewed pressure on the Spanish economy has
come from European Union enlargement to countries in central and
Eastern Europe. They have up to 60 percent lower labour costs
and specialise in industries such as machinery, electrical goods,
textile goods and automobiles, which make up around 40 percent
of Spains trade.
As a result there has been an outflow of capital investment
from Spain, with the country experiencing a drop of 50 percent
between 2000 and 2004. Recent casualties include textile plants
that have closed in Valencia under pressure from Chinese imports
and the relocation of some production at Volkswagen-owned SEAT
to Slovakia.
Decline in investment has in turn contributed to an overall
decrease in the productivity of Spanish labour. In 2005 it dropped
by 1.3 percent, the biggest fall of all countries in the OECD.
Spains dual economy is a big concern in ruling
circles. In a recent study for the Real Instituto Elcano think
tank, Sebastian Royo said, The real estate bubble has masked
the Spanish economys lack of competitiveness.... In this
regard, the Spanish economys loss of competitiveness is
a very worrying development. The current account deficit is a
key symptom of Spains loss of competitiveness.
Spains trade deficit stands at 7.6 percent of GDP, the
second highest among industrialised nations. The European Commission
is predicting that it will reach 9.3 percent by 2007, a level
which it says is unsustainable.
To turn around Spains competitiveness analysts have called
for yet more structural reforms. Royo says of Spains membership
of the euro-zone: Contrary to expectations it has not led
to a process of deep economic structural reforms that would have
fostered the development of an economic growth model based on
value-added and productivity.
Financial institutions have also called for a move away from
reliance on temporary employment contracts, which currently affects
one third of the labour forcemore than twice the EU average.
These have been used by Spanish firms as a cost-saving device,
particularly in the construction and service sectors. However,
they are entirely inappropriate in the manufacturing and technology
sector, which requires more long-term training.
While analysts say that a more sustained investment in the
labour force is needed to make Spanish exports competitive, they
are faced with the contradiction that it was the relatively high
cost of labour that chased investment away in the first place.
According to Royo, The industrial relations framework does
not provide the necessary flexibility (either internal or external)
to firms to deploy and organise their labour forces. A central
challenge for Spanish firms and employers is to find a balance
between the reduction of temporary contract levels and the rigidity
of certain contracts.
Rigidities of certain contracts refers to the relatively
better conditions associated with permanent contracts that some
workers enjoy. For the employers it means higher social security
contributions and higher dismissal costs (generally 45 days
pay for every year worked).
The plan was originally to bring these reforms in on an EU-wide
basis through the European constitution. Its failure to be ratified
amid popular opposition, however, has forced the ruling elites
of individual member states to carry out these reforms at a national
level. As Royo put it, The process of economic reforms must
be a domestic process led by domestic actors willing to carry
them out.
Ultimately, the cost of making Spain competitive will be borne
by the Spanish working class, which has seen wages stagnate and
accommodation costs double in real terms during the economic boom.
In his study Royo admitted that successive governments will
face growing resistance from the people likely to be hit hardest
by the reforms.
See Also:
Spain: A decade of economic
boom and stagnant wages
[30 August 2006]
Spain defies European Commission
on energy company sell-off
[26 August 2006]
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