The Spanish government Thursday presented a new package of economic reforms and a stripped-down budget plan for next year amid mounting social and political tension and renewed worries about Spain in financial markets.
Deputy Prime Minister Soraya Saenz de Santamaria called it “a crisis budget designed to exit the crisis”.
The new programme of savings, tax rises and structural reforms will be overseen by an new budget authority.
Saenz de Santamaria said that efforts to close the government’s deficit would focus more on spending cuts than tax rises.
The only areas of spending to increase in 2013 would be pensions, student scholarships and interest payments.
Individual pension payments would increase by 1% next year, the government said, while the overall pension budget would rise by 4%.
Spending cuts would reduce the deficit by 0.77% of GDP in 2013, while revenue adjustments would yield 0.56%.
The government expects the deficit this year to come to 6.3% of GDP, although many analysts expect this target to be overshot.
However, the government said that tax revenues were proving to be higher than budgeted for this year, and were expected to increase by a further 3.8% in 2013.
The deputy prime minister also said that the government would introduce 43 new laws to reform the country’s economy.
It comes amid further protests this week, and growing expectations that Spain will seek a bailout from its eurozone partners.
Thousands of protesters rallied near the Spanish parliament for a second straight night on Wednesday as the government moved to announce a series of economic reforms and a tight budget.
Wednesday’s protests happened as a rough day on the markets again raised the spectre of a full bailout and deeper economic pain.
Demonstrators faced off against riot police on Wednesday in the Plaza de Neptuno, the same area of the capital Madrid where officers beat protesters and fired rubber bullets to disperse them on Tuesday night.
The protesters shouted “Government resign!” and “We are not afraid”.
Spain’s borrowing costs crept back up to danger levels and the stock market plunged on Wednesday, as calls for snap elections by Catalonia, the country’s region seeking autonomy, added to the gloom.
On Friday the government is due to unveil an independent audit of its stricken banks to determine how much capital is needed to reinforce them from further shocks.
The budget and audit “could potentially boost sentiment towards Spain and pave the way for a bailout deal to be agreed”, analysts at Capital Economics said in a note.
“But Spain will still be left with a number of other major problems” in meeting its fiscal targets, securing its banks and fielding pressure from Catalonia, they added.
Before deciding whether to ask for a bailout, Rajoy insists on knowing what conditions European authorities would attach, apprehensive of having economic cuts dictated to him.
But the Wall Street Journal on Wednesday quoted him as saying that if Spain’s borrowing costs were “too high for too long”, then “I can assure you 100 per cent that I would ask for this bailout”.
The economic backdrop was grim, with figures from the Bank of Spain on Wednesday showing economic output sliding fast in the third quarter.
The Madrid stock exchange fell by nearly four per cent in afternoon trade, in line with other European indexes troubled by Spain’s outlook.
The interest rate on Spanish 10-year sovereign debt rose above six per cent, a level considered unsustainable in the long term.
Protesters say the new austerity measures, on top of tens of billions in earlier cuts to lower the deficit and fix Spain’s finances, punish the poor unfairly.
They have staged mass street rallies such as Tuesday night’s, where authorities said 64 people were treated for injuries and 35 arrested.
Mariano Rajoy, Spain’s prime minister, will enact further cutbacks to try to bring down one of the euro zone’s largest public deficits amid falling tax revenues in the recession-hit country.
“We know what we have to do, and since we know it, we’re doing it,” Rajoy said in a speech in New York on Wednesday.
“We also know this entails a lot of sacrifices distributed … evenly throughout the Spanish society,” Rajoy said in an address to the Americas Society.
Rajoy played down Tuesday’s protest at a conference at the Council of the Americas on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly meeting.
“Allow me to recognise from here in New York the majority of Spaniards who did not demonstrate, who do not appear on the front pages of newspapers or open the television news shows,” Rajoy said.
Spain, the eurozone’s fourth largest economy, fell back into recession in the last quarter of 2011, the second recession since the bursting of the country’s property bubble.
The euro fell to a two-week low against the dollar.
Spain is in its second recession in three years and unemployment is near 25%, with youth unemployment far higher.
Source:Thetimesofearth