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View Full Version : Spain unveils deep budget cuts amid EU economic fears



KurtFF8
12th May 2010, 17:31
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/10109275.stm



Spain's PM has outlined a plan to tackle the country's budget crisis, amid concerns that problems afflicting Greece may spread across the eurozone.
Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero announced a 5% cut to public sector salaries, as well as reductions to pensions and regional government funding.
He said the plan would save about 15bn euros ($19bn; £12.5bn) over two years.
At the weekend Spain said it wanted to drastically reduce its budget deficit, which currently stands at 11% of GDP.
The aim of the new package is to trim this deficit to 6% of GDP in 2011.
In his speech to parliament, Mr Zapatero revealed other details of the plan. Automatic increases in pensions will be suspended from 2011 and funding for regional governments cut.
"We aim to cut civil service wages by an average of 5% in 2010 and freeze them in 2011," he added.
He said his own salary and those of senior cabinet members would be cut by 15%.
SPANISH COST-CUTTING PLAN

Continue reading the main story (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/10109275.stm#skip_feature_02)

5% average pay cut for public workers in 2010
Payout scrapped to parents for birth of children
Automatic inflation-adjustments for pensions suspended
Funding to regions cut by 1.2bn euros

Your reaction - Spanish cuts
Mr Zapatero said he wanted "to contribute, with our financial stability, to the financial stability of the eurozone".
The cabinet is to vote on the new proposals later this week.
The BBC's Sarah Rainsford in Madrid says Mr Zapatero approved an austerity package in January but that since then little has happened.
Our correspondent says Mr Zapatero had shied away from really painful measures.
But Madrid is now under pressure from the European Commission to deliver.
EU jitters The European Union has been anxious to see more fragile European economies including Spain, Portugal and Greece impose tougher austerity measures.
On Sunday it approved a 750bn-euro rescue package to prop up European economies struggling with large debts.
Many Spaniards fear the effect the cuts will have on the economy, which has already contracted sharply, and where the unemployment rate exceeds 20% - twice the eurozone average.
Mr Zapatero was speaking as government statistics showed Spain had moved out of recession in the first quarter of this year, with growth of 0.1%.
On Tuesday US President Barack Obama called Mr Zapatero, urging him to take "resolute action".
The White House said Mr Obama was actively engaged in lessening the global impact of Europe's debt crisis.


This will be interesting, along with Portugal and the rest. Can Germany's economy help them out too? We'll see

pranabjyoti
12th May 2010, 17:44
Another Greece in the making. Probably these are the symptoms of "beginning of the end".

Jolly Red Giant
12th May 2010, 17:49
The Irish government today announced that it plans to cut a further €3billion this year on top of the €4billion in cuts last year.

In terms of the size of the cuts compared to GDP - the proposed Irish cuts this year are twice the size of the proposed cuts in Spain.

pranabjyoti
13th May 2010, 16:50
The Irish government today announced that it plans to cut a further €3billion this year on top of the €4billion in cuts last year.

In terms of the size of the cuts compared to GDP - the proposed Irish cuts this year are twice the size of the proposed cuts in Spain.
Volcanoes are fuming. What will be the possible time of eruption?

DenisDenis
14th May 2010, 21:00
where does germany keep getting all that money from? I doubt they would be able to help AND Greece AND spain and portugal. I bet over time germany itself would have to impose austerity measures in their own country if this keeps on going...

Ligeia
14th May 2010, 22:19
I bet over time germany itself would have to impose austerity measures in their own country if this keeps on going...
There have already been a lot of cuts in social services (I've never seen so many homeless people in Germany... and empty stores), I think the german government has already planned more for 2011 when the debt-brake (Schuldenbremse) sets on. The large cuts in the social system were made due to raising competitiveness in the EU(keeping export-rates high), and one of the reasons why other European countries have those problems now. But they've planned more of those kind of austerity measures for the population in Germany.