Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy unveiled the austerity package on
Wednesday.
Rajoy reminded parliament that Spain is going through one of its worst recessions in history, with unemployment at 24.4 percent and economic activity set to decline by 1.7 percent this year.
Spanish government announced additional austerity measures to slash its fiscal deficit by about 80 billion dollars. They include further spending cuts and an increase of the sales tax.Move calls for a three percentage point increase in the value-added tax to 21 percent.The spending cuts include reducing the number of local assembly members, as well as decreasing unemployment allowances and special benefits for civil servants.Rajoy said the package will reduce the country's deficit by 65 billion euros, or about 80 billion dollars, by 2014. He said the steps are necessary because Spain's public spending far exceeds revenues.
The measures follow a recent agreement on a European Union bailout of the country's ailing banks.
Eurozone finance ministers have agreed to offer 30 billion euros, or about 37 billion dollars, to Spain. They also agreed to extend by one year to 2014 the deadline to achieve the country's deficit reduction target. Europe Union had demanded a VAT rise along with a series of other tough measures as it gave Spain an extra year to bring its bulging public deficit back to agreed limits.
The interest rate which Spain has to pay to borrow for 10 years eased fractionally as the measures were announced but remained at a crippling level of 6.743 percent from 6.773 percent on Tuesday.
The Key measures announced by Rajoy:
VAT goes up to 21 percent from 18 percent, and the reduced rate on some products such as food goes up to 10 percent from 8 percent. A special 4-percent rate on basic needs such as bread is untouched.
Public administration is to be reformed to save 3.5 billion euros, including a drastic cut in the number of publicly owned enterprises and a 30-percent cut in the number of local councillors.
For the newly unemployed, benefits will be cut after six months from 70 percent of basic salary to 50 percent. Previously, the benefit had been reduced after six months to 60 percent of salary.
Certain bonuses paid to top civil servants will be cut, and the Christmas bonuses for top public officials will be eliminated.
In Brussels, eurozone ministers agreed the previous day to provide a first slice of 30 billion euros for Spain's banks this month, with 100 billion euros potentially available in all.
The 17-nation single currency bloc agreed, also, to extend a deadline for Spain to cut its public deficit to the European Union's limit of 3.0 percent of gross domestic product by one year to 2014.
As Spain struggles with a recession, the bloc agreed to relax the deficit target to 6.3 percent of GDP from 5.3 percent in 2012; to 4.5 percent from 3.0 percent in 2013 and then impose a 2.8-percent goal for 2014.
In return, Madrid had to enact further austerity. It had already approved in March a budget for 2012 that squeezed out 27 billion euros in spending cuts and tax increases.
"Compared to previous packages, the measures this time seem relatively straightforward to implement and will be hard to evade for tax payers," said Christian Schulz, senior economist.
Rajoy reminded parliament that Spain is going through one of its worst recessions in history, with unemployment at 24.4 percent and economic activity set to decline by 1.7 percent this year.
Spanish government announced additional austerity measures to slash its fiscal deficit by about 80 billion dollars. They include further spending cuts and an increase of the sales tax.Move calls for a three percentage point increase in the value-added tax to 21 percent.The spending cuts include reducing the number of local assembly members, as well as decreasing unemployment allowances and special benefits for civil servants.Rajoy said the package will reduce the country's deficit by 65 billion euros, or about 80 billion dollars, by 2014. He said the steps are necessary because Spain's public spending far exceeds revenues.
The measures follow a recent agreement on a European Union bailout of the country's ailing banks.
Eurozone finance ministers have agreed to offer 30 billion euros, or about 37 billion dollars, to Spain. They also agreed to extend by one year to 2014 the deadline to achieve the country's deficit reduction target. Europe Union had demanded a VAT rise along with a series of other tough measures as it gave Spain an extra year to bring its bulging public deficit back to agreed limits.
The interest rate which Spain has to pay to borrow for 10 years eased fractionally as the measures were announced but remained at a crippling level of 6.743 percent from 6.773 percent on Tuesday.
The Key measures announced by Rajoy:
VAT goes up to 21 percent from 18 percent, and the reduced rate on some products such as food goes up to 10 percent from 8 percent. A special 4-percent rate on basic needs such as bread is untouched.
Public administration is to be reformed to save 3.5 billion euros, including a drastic cut in the number of publicly owned enterprises and a 30-percent cut in the number of local councillors.
For the newly unemployed, benefits will be cut after six months from 70 percent of basic salary to 50 percent. Previously, the benefit had been reduced after six months to 60 percent of salary.
Certain bonuses paid to top civil servants will be cut, and the Christmas bonuses for top public officials will be eliminated.
In Brussels, eurozone ministers agreed the previous day to provide a first slice of 30 billion euros for Spain's banks this month, with 100 billion euros potentially available in all.
The 17-nation single currency bloc agreed, also, to extend a deadline for Spain to cut its public deficit to the European Union's limit of 3.0 percent of gross domestic product by one year to 2014.
As Spain struggles with a recession, the bloc agreed to relax the deficit target to 6.3 percent of GDP from 5.3 percent in 2012; to 4.5 percent from 3.0 percent in 2013 and then impose a 2.8-percent goal for 2014.
In return, Madrid had to enact further austerity. It had already approved in March a budget for 2012 that squeezed out 27 billion euros in spending cuts and tax increases.
"Compared to previous packages, the measures this time seem relatively straightforward to implement and will be hard to evade for tax payers," said Christian Schulz, senior economist.
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