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Spain comes a step closer to EU/IMF bailout

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Published 29 May 2012

As Spain's ten-year borrowing costs neared danger levels following the nationalisation of Bankia, the country's fourth largest bank, Madrid was given assurances that it could count on external assistance if needed.

Marek Belka, Poland's central bank governor, said on Monday (28 May) that Spain could count on a firewall of international funding if its troubled banks needed further recapitalisation.

Investors are growing increasingly concerned Spain could be forced to seek an international bailout though Spain's prime minister has said there will not be any European rescue for Spanish banks.

"Obviously there exists this so-called firewall both in the EFSF (European Financial Stability Facility) and the IMF that should be a guarantee that Spain can count on financial assistance, on bridge financing from abroad," Belka said at a conference in Lima.

Belka declined to say if Spain would need such assistance.

"Spain is struggling with the typical weaknesses of southern rim euro zone countries but the extent of those problems is much less than those of Greece, and even of other countries there," he said.

Bankia rescue

The country's No. 4 Bank Bankia, asked Spain for €19 billion in government help over the weekend and government sources said the country may prop up Bankia with sovereign bonds. There are also growing concerns about the fiscal health of the country's regional governments.

Investors lacking confidence in Madrid's efforts sent Spain's 10-year bond yields near 7% on Monday (28 May), a level at which Ireland and Portugal were frozen out of capital markets and forced to seek international bailouts.

Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy pinned the blame for the rising borrowing costs on concern about the future of the single currency. He again ruled out seeking outside aid to revive a banking sector laid low by a property boom that has long since bust.

"There are major doubts over the euro zone and that makes the risk premium for some countries very high. That's why it would be a very good idea to deliver a clear message there's no going back for the euro," Rajoy told a news conference on Monday (28 May).

"There will not be any [European] rescue for the Spanish banking system."

Tapping EU bailout fund for banks

Rajoy gave no details of bank recapitalisation plans but for the first time backed calls for the euro zone bailout fund, which will be in place from July, to be able to lend to banks direct.

Asked at a press conference whether he supported possible changes to bailout structures at a euro zone level, Rajoy said: "Many people are in favour of that, and I am as well."

Spain has repeatedly rejected the need for external help to fund the rescue of its troubled banking sector.

Rajoy did not say how much money might be needed to salvage the country's troubled banking system after the nationalisation of its fourth-largest lender Bankia, saying he would wait for the completion of an external audit on the situation.

Spain's central government and regions need to refinance €117.5 billion of debt by the end of the year, while funding a deficit worth €52 billion.

EurActiv.com with Reuters

COMMENTS

  • The biggest reason why the EU is in the terrible constantly unfolding socio-economic disaster is not all to do with inept politicians and unscrupulous bankers with no empathy with society, but a total lack of having a driving economic policy based upon innovation and its exploitation. In this respect one can never get away from the fact that ALL real and ‘New’ wealth is technologically based. When we look at the history of the world, advanced technological concerns have always been at the leading-edge of the wealthiest and most powerful entities in the world. The reason, new technology makes old thinking and established technology redundant over time. The great companies of the world that we presently have are predominantly technologically driven. ‘Apple’ is a prime example of how technology can drive at times a corporate to the very pinnacle of the world’s richest companies. Not that long ago in relative terms, it may have gone bust. Therefore technology turns around the financial fortunes of corporations and creates vast numbers of jobs in the process.

    Therefore the EU’s problems are firmly based in not having an innovative structure that exploits this fundamental building block of economic dynamism. The ‘elites’ in the EU may think that they have but where they are simply deluding themselves and the 750 million Europeans within the EU. Indeed if the European Commission thinks that they have got it so right, why are we in constant stagnant waters when it comes to the global export markets where they decline more than advance year on year?

    What the EU has to do for its survival is to create the pan-European infrastructure that allows innovation and its exploitation to flourish. Presently we have not got this even though the ‘élites’ think that we have. Common sense dictates that we have to have new fundamental thinking first and not research and development first, which the EU leaders and mandarins think is the correct step-wise mechanism - they simply leave out the most important, the fundamental creative stage which is the most vital for our future.

    It is time to save the EU if it wants to be saved. There are differing views on this but exist or not, the successful or dire effects will be on the people of Europe, not the bureaucrats who decide our futures. Therefore not until we have a totally integrated system that is working throughout the whole of the EU when it comes to innovation, we shall continue in decline. Why cannot the powers that be see the reasoning in establishing a pan-EU system of creative incubators, for that is where the long-term prosperity of Europeans resides (the most creative people in the world through international studies)? But possibly this is because they do not understand. The reason, they never wish to think-out-of-the-box and to listen to those who just might have the solutions. Elitism I am afraid will be the death of us economically and socially over time !!!

    Dr David Hill
    Chief Executive
    World Innovation Foundation

    By :
    Dr David Hill - World Innovation Foundation
    - Posted on :
    30/05/2012
Italy's PM Monti, Germany's Chancellor Merkel, Spain's Prime Minister Rajoy and France's President Hollande attend an informal EU leaders summit in Brussels on 23 May
Background: 

Spain has previously denied it would need an international bailout, following Greece, Ireland and Portugal.

Spain’s budget deficit and growing debt has worried investors, but senior EU officials said Brussels was pushing the Spanish government to implement tough reforms and announced and that there were no bailout talks, despite a sharp sell-off in Spanish bonds.

Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy announced new spending in April in a bid to meet a stringent EU deficit limit. The EU welcomed the savings but many analysts fear they will lead to a deeper recession, a scenario that Spain’s Central Bank Governor Miguel Ángel Fernández Ordóñez said could mean banks will need more capital.

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