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Economy of Spain

Economy of Spain
CurrencyEuro (EUR, €)
Calendar year
Trade organisations
EU, WTO and OECD
Country group
Statistics
PopulationIncrease 48,345,223[3]
GDP
GDP rank
GDP growth
  • Increase 5.5% (2022)[5]
  • Increase 2.5% (2023f)[5]
  • Increase 2.0% (2024f)[5]
GDP per capita
  • Increase $33,090 (nominal; 2023)[4]
  • Increase $50,471 (PPP; 2023)[4]
GDP per capita rank
GDP by sector
Positive decrease 1.9% (June 2023)[7]
Population below poverty line
  • Positive decrease 20.4% at risk of poverty or social exclusion (Eurostat, 2022)[8]
Positive decrease 32.0 medium (2020, Eurostat)[9]
Labour force
  • Increase 23,312,310 (2021)[12]
  • Increase 67.0% employment rate (2018)[13]
Labour force by occupation
  • agriculture: 4.2%
  • industry: 24.0%
  • services: 71.7%
  • (2009)[14]
Unemployment
  • Positive decrease 11.6% (June 2023)[15]
  • Positive decrease 27.9% youth unemployment (15 to 24 year-olds; June 2023)[16]
Average gross salary
€2,471 per month
€1,910 per month
Main industries
[17][18]
Steady 30th (very easy, 2020)[19]
External
ExportsIncrease $533.8 billion (2019 est.)[14]
Export goods
Machinery, motor vehicles; foodstuffs, pharmaceuticals, medicines, other consumer goods
Main export partners
ImportsIncrease $463.1 billion (2019 est.)[14]
Import goods
Fuels, chemicals, semi-finished goods, foodstuffs, consumer goods, machinery and equipment, measuring and medical control instruments
Main import partners
FDI stock
  • Increase $824.8 billion (31 December 2017 est.)[14]
  • Increase Abroad: $776.8 billion (31 December 2017 est.)[14]
Increase $29.6 billion (2019 est.)[14]
Negative increase $2.094 trillion (31 December 2017 est.)[14]
Public finances
  • Positive decrease 116.1% of GDP (Q2 2022)[20]
  • Negative increase €1.475 trillion (Q2 2022)[21]
  • €35.2 billion deficit (2019)[22]
  • −2.8% of GDP (2019)[22]
Revenues39.1% of GDP (2019)[22]
Expenses41.9% of GDP (2019)[22]
Increase $79.36 billion (November 2020 est.)[14]

All values, unless otherwise stated, are in US dollars.

The economy of Spain is a highly developed social market economy.[26] It’s the world's 15th largest by nominal GDP and the sixth-largest in Europe. Spain is a member of the European Union and the eurozone, as well as the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development and the World Trade Organization. In 2021, Spain was the twentieth-largest exporter in the world and the sixteenth-largest importer. Spain is listed 27th in the United Nations Human Development Index and 37th in GDP per capita by the World Bank. Some of the main areas of economic activity are the automotive industry, medical technology, chemicals, shipbuilding, tourism and the textile industry.

Following the financial crisis of 2007–2008, the Spanish economy plunged into recession, entering a cycle of negative macroeconomic performance. Compared to the EU's and US's average, the Spanish economy entered recession later (the economy was still growing by 2008) but it stayed there longer. The economic boom of the 2000s was reversed, leaving over a quarter of Spain's workforce unemployed by 2012. In aggregated terms, the Spanish GDP contracted by almost 9% during the 2009–2013 period.[27] The economic situation started improving by 2013–2014. By then, Spain managed to reverse the record trade deficit which had built up during the boom years.[28] It attained a trade surplus in 2013, after three decades of running a trade deficit.[28] The surplus kept strengthening during 2014 and 2015.[29]

In 2015, the Spanish GDP grew by 3.2%: a rate not seen since 2007 and the last year before the world financial crisis struck.[30] This growth rate was the highest among the larger EU economies that year.[31] In just two years (2014–2015), the Spanish economy recovered 85% of the GDP lost during the 2009–2013 recession.[32] This success led some international analysts to refer to Spain's current recovery as "the showcase for structural reform efforts".[33] Strong GDP growth was registered also in 2016, with the country growing twice as fast as the eurozone average.[34] In this regard, the Spanish economy was forecast to remain the best-performing major economy in the eurozone in 2017.[35] Spain's unemployment rate fell substantially from 2013 to 2017. The real unemployment rate is much lower since there is an estimation of millions of people working in the grey market, people who count as unemployed or inactive yet still perform jobs.[36] Although estimates of the hidden economy vary, the real Spanish GDP may be around 20% bigger as it’s assumed the underground economy of Spain moves annually 190 billion Euros (US$224 billion).[37] Among high income European countries, only Italy and Greece are believed to have larger underground economies than Spain. Thus Spain may have higher purchasing power as well as a smaller gini coefficient[38] than shown in official numbers. In 2012, the Spanish government officially requested a credit from the European Stability Mechanism to restructure its banking sector in the face of a financial crisis.[39] The ESM approved up to €100 billion in assistance although, in the end, Spain only drew €41.3 billion. The ESM programme for Spain ended with the full repayment of the credit drawn 18 months later.[40]

The 2020 pandemic hit the Spanish economy with more intensity than other countries, as tourism accounts for 5% of its GDP and that sector of the economy was halted worldwide. In the first quarter of 2023 it was announced that it had fully recovered from the downturn, its GDP reaching pre-pandemic levels.[41]

In 2023, Spain’s economy is expected to grow by 2.2% , slightly beating a preliminary estimate and bucking a downturn in the euro zone as a whole.[42]

History

Real GDP per capita development Spain

During the first decades of the twentieth century, Spain experienced an accelerated growth of its industrial labor force and urban population; the economy became less agrarian as the process of urbanization spread after 1910. The largest sector was still agriculture but saw declines, along with fishery, relative to the share of active population engaged in the activity. The fastest growing sector at that time was services.[43]

When Spain joined the EEC in 1986 its GDP per capita was about 72% of the average of its members.[44]

At the second half of the 1990s, the conservative government of former prime minister Jose María Aznar had worked successfully to gain admission to the group of countries joining the euro in 1999. By the mid-1990s the economy had commenced the growth that had been disrupted by the global recession of the early 1990s. The strong economic growth helped the government to reduce the government debt as a percentage of GDP and Spain's high unemployment rate began to steadily decline. With the government budget in balance and inflation under control Spain was admitted into the Eurozone in 1999. By 2007, Spain had achieved a GDP per capita of 105% of European Union's average due to its own economic development and the EU enlargements to 28 members, which placed it slightly ahead of Italy (103%). Three regions were included in the leading EU group exceeding 125% of the GDP per capita average level: the Basque Country , Madrid, and Navarre.[45] According to calculations by the German newspaper Die Welt in 2008, Spain's economy had been on course to overtake countries like Germany in per capita income by 2011.[46] in October 2006, Unemployment stood at 7.6% which compared favorably to many other European countries, and especially with the early 1990s when it stood at over 20%. In the past, Spain's economy had included high inflation [47] and it has always had a large underground economy.[48]

The turn to growth during the 1997-2007 period produced a real estate bubble fed by historically low interest rates, massive rates of foreign investment (during that period Spain had become a favorite of other European investment banks) and an immense surge in immigration. At its peak in 2007, construction had expanded to 15% of the total gross domestic product (GDP) of the country and 12% of total employment. During that time Spain capital inflows –including short term speculative investment– financed a large trade deficit.[44]

The downside of the real estate boom was a corresponding rise in the levels of private debt, both of households and of businesses; as prospective homeowners had struggled to meet asking prices, the average level of household debt tripled in less than a decade. This placed especially great pressure upon lower to middle income groups; by 2005 the median ratio of indebtedness to income had grown to 125%, due primarily to expensive boom time mortgages that now often exceed the value of the property.[49]

Noticeable progress continued until early 2008, when the global financial crisis burst Spain's property bubble.[50]

A European Commission forecast had predicted Spain would enter the world's late 2000s recession by the end of 2008.[51] At the time, Spain's Economy Minister was quoted saying, "Spain is facing its deepest recession in half a century".[52] Spain's government forecast the unemployment rate would rise to 16% in 2009. The ESADE business school predicted 20%.[53] By 2017, Spain's GDP per capita had fallen back to 95% of the European Union's average.[44]

Economic and financial crisis, 2008-2012

Spain had continued on the path of economic growth when the ruling party changed in 2004, maintaining robust GDP growth during the first term of prime minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, even though some problems in the Spanish economy were becoming evident. According to the Financial Times, Spain's rapidly growing trade deficit had reached 10% of the country's GDP by the summer of 2008,[54] the "loss of competitiveness against its main trading partners" and, also, as a part of the latter, an inflation rate which had been traditionally higher than the one of its European partners, back then especially affected by house price increases of 150% from 1998 and a growing family indebtedness (115%) chiefly related to the Spanish Real Estate boom and rocketing oil prices.[55]

In April 2008, the Spanish government official GDP growth forecast was 2.3% but was revised down by the Spanish Ministry of Economy to 1.6.[56] Studies by most independent forecasters estimated that the rate had actually dropped to 0.8% instead,[57] below the strong 3% plus GDP annual growth rates during the 1997–2007 decade. During the third quarter of 2008 the national GDP contracted for the first time in 15 years. In February 2009, it was confirmed that Spain, along other European economies, had officially entered recession.[58]

In July 2009, the IMF worsened the estimates for Spain's 2009 contraction, to minus 4% of GDP for the year (close to the European average of minus 4.6%.) It estimated a further 0.8% contraction of the Spanish economy for 2010.[59] In 2011, the deficit reached a high of 8.5%. For 2016 the deficit objective of the government was around 4%, falling to 2.9% for 2017. The European Commission has demanded 3.9% for 2016 and 2.5% for 2017.[60]

Property boom and bust, 2003–2014

The adoption of the Euro in 2002 had driven down long-term interest rates, prompting a surge in mortgage lending that jumped more than fourfold from 2000 to its 2010 apex.[61] The growth in the Spanish property market, which had begun in 1997, accelerated and within a few years had developed into a property bubble, financed largely by regional banks, known as "Cajas", which are regional savings banks under the oversight of regional governments, and fed by the historically low interest rates and a massive growth of immigration. Fueling this trend, the Spanish economy was being credited for having avoided the virtual zero growth rate of some of its largest partners in the EU in the months previous to the global Great Recession.[62]

Over the five years ending 2005, Spain's economy had created more than half of all the new jobs in the European Union .[63][64] At the top of its property boom, Spain was building more houses than Germany, France and the U.K. combined.[61] Home prices soared by 71% between 2003 and 2008, in tandem with the credit explosion.[61]

The bubble imploded in 2008, causing the collapse of Spain's large property related and construction sectors, causing mass layoffs, and a collapsing domestic demand for goods and services. Unemployment shot up.

At first, Spain's banks and financial services avoided the early crisis of their international counterparts. However, as the recession deepened and property prices slid, the growing bad debts of the smaller regional savings banks, the "cajas", forced the intervention of Spain's central bank and government through a stabilization and consolidation program, taking over or consolidating regional "cajas" and finally receiving a bank bailout from the European Central Bank in 2012 aimed specifically for the banking business and "cajas" in particular.[65][66][67]

Following the 2008 peak, home prices plunged by 31%, before bottoming out in late 2014.[61]

Euro debt crisis, 2010-2012

Spain bond rates during Spanish financial crisis
  20 year bond
  10 year bond
  2 year bond
  3 month bond

In the first weeks of 2010, renewed anxiety about the excessive levels of debt in some EU countries and, more generally, about the health of the euro has spread from Ireland and Greece to Portugal, and to a lesser extent in Spain.

Spain is part of a monetary union, the Eurozone (dark blue), and of the EU single market.

Many economists recommended a battery of policies to control the surging public debt caused by the recessionary collapse of tax revenues, combining drastic austerity measures with higher taxes. Some senior German policy makers went as far as to say that emergency bailouts should include harsh penalties to EU aid recipients such as Greece.[68] It has been noted that the Spanish government budget was in surplus in the years immediately before the global financial crisis and that its debt was not considered excessive.

At the beginning of 2010, Spain's public debt as a percentage of GDP was still less than those of Britain, France or Germany. However, commentators pointed out that Spain's recovery was fragile, that the public debt was growing quickly, that troubled regional banks may need large bailouts, growth prospects were poor and therefore limiting revenue and that the central government has limited control over the spending of the regional governments. Under the structure of shared governmental responsibilities that has evolved since 1975, much responsibility for spending had been given back to the regions. The central government found itself in the difficult position of trying to gain support for unpopular spending cuts from the recalcitrant regional governments.[69]

On 23 May 2010, the government announced further austerity measures, consolidating the ambitious plans announced in January.[70]

As of September 2011, Spanish banks hold a record high of €142 billion of Spanish national bonds. December 2011 bond auctions are "very likely to be covered" according to JPMorgan Chase.[71]

Till Q2 2012, Spanish banks were allowed to report real estate related assets in higher non-market price by regulators. Investors who bought into such banks must be aware. Spanish houses cannot be sold at land book value after being vacant over a period of years.[citation needed]

Employment crisis (2008 - present)

Torres de la Casería de Ossio apartment buildings in San Fernando completed in 2007. The collapse of the Spanish construction boom was a major contributor to the record unemployment.[72]

After having completed large improvements over the second half of the 1990s and during the 2000s, Spain attained in 2007 its record low unemployment rate, at about 8%,[73] with a few regions on the brink of full employment. Then Spain suffered a severe setback from October 2008, when it saw its unemployment rate surge to 1996 levels. During the period October 2007 – October 2008 the unemployment surge exceeded that of past economic crises, including that of 1993. In particular, during the month of October 2008, Spain suffered its worst unemployment rise ever recorded.[74][75] Even though the sheer size of Spain's underground economy masks to some extent the real situation, employment has been a long term weakness of the Spanish economy. By 2014 the structural unemployment rate was estimated at 18%.[76] By July 2009, it had shed 1.2 million jobs in one year.[77] The oversized building and housing related industries were contributing greatly to the rising unemployment numbers.[72] From 2009 thousands of established immigrants began to leave, although some did maintain residency in Spain due to poor conditions in their country of origin.[78] In all, by early 2013 Spain reached an unprecedented unemployment record at about 27%.[73]

In May 2012 a radical labor reform made for a more flexible labor market, facilitating layoffs with a view to enhancing corporate's confidence.[79]

Youth crisis

During the early 1990s, Spain experienced a period of economic crisis as a result of a larger, Europe-wide economic episode that led to a rise in unemployment rates. Many young adults in Spain found themselves trapped in a cycle of temporary jobs, which resulted in the creation of a secondary class of workers through reduced wages, job stability and advancement opportunities.[80] As a result, many Spaniards, predominantly unmarried young adults, emigrated to other countries in order to pursue job opportunities and raise their standard of life,[81] which left only a small amount of young adults living below the poverty line in Spain.[82] Spain experienced another economic crisis during the 2000s, which also prompted a rise in Spanish citizens emigrating to neighboring countries with more job stability and better economic standings.[83]

Youth unemployment remains a concern in Spain, prompting suggestions of labor market programs and job-search assistance like matching youth skills with businesses. This would improve Spain's weakened youth labor market, and their school to work transition as youth have found it difficult to find long-term employment.[84]

Employment recovery

The labor market reform started a trend of setting successive positive employment records. By the second quarter of 2014, the Spanish economy had reversed its negative trend and started creating jobs for the first time since 2008.[79] The second quarter reversal had been sudden and extraordinary considering that the number of jobs created set an absolute positive record since such quarterly employment statistics are maintained in 1964.[85] Labor reform did seem to play an important role; one piece of evidence cited was that Spain had started creating jobs at lower rates of GDP growth than before: in previous cycles, employment rose when growth hit 2%, this time the gain came during a year when GDP had expanded by just 1.2%.[76]

Greater than expected GDP growth paved the way for further declines in the unemployment rate. Since 2014 Spain has been registering steady annual fall in the official jobless figure. During 2016, unemployment in Spain experienced the steepest fall on record to date.[34] By the end of that year, Spain had recovered 1.7m of the more than 3.5m jobs lost over the course of the recession.[34] By Q4 2016 Spanish unemployment had fallen to 18.6%, the lowest rate in seven years.[86] In April 2017 the country recorded its biggest drop in jobless claimants for a single month in the entire historical series to date.[87] Job creation kept speeding up; in this regard, May 2017 was the best May to date in terms of social security affiliations since this record was started in 2001 and during that month jobless claims fell to the lowest figure since June 2009.[88]

In the second quarter 2017, unemployment fell to 17%, below 4 million for the first time since 2008,[89] with the country experiencing its steepest quarterly decline in unemployment on record to date (series starts in 1964).[90] In 2018, at 14.6% the unemployment rate did not exceed the 15% threshold for the first time since 2008 when the crisis began.[91]

As of 2017, trade unions, left, and center-left parties have criticized and wanted the labor reform to be revoked, on grounds that it tilts the balance of power too far towards employers.[34] Besides, most new contracts are temporary.[88]

In 2019, Pedro Sánchez's socialist government increased the minimum wage by 22% in an attempt to boost hiring and encourage spending. Members of the opposition argued that this increase from €858 to €1050 a month would negatively affect 1.2 million workers due to their employers being unable to cover the aforementioned raise.[92]

Reduction of European Union funds

Capital contributions from the EU, which had contributed significantly to the economic empowerment of Spain since joining the EEC, have decreased considerably since 1990 due to the economic standardization in relation to other countries and the effects of the EU's enlargement. On the one hand, agricultural funds from the Common Agricultural Policy of the European Union (CAP) are now spread across more countries. On the other hand, with 2004's and 2007's enlargement of the European Union, less developed countries joined the EU, lowering the average income per capita (or GDP per capita), so that Spanish regions which were considered to be relatively less developed, became in the European average or even above it. Spain has gradually become a net contributor of funds for less developed countries of the Union as opposed to receiving funds.[93]

Economic recovery (2014–2020)

During the economic downturn, Spain significantly reduced imports, increased exports and kept attracting growing numbers of tourists; as a result, after three decades of running a trade deficit the country attained in 2013 a trade surplus[28] which has strengthened during 2014 and 2015.[29]

With a 3.2% increase in 2015, the Spanish GDP growth was the highest among larger EU economies that year.[31] In just two years (2014–2015) the Spanish economy had recovered 85% of the GDP lost during the 2009-2013 recession,[32] which got some international analysts to refer to Spain's current recovery as "the showcase for structural reform efforts".[33]

By Q2 2016 the Spanish economy had been accumulating 12 consecutive quarters of growth, managing to consistently outperform the rest of the Euro area.[94] Such growth had continued, with the Spanish economy outperforming expectations and growing 3.2 per cent in 2016, almost twice as fast as the Euro zone average.[95][34] One of the main drivers of economic recovery was international trade, in turn sparked by dramatic gains in labor productivity.[96] Exports have shot up, from around 25% (2008) to 33% of GDP (2016) on the back of an internal devaluation (the country's wage bill halved in the 2008-2016 period), a search for new markets and a recent mild recovery of the European economy.[95]

The Spanish economy was forecast to remain the best-performing major economy in the Euro zone in 2017[35] and in the second quarter of 2017 Spain had recovered all the GDP lost during the economic crisis, exceeding for the first time the output level that had been reached in 2008.[96]

By 2017, following several months of prices picking up, homeowners who had been renting during the economic slump had started to put their properties back on the sales market.[97] In this regard, home sales are expected to return in 2017 to pre-crisis (2008) level.[98] In all, the Spanish real estate market was experiencing a new boom, this time in the rental sector.[97] Out of 50 provinces and compared to May 2007, the National Statistics Institute has recorded higher rent levels in 48 provinces, with the 10 most populated accumulating rent inflation between 5% and 15% since 2007.[97] The phenomenon is most visible in big cities such as Barcelona or Madrid, which are seeing new record average prices, partially fueled by short-term rentals to tourists.[97]

Data

The following table shows the main economic indicators in 1980–2021 (plus IMF estimates for 2022–2027 in italics). Inflation below 5% is in green.[99]

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Year GDP

(in Bil. US$PPP)

GDP per capita

(in US$ PPP)

GDP

(in Bil. US$nominal)

GDP per capita

(in US$ nominal)

GDP growth

(real)

Inflation rate

(in Percent)

Unemployment

(in Percent)

Government debt

(in % of GDP)

1980 294.4 7,819.0 230.8 6,128.0 Increase1.2% Negative increase15.6% 11.0% 16.6%
1981 Increase321.0 Increase8,443.6 Decrease204.6 Decrease5,381.9 Decrease-0.4% Negative increase14.5% Negative increase13.8% Negative increase20.0%
1982 Increase345.0 Increase9,028.1 Decrease197.6 Decrease5,171.5 Increase1.2% Negative increase14.4% Negative increase15.8% Negative increase25.1%
1983 Increase364.5 Increase9,492.1 Decrease172.9 Decrease4,501.8 Increase1.7% Negative increase12.2% Negative increase17.2% Negative increase30.4%
1984 Increase384.0 Increase9,962.0 Decrease172.4 Decrease4,471.7 Increase1.7% Negative increase11.3% Negative increase19.9% Negative increase37.1%
1985 Increase405.5 Increase10,482.7 Increase181.6 Increase4,694.8 Increase2.4% Negative increase8.8% Negative increase21.3% Negative increase42.1%
1986 Increase427.9 Increase11,028.9 Increase251.3 Increase6,477.3 Increase3.4% Negative increase8.8% Positive decrease20.9% Negative increase43.3%
1987 Increase463.5 Increase11,919.1 Increase318.4 Increase8,187.3 Increase5.7% Negative increase5.2% Positive decrease20.2% Positive decrease43.1%
1988 Increase505.2 Increase12,963.9 Increase374.1 Increase9,598.7 Increase5.3% Increase4.8% Positive decrease19.2% Positive decrease39.6%
1989 Increase551.3 Increase14,118.3 Increase412.6 Increase10,566.1 Increase5.0% Negative increase6.8% Positive decrease17.2% Negative increase41.0%
1990 Increase593.9 Increase15,183.5 Increase535.7 Increase13,693.6 Increase3.8% Negative increase6.7% Positive decrease16.2% Negative increase42.5%
1991 Increase629.5 Increase16,050.8 Increase576.4 Increase14,697.5 Increase2.5% Negative increase5.9% Negative increase16.3% Negative increase43.1%
1992 Increase649.3 Increase16,501.7 Increase630.1 Increase16,013.2 Increase0.9% Negative increase7.1% Negative increase18.4% Negative increase45.4%
1993 Increase656.0 Increase16,619.1 Decrease529.3 Decrease13,409.7 Decrease-1.3% Increase4.6% Negative increase22.6% Negative increase56.2%
1994 Increase685.7 Increase17,323.7 Increase531.1 Increase13,419.6 Increase2.3% Increase4.7% Negative increase24.1% Negative increase58.7%
1995 Increase728.9 Increase18,373.0 Increase613.9 Increase15,475.6 Increase4.1% Increase4.7% Positive decrease22.9% Negative increase63.4%
1996 Increase760.2 Increase19,118.2 Increase640.0 Increase16,095.8 Increase2.4% Increase3.6% Positive decrease22.1% Negative increase67.5%
1997 Increase803.2 Increase20,146.4 Decrease589.4 Decrease14,782.9 Increase3.9% Increase1.9% Positive decrease20.6% Positive decrease66.2%
1998 Increase848.5 Increase21,209.3 Increase618.4 Increase15,457.1 Increase4.5% Increase1.8% Positive decrease18.6% Positive decrease64.2%
1999 Increase901.3 Increase22,413.0 Increase636.0 Increase15,814.2 Increase4.7%