November 15, 2024

Spain to Reinstate Wealth Tax It Dropped 3 Years Ago

MADRID — The Spanish government plans to reintroduce on Friday a wealth tax that it scrapped just three years ago as it scrambles for ways to reduce the budget deficit and avoid becoming the next victim in the European sovereign debt crisis.

Elena Salgado, the finance minister, explained the tax shortly after Spain completed a successful bond sale on Thursday. She estimated that the tax could yield about 1.08 billion euros (about $1.5 billion) in additional revenue from some 160,000 of Spain’s richest taxpayers, those with more than 700,000 euros in declared assets.

In 2007, the last year that the wealth tax was collected, revenue from the wealth tax reached 2.12 billion euros, after more than 900,000 people were charged 0.2 percent to 2.5 percent of their declared assets.

The Spanish government removed the tax in April 2008, shortly after José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero was re-elected as prime minister. Its reintroduction is likely to be the last legislative measure taken by the Socialist government before a general election on Nov. 20.

Opinion polls indicate that Mariano Rajoy, leader of the main center-right opposition Popular Party, will defeat the Socialist candidate, Alfredo Pérez Rubalcaba, and replace Mr. Zapatero as prime minister.

As it fights to regain the confidence of financial markets, Mr. Zapatero’s government has pledged to lower the budget deficit to 6 percent of gross domestic product this year, from 9.2 percent last year.

However, that target — still double the maximum that countries in the euro zone are supposed to meet — was set on the assumption that the economy would grow 1.3 percent this year. The most recent data suggests that growth will in fact fall short of 1 percent for the full year.

Even though the revived wealth tax will be more narrowly focused than the previous one, the plan has added to tensions over fiscal strategy between the federal government and regional governments that will be collecting the wealth tax on behalf of Madrid. Economists have also questioned the benefit of such a narrow tax — it will affect about 0.7 percent of Spanish taxpayers — at a time when the euro crisis is deepening.

Some regional governments controlled by the Popular Party have already declared their opposition to collecting what they consider to be a misguided wealth tax. Mr. Rajoy, however, has refused to say whether he would abolish such a tax if elected in November.

Most regional governments are expected to fall short of their budget deficit targets this year; only eight of the country’s 17 regional governments met last year’s target. Fitch, the credit rating agency, lowered the ratings of five regions this week, warning that “considerable efforts” were still required “in the area of cost control.”

On Thursday, Spain sold 3.95 billion euros of bonds maturing in 2019 and 2020, just short of its target of 4 billion euros. The yields remained near record highs. The bond due Oct. 31, 2020, was sold at an average yield of 5.16 percent, compared with 5.2 percent when it was last sold on Feb. 17. That was also the level at which it was trading on the secondary market before the auction.

The auction attracted twice the number of bids accepted, a level of demand that “compared favorably to the last two Spanish auctions,” said Chiara Cremonesi, a fixed-income strategist at UniCredit. “Taking into consideration the current environment, the auction result was not too bad over all.”

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/16/business/global/spain-seeking-new-revenue-to-reintroduce-wealth-tax.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Spanish Leaders Back Constitutional Amendment to Limit Debt

The measure is designed to calm markets that have been concerned about Spain’s ability to stick to its budgetary targets, particularly because of excessive spending by regional authorities.

Having secured the backing of Mariano Rajoy, the leader of the Popular Party, the main center-right opposition, Mr. Zapatero hopes lawmakers will vote on an amendment in the coming month. It could be one of the final legislative changes introduced by his government before a general election on Nov. 20.

Mr. Zapatero has been governing without a parliamentary majority, while Mr. Rajoy’s party is ahead in opinion polls, having won in regional and municipal elections last May.

During a specially convened session of Parliament, Mr. Zapatero’s government also won backing for further budgetary measures designed to yield almost €5 billion, or $7 billion, in additional revenue this year. The revenue will be almost evenly split between corporate tax payments, which will be brought forward, and a reduction in state health spending by promoting the use of generic drugs.

Spanish lawmakers, recalled early from their summer vacations, also signed off on a proposed cut in value-added taxes on home purchases that was announced Friday. Unsold housing has been one of the major problems facing the country’s banking and real estate sectors.

Mr. Zapatero told lawmakers that the government would present a new plan this week to stimulate youth employment, including an increase in job training subsidies. The government will also extend by a further six months a subsidy of €400 a month for jobless people who have already reached the end of their regular unemployment compensation period.

The measures come as Spain’s fragile economic recovery has shown signs of already running out of steam. Gross domestic product grew only 0.2 percent in the second quarter despite stronger exports and a tourism sector that has rebounded to pre-crisis levels, thanks in part to reduced competition from politically troubled countries in North Africa.

Spain paid sharply lower interest rates in the bond market Tuesday, selling €2.14 billion in six-month bills, with a yield of 2.2 percent compared with 2.5 percent at the previous auction, on July 26.

It also sold €805 million in three-month bills with an average interest rate of 1.4 percent, down from 2 percent in July.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=fa332f7ba4977dfaea2013049bf0798f

Spain’s Governing Party Suffers Heavy Losses

Conceding defeat on Sunday night, Prime Minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero said that his Socialist Party had been understandably punished by voters for overseeing an economic crisis that had left Spain with a 21 percent jobless rate, more than twice the European average.

“These results are very clearly related to the effects of the economic crisis that we have been suffering for almost three years,” Mr. Zapatero said in a televised address. “Almost two million jobs have been destroyed and I know that a lot of Spaniards are facing serious problems. Today, without a doubt, they have expressed their discomfort.”

Meanwhile, underscoring how they have unexpectedly seized the initiative from established political parties, trade unions and other institutions, thousands of protesters gathered Sunday for an eighth consecutive day in the Puerta del Sol in Madrid as well as the main squares in other cities.

The youth-led movement, the first to manifest in any meaningful way since austerity began to bite in Europe’s sovereign debt crisis, has caught Spain’s traditional politicians flat-footed. At the same time, some of the campaign’s participants have been struggling to come to terms with their own success and grappling with the need to give more coherence to their wide-ranging grievances in order to keep their campaign alive beyond the election.

The demonstrators, who insist that they have no party affiliation, want a more representative democratic system and are demanding an end to political corruption. Their anger toward established parties has been fueled by the debt crisis and the surge in joblessness, but their grievances also include a call for a cut in military spending, the closing of nuclear power plants and the end of some laws, like recent legislation aimed at punishing digital piracy.

The groups that have turned Madrid’s Puerta del Sol into the epicenter of the nationwide movement plan to remain there until at least next Sunday. The protests in Barcelona, the second-largest Spanish city, are expected to culminate in a major march on June 15, to end in front of the Catalan Parliament.

“If you had told me a few months ago that thousands of people would take to the streets to complain about our political system,” said one protester, María Subinas, “I would have found it hard to believe, because it looked like we were an apathetic generation that was incapable of responding to a crisis even when it was destroying our jobs like a tsunami.” Ms. Subinas, 33, who has been in Puerta del Sol since last Sunday, added, “The message has surely gone through to politicians that they can’t just keep ignoring our frustrations and pretend that nothing has changed.”

The Popular Party won 37.6 percent of the votes on Sunday, compared with 27.8 percent for the Socialists, according to preliminary results released at midnight with 98 percent of the votes counted. Despite popular discontent with established parties, turnout rose to 66 percent from 63 percent four years earlier.

Mr. Zapatero, who has been in office since 2004, announced in April that he would not seek a third term, and the extent of the Socialists’ loss suggests that, even with a new leader, the party will struggle to hold on to power in the general election, expected next March.

Among smaller parties to make notable gains on Sunday was Bildu, a Basque independence party, which won 1.4 percent of the national vote and could secure control of San Sebastián and some other Basque town halls. Bildu was allowed to take part in the election only after a court ruling, amid concerns over its suspected links to ETA, the violent separatist group.

The Socialists lost control in Barcelona and Seville, two of the nation’s largest cities.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=d8d0a6521afc751f8c74a72e3b4ae055