Spanish public debt tops one trillion euros


(MENAFN- AFP) Spain's public debt has topped one trillion euros ($1.3 trillion) for the first time, the central bank announced Thursday, despite years of government-imposed austerity.

The nation's accumulated public debt mushroomed to 1.007 trillion euros at the end of June from 996 billion euros a month earlier, the Bank of Spain said in a report.

Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy's government has struggled to contain annual deficits by raising taxes, freezing public salaries and curbing spending on services such as education and health care despite angry street protests.

Though the annual deficits are on the decline, they continue to push up the sovereign debt of the eurozone's fourth-largest economy. The public debt figure includes the cost of a 41-billion-euro banking rescue in 2012 financed by Spain's eurozone partners.

The trillion-euro public debt figure is equal to 98.5 percent of Spain's 2013 gross domestic product, an AFP calculation showed. The Bank of Spain has yet to release GDP figures for the second quarter of 2014.

Spain enjoyed a relatively low debt ratio, equal to 36.3 percent of GDP, in 2007. But the public debt soared after the implosion of a decade-long property bubble, which tipped the economy into a double-dip recession.

Spain's economy emerged from the latest two-year downturn in mid-2013 and grew in the second quarter of 2014 at a faster-than-expected quarterly rate of 0.6 percent.

The unemployment rate dipped below 25.0 percent in the April-June period but still remains painfully high at 24.47 percent.

Spain's public debt is expected to top 100 percent of GDP next year - far above the 60 percent ceiling agreed among European Union members.


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