Spain The Economy
Workers in an olive orchid
IN THE MID-1980s, Spain's per capita gross domestic
product
ranked low among the industrial countries represented in
the
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development,
though
well ahead of such nations as Greece, Yugoslavia, and
Portugal.
In the latter half of the decade, however, the Spanish
economy
entered a phase of strong expansion and employment.
Spain was a latecomer to economic and industrial
modernization. Early in the twentieth century, economic
progress
was made in fitful starts, but in the 1960s the process of
renewal began in earnest. Before then, the Spanish economy
was
one of the most underdeveloped in Western Europe, and it
was
sometimes characterized as a Third World economy. A
spectacular
period of growth and modernization during the 1960s and
the early
1970s profoundly transformed the Spanish economy, bringing
it
much closer to the West European consumer society
prototype.
However, in late 1975, when the authoritarian rule of
Francisco
Franco Y Bahmonde (in power, 1939-75) came to an end, and
democratic processes were restored, there were huge
increases in
the price of imported oil upon which Spain was heavily
dependent
for its energy needs. Vigorous economic expansion was
replaced by
recession, stagnation, and a dizzying increase in the
number of
unemployed wage earners.
The Socialist government, headed by Felipe Gonzalez
Marquez,
that came to power in late 1982--the first post-Franco
government
with an absolute parliamentary majority--was committed to
a
program of industrial renewal and economic modernization
and, at
the same time, to lowering the rate of inflation. Under
its
guidance, in the second half of the 1980s the economy
experienced
a growth rate and a level of foreign capital investment
that were
the highest in Europe. Budget deficits were reduced,
inflation
was lowered, foreign currency reserves were greatly
increased,
private enterprise enjoyed record profits, and consumer
spending
grew. A major accomplishment during this period was the
liquidation of excess personnel and overcapacity in key
industries, such as steel and shipbuilding, and the
redirection
of substantial capital resources to more promising hightechnology industries.
Despite the excellent economic performance of the late
1980s,
the Gonzalez government was unable to reduce an
unemployment rate
that was then the highest among the members of the
European Community
(EC--see Glossary).
The number of workers
employed as a
result of the economic boom was equivalent to the number
of new
entrants into the labor market, so that the boom only
marginally
reduced the number of job seekers. A mitigating
circumstance,
however, was that although the official unemployment rate
was 20
percent, perhaps as many as one-third of those registered
as
unemployed were working in the "underground economy."
Spain's accession to the EC on January 1, 1986, was a
driving
force behind the country's accelerated modernization
effort.
Under the terms of its entry into the EC, Spain was
required to
adapt to EC norms and regulations, over a period of seven
years.
The EC plan to eliminate existing barriers to trade,
employment,
and the flow of capital throughout the EC by the end of
1992 was
still another impetus. Observers believed that, barring
unforeseeable adverse developments in the international
economic
situation, by the year 2000 Spain would at last closely
resemble
its neighbors, who, for most of the twentieth century, had
been
socially and economically more advanced.
Data as of December 1988
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