Saturday, June 9, 2012

Spain's 90s greed is at the root of its banking crisisA collective madness over property speculation made us poor and jeopardised our future. Spain must secure a partial bailout


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  • Spain housing construction boom
    'Spain is now a country with a million unsold properties [and] hundreds of housing developments left unfinished.' Photograph: Arturo Rodriguez/AP
    Spain's banking crisis did not come out of the blue. In the 1990s the Spanish suffered a bout of collective madness. Interest rates fell from 14% (with the peseta) to 4% (with the euro) in a matter of weeks. In 1998 the centre-right government passed a law that significantly increased the amount of land for development. Developers got rich, selling the idea that everyone was going to win because property would always go up – never down – in value. German banks financed Spain's savings and commercial banks, which needed extra funds for high-risk mortgages. Greed made us rich for a while – but then it made us poor, and jeopardised our future.