it might appear premature, but if we look at the path that spain is now on and what has happened to other 'rescued' countries we can see that things are likely to get a lot worse rather than better.
i agree that spain is better situated than greece and portugal (i'm not sure about ireland), but this is more of a reflection of the terrible situation in those countries. spain faces huge challenges with an insolvent banking sector and massive unemployment. planned spending cuts are only going to make the latter worse. the banks have not disclosed the full extent of their losses, there is much more to come. this is exactly what happened in ireland and the steady drip, drip of bad news will erode confidence in spain.
let me rephrase my question. how do you think the 'rescue' will address the problems that spain faces?
i agree that spain is better situated than greece and portugal (i'm not sure about ireland), but this is more of a reflection of the terrible situation in those countries. spain faces huge challenges with an insolvent banking sector and massive unemployment. planned spending cuts are only going to make the latter worse. the banks have not disclosed the full extent of their losses, there is much more to come. this is exactly what happened in ireland and the steady drip, drip of bad news will erode confidence in spain.
let me rephrase my question. how do you think the 'rescue' will address the problems that spain faces?
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