In a seriously misguided
effort to balance its budget, In early September Spain Passed Largest VAT Hike In
History.
I wrote at the time, "Stunning
Ineptitude Will Make History Books".
Spain's unemployment rate is over 25% and the youth unemployment rate is near 53% yet the fools in the Spanish government hiked taxes yet again, this time by the largest amount in history.
Spain's handling of this economic implosion is sure to make the history books as a prime example of complete ignorance in how to deal with a fiscal crisis.
History in the Making
That prediction took a single
month to pan out. Reuters reports Spain retail sales decimated by VAT
hike.
Spanish retail sales fell at
their fastest pace on record in September as already battered consumer
confidence took another hit from a hike in value added tax, driving many
shoppers to trade down to cheaper products.
Sales fell 10.9 percent year
on year, Monday's National Statistics Institute data showed, reflecting an
economy struggling through its second recession in three years and plagued by
chronically high unemployment.
The drop was the biggest in
calendar-adjusted terms since current records began in January 2004, and marked
the 27th monthly decline in a row.
"It's clear there are no
signs the crisis is abating," economist at Nomura Silvio Peruzzo said.
"The headline (retail) figures show a sharp drop and indicate that
domestic demand is not going to be anywhere near what the government is
anticipating."
ll Pain, No Gain
The last thing Spain needs is
ridiculous tax hikes. Clearly they are counterproductive. So why do the
jackasses keep hiking taxes?
That's a good question, and
here is the two-part answer.
Counterpart jackasses in Brussels
insist upon it
1.
The government in Spain refuses to change work rules and shrink government,
something that desperately needs to be done
2.
To be sure more pain is coming to Spain. Shrinking government and reducing
pensions would be painful as well, but at least there would be long-term
benefit. Hiking taxes is all pain and no gain.
3.
Spain really needs to exit the euro, and it will, but not before the entire
country is in the gutter and the masses have finally have had enough.
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