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Showing Original Post only (View all)spain Is Beyond Doomed: The 2 Scariest Unemployment Charts Ever [View all]
http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2013/04/spain-is-beyond-doomed-the-2-scariest-unemployment-charts-ever/275324/
Spain is in a great depression, and it is one of the most terrifying things I have ever seen.
Five years after its housing boom turned to bust, Spanish unemployment hit a record high of 27.2 percent in the first quarter of 2013. It's almost too horrible to comprehend, but 19.5 percent of the total workforce has not had a job in the past six months; 15.3 percent have not in the past year; and 9.2 percent have not in the past two years. You can see this 1930s-style catastrophe in the chart below from the National Statistics Institute.

Here's the story of Spanish unemployment in three acts. During the boom, joblessness was relatively high due to persistent structural problems. Then it shot up fast and faster as Spain's building bust and then Lehmangeddon hit in 2008. But it has kept climbing up since the panic abated, albeit at a less catastrophic pace, due to the toxic combination of too tight money and budgets.
In other words, austerity hasn't been the path to prosperity. It's been the path to perma-slump.

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Probably True - With The Power The 1% Holds - Does It Matter? - Probably Not
cantbeserious
Apr 2013
#4
Except, of course, for the Basque region, where their economy is doing relatively well, or growing.
jtuck004
Apr 2013
#6
What I find fascinating, and scary, is nearly the entire U.S. acting like victims of Stockholm
jtuck004
Apr 2013
#8
I used to think that, but the more I looked at it, I realized that resignation requires
jtuck004
Apr 2013
#30
I think it probably has quite a lot to do with it. It's no bed of roses, but they are doing
jtuck004
Apr 2013
#23
I have to confess that I have absolutely no idea of how to interpret that first chart
Orrex
Apr 2013
#14