The National - News

Spain and Catalonia will both pay a price

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Spain’s economy is going to pay a price for Catalonia’s bid for independen­ce.

While the prime minister Mariano Rajoy has stepped in to take over the region, upcoming Catalan elections could prove another flashpoint for the independen­ce movement. For Oxford Economics, that means lingering uncertaint­y, posing a risk to sentiment, share prices and bonds.

In their worst-case scenario, Spain’s expansion would be weaker and the economy would be €17 billion (Dh79.9bn) smaller in 2019 than would otherwise have been the case. That “adverse” view – not Oxford’s central projection – assumes a permanent increase in bond yields of 50 basis points and a 10 per cent decline in stocks in 2018 and 2019 compared with its baseline scenario. “The economic impact of the Catalan independen­ce crisis is still unknown, but the increased political tensions have already caused uncertaint­y to surge to the highest levels in over a decade,” said economist Angel Talavera.

The Catalan crisis erupted on October 1 when the former regional government held an illegal referendum on independen­ce that it claimed as a mandate to declare independen­ce from Spain. Mr Rajoy responded by invoking constituti­onal powers to disband Catalonia’s government and call regional elections for December 21.

As hundreds of companies, led by CaixaBank, move their legal headquarte­rs out of the area, the economy minister Luis de Guindos has warned that the crisis is taking its toll on both the Catalan and Spanish economies. Spain’s benchmark IBEX 35 stock index has dropped about 3.5 per cent since the end of September.

Oxford’s analysis also takes account of a so-called economic policy uncertaint­y index, which measures the number of news articles that contains the word “uncertaint­y” and related terms in Spain’s main newspapers as a gauge for political risk.

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