Arab Times

Spain unveils recovery plan amid pandemic

Aims to creating 800,000 jobs over the next three years

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LISBON, Portugal, Oct 11, (AP): Spain’s prime minister unveiled a major plan Wednesday to boost his country out of recession by spending 140 billion euros ($162 billion) of European Union aid to reshape the economy, with the aim of creating 800,000 jobs over the next three years.

The program is a response to the sharp downturn caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic and its worldwide disruption of economies. The plan focuses primarily on getting Spain to transition to green energy and a digital economy, which will take up about 70% of the financing.

“We have to turn this heavy blow into an opportunit­y,” Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez said, referring to the pandemic’s far-reaching effects on society and the economy. “This is the challenge of our generation.”

Spain this week became the first EU country to surpass 835,000 coronaviru­s infections, with 32,562 people in Spain confirmed to have died from COVID-19. The capital, Madrid, is experienci­ng Europe’s worst second wave of infections.

Spain is the latest EU country to say how it intends to use the bloc’s 750-billion-euro coronaviru­s recovery fund, approved last July and designed to help the world’s biggest trading bloc exit its deepest-ever recession.

France last month unveiled a 100 billion-euro ($116 billion) plan called “France Reboot,” that includes 40 billion euros ($46 billion) from the EU recovery plan.

Germany has a 130 billion euro stimulus package for 2020 and 2021, to be spent on infrastruc­ture, digitaliza­tion and green energy projects such as electric vehicles. Italy is sketching a roadmap along similar lines to Spain, dubbing it #nextgenera­tionitalia.

Greece, after an anticipate­d economic contractio­n of 8.2% this year, expects to rebound with 7.5% growth next year. The Greek economy is set to benefit from 32 billion euros in EU funds through 2026 – 19.3 billion in grants and 12.7 billion in loans with favorable interest rates and terms.

The Spanish government expects the country’s economy to contract 11.2% this year. In some sectors, such as tourism, the drop could be as much as 25%. Officials expect an unemployme­nt rate of around 17% this year and next.

The Socialist-led government’s strategy aims to achieve growth of 7.2% next year.

It is built on 10 main planks. They include strengthen­ing the public health service, improving public infrastruc­ture, transition­ing to green energy and enhancing energy efficiency, developing profession­al training schemes and accelerati­ng the digital modernizat­ion of Spanish industry.

“The world has changed and we need to change, too, to safeguard our future,” Sánchez said.

Spain’s deputy prime minister for ecological transition, Teresa Ribera, highlighte­d the plan’s focus on environmen­tally friendly growth.

“We will support the growth of industry by helping it digitalize and meet environmen­tal challenges, by recovering the use of raw materials, a circular economy, and having qualified profession­als,” Ribera said. “The new economic model within the planet’s sustainabl­e limits will help and guide our reconversi­on toward green jobs. We have the opportunit­y to transform our country.”

 ??  ?? People pass by a poster thanking medical workers at a bus station in Madrid, Spain on Oct 7, 2020. Spain’s prime minister unveiled a major plan Wednesday to boost his country out of recession. (AP)
People pass by a poster thanking medical workers at a bus station in Madrid, Spain on Oct 7, 2020. Spain’s prime minister unveiled a major plan Wednesday to boost his country out of recession. (AP)

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