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@redtianime62824 жыл бұрын
Well informed videos, well done! Hope next you will make some about UK and Romania. Don't mind watching videos about other EU countries as well . Thank you
@happyjose00504 жыл бұрын
@@vardekpetrovic9716 Italy can't compete with Asia on cheap products, we Europeans should shift to a german model (in my opinion), also constant devaluations on their currency destroyed people's savings
@rogarizurieta76414 жыл бұрын
The world's greatest land asset bubble isn't Spain in 2008 or Ireland today, it is still Japan in the 80s, the country still has unrealized debt that accounts for Japan's unusually highest debt to GDP ratio in the world. They are expected to pay it off by 2030 or later. Japan's asset bubble economy is referred to as the 'greatest party ever thrown.'
@binoybeen4 жыл бұрын
Please do a video about Ireland economy 🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪
@kingboymilan59274 жыл бұрын
Loved the vid. Maybe in the near future one about Serbia? Would be interesting. :)
@ackchyually94614 жыл бұрын
"I am firmly convinced that Spain is the strongest country of the world. Century after century trying to destroy herself and still no success." ~ Otto von Bismarck
@AltSimplified4 жыл бұрын
What a source though! Top marks!
@Bolmer14 жыл бұрын
It's a funny quote but Otto von Bismarck never said that btw Es una cita entretenida pero Otto von Bismarck nunca dijo eso por cierto.
@rehanfauzan46234 жыл бұрын
i would say poland is morr resilient than spain
@darklight58384 жыл бұрын
@@patricksweeney5308 Reconquered by the Moors? Dude, have you seen London or Paris? Some of the neighborhoods there look like Saudi Arabia or Algeria. I haven't seen that in Spain.
@Neilos-sd6ti4 жыл бұрын
@@Bolmer1 source?
@vsingh34934 жыл бұрын
Been living in Spain for over 4 years and I would like to add that starting a business, small or big is not easy. The taxes, social security, permits, fines are really high. It got even worse in COVID-19 times where existing businesses had to close because they could not afford to pay their share of monthly salary to their employees while being out of business. Yes, the government did pay the benefits to the employees, but it's impossible for most small businesses to contribute their share for the employee benefit for such a long period of time with absolutely no income source.
@octavio99434 жыл бұрын
You should make a video on British debt , UK GDP is 2,978 trillion,and his debt is 8.126.000.000.000 trillion, The second largest on the planet . MUCH GREATER THAN SPAIN'S DEBT, IN QUANTITY AND in THE PERCENTAGE OF GDP ....
@JSB1034 жыл бұрын
It's the same all over the world, in case you haven't noticed. Small family busineses whatever they might be, WILL succumb to mega corporations everywhere. Governments are regulating small businesses to DEATH in favor of the big mega corporations. Have a small business? SORRY OLD BOY, you lose.
@SantoRedentor4 жыл бұрын
I truly admire the Indian community here in Spain. I don't even consider starting a business here because of all the obstacles and huge taxes to entrepreneurs. If I ever want to start a business I will do it in another country.
@joanet5013 жыл бұрын
Factores
@danialfred4443 жыл бұрын
@@lugburz-shak4629 Yes, when u have big capital available and u already have the good life, going to another country to win more money is legal but unethical xD
@jamesprimavesi23924 жыл бұрын
It is far too hard to start a small business in Spain which is preventing the economy from becoming more dynamic.
@quoth_raven4 жыл бұрын
Actually you can do it online with an electronic cert. and have it up and running in a day. That´s not to say that spain is in some ways not an attractive location for a new business.
@tomassin904 жыл бұрын
@@quoth_raven And how expensive is it? It's a monthly fee no matter how much you earn, and even then the benefits you get out of the monthly payment are garbage. Only Spain and Poland have such retarded self-employment regulations. Europe's butthole, instead of making it free and pay on earned income (which actually makes sense)
@quoth_raven4 жыл бұрын
@@tomassin90 The "monthly fee" that you refer to are social security fees, which are expensive in every single EU country... Alonso is correct: it´s easy to start and dirt cheap for the first couple of years. In comparison the monthly health insurance in germany for self emplyed people is more expensive, and in spain it also includes pension benefits. Contrary to popular opinion, Spain is actually quite competetive price-benefitswise within the EU! Firing people is definately too expensive, but you have to take that into account when hiring them! Wages are low and the business ethics are quite bad. I never said Spain is a great place to do business, but be objective: it´s not all bad!
@tomassin904 жыл бұрын
@@quoth_raven How weird, only Spain and Poland have a monthly subscription fee in order to be self-employed. Not Germany, Not France, Not the UK... The social security Fees are paid within the invoice of every transaction and when the Tax date arrives in 95% of EU countries. And they are not "expensive" in every country, in Germany it's 5,5% in France a 10%, in Spain 300+€ a month, no matter how much you earn.
@quoth_raven4 жыл бұрын
@@tomassin90 what you are saying is false, you obviously haven´t first hand experience with how the system works in other eu countries. For example in Germany health insurance is 15% of your net income, with a minimum amount per month. It´s based on your yearly tax statements, not your invoices or transactions. And as stated, that doesn´t include pension or anything else. In practice social security fees are around 25-35% in all EU countries. The thing is, every system is slightly different and mostly quite complex so you can´t just compare the "cuota mínima de autónomos" of Spain because it´s not called that in other countries. That doesn´t mean that you don´t have to pay and that there aren´t minimum fees.
@quoth_raven4 жыл бұрын
The video misses how the bubble was greatly fueled by legislation which allowed local politicians to profit economically from the construction industry.
@Javservice4 жыл бұрын
The same bubble happened in US but the difference is that in US the government is really good at hiding their implication. I’m Spain the government is a lot more sincere.. and far less secretive and honest.
@Ma-ttga4 жыл бұрын
@@Javservice Not more sincere. More stupid maybe.
@TheIronalvarohide4 жыл бұрын
@@Javservice Only when we get them lol. I cant imagine the fortune our last king stole
@Javservice4 жыл бұрын
@@TheIronalvarohide nothing compared to what the Biden family has and will steal in the next four years😂😂😂😂🤣🤣🤣
@tewkewl4 жыл бұрын
It's always government intervention that creates more problems than it solves.
@ImNotADeeJay3 жыл бұрын
In some countries, succeeding is building a company from the ground up, in Spain, succeeding is getting a lifetime job as a civil servant.
@inigojordana3 жыл бұрын
It's odd to me that a couple of entrepreneurs that I know who own relatively profitable businesses in Spain have told me that they want to be civil servants... Why though?
@ImNotADeeJay3 жыл бұрын
@@inigojordana Because in Spain, becoming a civil servant means you have a paycheck guaranteed for life, among other perks. You can't be "fired".
@inigojordana3 жыл бұрын
@@ImNotADeeJay Yes, it's odd to me though, as it's the only place I've lived in wherein the goal is to work for the government.
@jeanbethencourt15063 жыл бұрын
I'd rather rent myself out to a private conglomerate in the UK.
@gepwxaqdfsidsesg15483 жыл бұрын
and don't civil servants retire at 60 with 82% pay? and a lot of them finish work at 2pm as well I think.
@enricrodriguezmateu35813 жыл бұрын
As a Spaniard, I think one of our biggest mid-term problems is going to be our public debt. It keeps growing and growimg and the government keeps making policies which make it even worse
@cefirodewinter90863 жыл бұрын
That's why I'm leaving
@101jlam3 жыл бұрын
I agree. I don't get how people keep voting socialism. Sooner or later our debt is going to be unpayable. If i ever have the chance I'll leave.
@dionisioareopagita95333 жыл бұрын
Private debt is worst.
@TheRaul453 жыл бұрын
The former right-wing party LOWERED the debt. The parties of the previous left (Zapatero) and this (Pedro Sanchez) have increased the debt. In two years ruling the left, the debt has increased more than in the last 20 years
@dionisioareopagita95333 жыл бұрын
@@TheRaul45 hahahahahaha. Did Homer Simpson said that? hahahaha Rajoy was the worst of all. Holly Molly!
@AktienMitKopf4 жыл бұрын
very nice video. I live in Mallorca, which is like 80% dependent on tourism and people are hurting :(
@la_rs31724 жыл бұрын
Wirst du in Zukunft aussichtsreiche Aktien aus Spanien vorstellen?
@AltSimplified4 жыл бұрын
Thanks mate. Cool channel by the way 👍
@octavio99434 жыл бұрын
You should make a video on British debt , UK GDP is 2,978 trillion,and his debt is 8.126.000.000.000 trillion, The second largest on the planet . MUCH GREATER THAN SPAIN'S DEBT, IN QUANTITY AND in THE PERCENTAGE OF GDP ....
@alfredvinciguerra5324 жыл бұрын
@@octavio9943 Yes but they have their own currency and it’s mostly owned by the British people
@willwattles54164 жыл бұрын
@@octavio9943 u sound hurt lmao
@redding83093 жыл бұрын
You talk about literally everything but forget Spain's main problem: we don't have a strong industry. That's why France recovered easily btw, because they do. We basically rely most of our economy on tourism and services, which only create low quality jobs. This creates a never-ending economic loop which we will never be able to go out unless our government starts to promote creating industry (like software, for example) and R&D
@richardlynch80093 жыл бұрын
Part (at least where I live) is resistance to other languages in favor of dialects. Where I live people refuse to speak English. Signs in government buildings are in Spanish and Valenciano. I think it inherently causes resistance. Call an American company and they will allow you to select your language. In Spain, tough luck if you don't speak Spanish fluently. I think I am ignorant of the larger picture because I live in a smaller resort town, but service industry jobs are staffed by foreign help and the 'good' jobs picking fruit are ALL staffed by foreigners and paid in cash. I don't think I know anyone who has a job that is Spanish beyond people who work at the supermarket. The healthcare is abused by EU foreigners who just leech off the system and contribute nothing due to government aid, methadone policies, etc. Don't get me wrong. Love it here. I think you are right about the lack of industry. But I am not sure I see anything but red tape in the way of trying to get a business going. I need to know someone who knows someone just to get an apartment. I am sure I am a little blinded and myopic. I also absolutely love the culture's weighting toward family (except how that has contributed to the pandemic). But the business resistance is somewhat self-inflicted. Years ago I wanted to import a particular product that I think is the best in the world of its type made in Spain. The family values made the manufacturer resist until I met him in person. In a way it is beautiful as is the clinging to culture and dialect. But it would be more helpful if it were expansive rather than regressive.
@christoohunders53163 жыл бұрын
Victoria, France has liquidated 50% of its industry in the last 40 years ! France has not recovered at all, we are indebted like crazy !
@ikergameplaysyt3 жыл бұрын
True
@redding83093 жыл бұрын
@@christoohunders5316 Haha, Spain has liquidated more than 80% of its industry in 40 years and has sold almost every single state company to international investors, believe me, it can be worse
@christoohunders53163 жыл бұрын
@@redding8309 I thought Galicia, pais Vasco and Catalonia had still a fairly decent industrial background ?
@chrisjamel84614 жыл бұрын
I think Spain is undeniably beautiful
@eldon60544 жыл бұрын
Ty
@Ajaxtothehead4 жыл бұрын
Also great food and great people, I love going there..
@Jose-gc8rl4 жыл бұрын
@@eldon6054 Un Aragonés por aqui? Ya es raro con los pocos que somos
@4youtubezgz5334 жыл бұрын
@@Jose-gc8rl jodo co, añádele otro
@kaziqta50534 жыл бұрын
Every country is.
@everydaydose77794 жыл бұрын
I just dont understand how you can pump out this quality videos in such a short span
@AltSimplified4 жыл бұрын
When you love what you do! Plus red bull.
@hhjj6214 жыл бұрын
Maybe, "...in such a short spaIn"?!!🎩😎
@usayeed7274 жыл бұрын
@@AltSimplified seriously, how you don’t have e subscribers is a mystery to me. You deserve hundreds of thousands
@Wa7edmenalnass4 жыл бұрын
Easy with Some really good COKE.
@riseshine31774 жыл бұрын
@@usayeed727 got one more at least with me now :)
@svtinker4 жыл бұрын
Having lived through the Texas oil bust of the 80s the lesson’s learned are; spread your risk and position yourself to transition to new markets quickly.
@georgfriedrichhandel43904 жыл бұрын
I lived through the same crisis. Because housing prices in Texas at that time were linked to the price of oil, that was a great time to buy a house in Texas. Houses that were worth more than $100K before the bust were valued at less than half their original price. But many homeowners were stuck with houses that were valued for less than their mortgages and those that could either refinanced or just let the bank foreclose on the house.
@svtinker4 жыл бұрын
Curé, yep, the deep pockets cleaned up.
@theresaferrell82524 жыл бұрын
@@georgfriedrichhandel4390 that's really bad
@georgfriedrichhandel43904 жыл бұрын
@@theresaferrell8252 What was worse was the false middle class that oil had created. During the boom times, it was possible for a young kid to find a high-paying job in the oil fields and they didn't even have to finish high school. But when the bust occurred, they were the first to get laid off. And it was a long way down.
@quoth_raven4 жыл бұрын
@@georgfriedrichhandel4390 that was the same problem in the construction industry in spain. Lots of kids left school because you got paid more for laying bricks than as an aerospace engineer.
@j.f.e.2514 жыл бұрын
As a Spaniard I must say that though the video is great in general, there is a mistake regarding banks bailouts; national banks weren't really bailed out, it was the regional ones, called "Cajas", which were controlled by politicians and theoretically non-profitable structures, the ones who needed and actually took the bailout. Anyway, very good content overall
@myvideosetc.82714 жыл бұрын
Correct, and a very important point: no private banks where bailed out with pucblic money¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡. "public", banks full of politicians in their boards needed a bailout with public money.
@johnnypickles52564 жыл бұрын
You mean public sector banks as opposed to the private banks , and these were controlled by corrupt politicians and unionists. That's what the taxpayer bailed out. Unfortunately the Spanish political class is its cancer, and has been for centuries.
@GravLink14 жыл бұрын
Totally correct. Political corruption was a major problem too (it still is)
@mrmariomantube4 жыл бұрын
^This is false. There were also 'banks' bailed out. Like Banco de Valencia. And these regional banks were private in nature. La Caixa was not a public bank, ffs.
@j.f.e.2514 жыл бұрын
@UCcd4H0pI6E1t9hA_SKr08ZA Banco de Valencia was the only exception and it should not really be considered a private bank, as its main stockholder was Bancaja itself (one the before mentioned "Cajas")
@paulisaaksohn56644 жыл бұрын
I am not a Spaniard, but I absolutely am madly in love with this beautiful nation-its people, its nature, its language and culture, food and traditions and so much more. I was there 5 yrs ago and there is nothing I didn't like as someone, who comes from a much smaller and a lot more crowded and stressful place in the Eastern Mediterranean. I think Spain's faring a lot better than Greece, Portugal, Romania, Bulgaria, the Baltic States and I am positive the future is definitely much brighter for Spain than many other European nations in the long run. Wish you all the best, oh, gorgeous beauty and may you prosper and thrive!
@PalomaAlbert4 жыл бұрын
✌️✨✨✨🍷
@alfredobelloni32584 жыл бұрын
Such a passionate comment should have ended with an "Olé!"
@octavio99434 жыл бұрын
You should make a video on British debt , UK GDP is 2,978 trillion,and his debt is 8.126.000.000.000 trillion, The second largest on the planet . MUCH GREATER THAN SPAIN'S DEBT, IN QUANTITY AND in THE PERCENTAGE OF GDP ....
@dm73604 жыл бұрын
Muchas gracias crack!!!! :)
@ACSCx4 жыл бұрын
@@octavio9943 A nadie le importa la deuda que tenga un país, lo que importa es si se puede pagar o no.
@davidnelson30264 жыл бұрын
Too much corruption is a big reason . . .
@octavio99434 жыл бұрын
You should make a video on British debt , UK GDP is 2,978 trillion,and his debt is 8.126.000.000.000 trillion, The second largest on the planet . MUCH GREATER THAN SPAIN'S DEBT, IN QUANTITY AND in THE PERCENTAGE OF GDP ....
@101jlam3 жыл бұрын
Corruption is a factor, but i would say that the biggest reason is socialism. People keep voting more public expenditure instead of lowering taxes and bringing foreign investment to the country. The more public expenditure the higher the taxes for the middle class. Also another problem is that we have SO MUCH bureaucracy that it is virtually impossible to create your own business. In addition we have a political social class (yeah im even considering them an autonomous social class) that acts as an oligarchy.
@pb82383 жыл бұрын
@@octavio9943 Nope. As of 2020, UK debt is 1.8 trillion, 84% of GDP. Spain debt is 1.4 trillion, 120% of GDP. Anything over 100% of GDP means real problems.
@desconocidoin3 жыл бұрын
@@101jlam You don´t even know what socialism is.
@101jlam3 жыл бұрын
@@desconocidoin illuminate me Jon. I'm pretty sure you have a vast amount of knowledge that will shine a light upon my understanding of my own country.
@JoaquinRubioSabin4 жыл бұрын
I’m from Barcelona (Spain) and I’m sure that one of the biggest Spanish problems are our hospitality and tourism-based economy instead of a technology-based one which are more resilients. We have not changed our Real Estate problems where the high demand from tourists push higher the prices making it dangerous for the local economy with lower salaries than this European, American or Asian tourists.
@البهظبيه-س8ك2 жыл бұрын
هذه هي المشكلة الحقيقية بالفعل ضعف القطاع الصناعي والتكنولوجي في إسبانيا كارثي
@cekan144 жыл бұрын
As an Spaniard, I can confirm. I am surprised by how well informed you are about this issue. Your words reminded me of all the years my childhood spanned... Which were all characterized by the constant crisis, a word that has a very dark, and constant meaning for every Spaniard. It was painfully dramatic to see how the economy shrunk. At the very beginning, in 2008, and during the first months of 2009, the elderly used to say that we would complain too much for the situation, and that crises which took place during the last centuries were way worse. But soon, they all shut up. Everyone shut up. The president of the Government (or the Prime Minister for you Anglophones), who began by saying his famous phrase: "Trust me, there is no crisis", was forced to renounce and dissolve the parliament one year before his tenure was finished, because of how dramatic a situation turned out to be so he could not longer face it. Even taking a walk through the city was sad: you would see almost every non-essential shop closed. I remember how my friends and I used to go all the way up to the next town just to eat a burguer, because there was not even such a thing in ours. I know, it sounds silly that I complain about it... It's just difficult to describe how fucked up everything was. People who used to have a good job and a family were suddenly evicted and being left out at the streets. That was a national drama, seeing how, day after day, the police would show up and evict a family who would resist as much as they could. Education turned out to be horrible, too. Because of the austerity measures, costs had to be cut in schools. I remember how I was with 41 other people in a single room which was designed for around 25. I know, I know, there are worse things like this in the world. And there are also many other, worse things I remember about those times, but I just wanted to write some impressions down. At the end, the economy recovery was fragile. At the beginning of 2020, everyone could see that: underpaid and temporary jobs were widespread, and tourism, a low add value industry, was one of the drivers of the economic recovery. We would laugh and say that we were not at all prepared, should another crisis hit the economy. The worst case scenario up until that point was the US-China trade war, which did not affect us that much... And then came covid, and everything began, once again, to crumble. Man, I just have one year more of college, and I know very well that as soon as I finish it, I'll go abroad to look for a job, and a life. Seriously, the job prospects here are trash, you may well end up working underpaid for more hours for those of you were officially hired for. Fuck this, I'm going out. Wish me luck, KZbin.
@geisterfahreruberholer21714 жыл бұрын
Good luck! You should "thank" your elders for building up a nation full of debts and still vote the ones who decides this way of politics. Now, a whole generation like you is looking outside Spain which build up a massive brain-dran. Over here, a lot of Spanish people come by and never want to leave. Spanis communitys are growing
@Telencephelon4 жыл бұрын
Good luck. Thanks for taking the time and sharing this wonderful personal reflection
@Telencephelon4 жыл бұрын
@@jnimitzch4738 You sound like one of those elderly that moved to Spain.
@GXSergio4 жыл бұрын
I don't know from wich part of Spain you are, but that's not true at all...
@cssain-w2g4 жыл бұрын
This is a blunt exaggeration. I am a Spaniard living in Germany and I do not relate to many things said in this post (and I lived in Spain throughout the crisis). I will comment just on one: it is not true that the recent history of Spain is characterized by a constant crisis: from 1995 to 2009 there was a period of constant growth which consolidated Spain as a fully developed country in Europe. Plus, since 2015 the country was growing again, enjoying some of the largest growth rates in Europe and attracting hundreds of thousands of immigrants (I can provide you with the source of this data if you want). In any case, you should really live some time abroad in order to realize that most of the countries are not as perfect as you thought they were on paper. There is a reason why so many Spaniards that leave end up coming back to Spain (you can check the statistics, the number of Spaniards living abroad is constantly reducing). Also, you will see that many of the problems occurring in Spain also occur even in the most developed countries such as Germany. This will help you put things in perspective when complaining. By the way, fun fact: the percentage of Germans living abroad is larger than the percentage of Spaniards living abroad.
@asikt20844 жыл бұрын
I think this is a great video, free from ideology and shame, because normally "economic" channels tend to gilt countries for all bad situations they go trough and shame them for that. This one comments what happened in a professional way, very nice job
@alexandresantos80493 жыл бұрын
I wish all the best to our neighbors Spain! A great and historic nation thats for sure! Greetings from Portugal!
@eulalawrence12223 жыл бұрын
Yeah both are colonial emperor
@vgjl18243 жыл бұрын
We are iberian and celtic brothers
@fernandocosta7784 Жыл бұрын
Alexandre lambe-botas, não tens vergonha ?
@howarddonaldson80064 жыл бұрын
I am a self-employed person in Spain. You comented on the culture of black market working. I think this is a huge part of the problem. If you choose to be legitamatley self employed in Spain you are absolutley punished with tax and beurocracy. If they lived in Spain Bill Gates and Steve Jobs still have a black market business out the garage! If they cant fix this !.....
@dougm30374 жыл бұрын
Not the first time I've heard this Howard. I think there's a major need for the government to address stifling red tape.
@franciscobroseta5464 жыл бұрын
I was self employed in spain for 10 years. Now i live in Taiwan. Only missing the food, the well regulated traffic and the people i know over there ~~~
@yosell4 жыл бұрын
Small companies smashed with taxes that are not invested in Tech or core Industry, against Huge companies that don't pay even 5% of what the should. If Steve Jobs would be a little slave for Telefonica, would get underpaid because innovation is just ignored, so he has no chance. Thats why I write this from Germany.
@octavio99434 жыл бұрын
You should make a video on British debt , UK GDP is 2,978 trillion,and his debt is 8.126.000.000.000 trillion, The second largest on the planet . MUCH GREATER THAN SPAIN'S DEBT, IN QUANTITY AND in THE PERCENTAGE OF GDP ....
@JSB1034 жыл бұрын
@@franciscobroseta546, I have heard wonderful comments about the food in Taiwan.
@JoseMariSoto3 жыл бұрын
I am 29 years old and from Spain and I have been earing that Spain has been in crysis all its life. After finishing my electrical engineering degree I had to emigrate to the UK because I couldn't find a stable job there...so I think that the whole government needs a internal reform. They don't stop stealing.
@Shouziroku3 жыл бұрын
'Cause us 90s generation have grown in almost constant economic depression. It is literally impossible to reform Spain because it was made so any significant change was actually impossible (3/4 to reform constitution, Tribunal Constitucional banning laws passed with absolute majority, etc).
@orukpe13 жыл бұрын
There are also thousands of electrical engineers working in spain. if you were not able to secure a job does not mean the country is bad. Do you know spain represent 10 percent of EU industrial output?, the second biggest car manufacturer, third in machine tools manufacturing, aerospace etc. do you know of corporación mondragón ?. please go and learn a bit about your country. Hay que defender la marca España hombre.
@borja45933 жыл бұрын
@@orukpe1 a country where a person with an university degree earns 1200€ euros is a banana republic, y antes de nada soy español pero no gilipollas para defender lo indefendible.
@orukpe13 жыл бұрын
@@borja4593 Mire borja, eso ocurre en cualquier parte de mundo, depende de lo que hace esa persona con título universitario. No todos gana 1200 euros. algunos sí sin duda. depende de su experencia. Tambien hay que saber buscar trabajo. metete en INFOJOBS y verás.
@orukpe13 жыл бұрын
@@borja4593 otra cosa más, no te van pagar 3000 euros simplemente el hecho de tener título universitario, hay que rendir y aportar valor a la empresa, y es así en todas las partes de mundo no sólo en España. Te digo porque he vivido en muchos paises.
@welshtoro32564 жыл бұрын
I've been visiting Spain since 1982. My wife is Spanish and we are based in Britain but have family in the Basque Country and Castile. We also have a small property in Andalusia. I remember driving through Valladolid and the north of the country around 2006/7 and there were crappy rushed buildings going up everywhere. I asked my father in law if there was a housing shortage like in Britain and he said no, it was just that property was a solid investment. That idea that property could be an investment without any demand seemed ridiculous to me but it was happening everywhere. It was providing a massive amount of well paid employment and nobody was asking questions. The whole country jumped on the bandwagon and when the crash happened there were thousands of ridiculously overvalued properties without any chance of a sale or occupancy. Moving forward and Spain has huge problems including a rapidly ageing population and pension crisis, rural drift to the cities and the emptying of the interior (a problem Spain has always had to contend with), foreign brain drain of their best talent, stubbornly high unemployment, particularly in certain areas, a nationalist problem that makes Scotland look like nursery school and a seemingly poor level of political competence and courage to address any of these issues.
@fampilot4 жыл бұрын
Your last sentence is the key, our politicians are our biggest problem....
@Kazordoon4 жыл бұрын
Spot on
@yunocba4 жыл бұрын
So perfectly described. And after watching this videos you can understand how Argentina (mostly influenced by spanish and italian people) has followed the same path
@castronator294 жыл бұрын
There's no demand you say? Come on, try to get a normal flat at a decent price in any city on the coast or one of the Big ones in the interior. Good luck.
@yunocba4 жыл бұрын
@@castronator29 I think what he was mentioning was there was not sufficient demand at the time bubble exploded for so many developments. Right now probably the demand is on again but still there's no well distributed. A lot of houses available in the interior and no single space in big cities
@eldon60544 жыл бұрын
Oh, Spain... I love you and hate you at the same time. Being a scientist I will have to go to a country that really values me.
@AnimationESP4 жыл бұрын
I had to go once to the UK. Stayed there working for a year and now I'm back working in Spain. That made me realise how great this country is. Spain would have great places to work in as scientists if it weren't for the deindustrialization promoted by the joining in the EU or the inequalities of having the 17 governments who compete instead of cooperate.
@MrSK8ORDIE694 жыл бұрын
Same here man
@EmojiMinion4 жыл бұрын
Same here
@sergiolopez53804 жыл бұрын
@@AnimationESP competing, instead of cooperating, is NOT the problem. Look at Switzerland and their kantons. Madrid has lower taxes (competing) and is booming. Other regions are forcing the central government to force Madrid to increase taxes, because they miss out. Because there is NO competition.
@AnimationESP4 жыл бұрын
@@sergiolopez5380 Are you sure Extremadura can compete with Madrid? That's absurd. Madrid needs to boom in order to increase competitiveness in other regions. The competition doesn't need to be inside our own country but abroad. It's not about not wanting lower taxes in a region but having the whole country take advantage of what has been built thanks to that.
@Al-um9mj4 жыл бұрын
I am Spanish and love Spain but left to other country years ago to work and have a proper career. I cannot support the incompetence of the politicians over the years (left and right) and the archaic companies mentality.
@aurematic4 жыл бұрын
Quick answer: Blame thief politicians and the lack of commitment of the people
@KromannOnboards4 жыл бұрын
The greatest real state bubble was Japan in the 80's... Where the surface of the royal palace came to cost the same as the state of California.
@clarazegarelli58614 жыл бұрын
What it surprised me the most to know, is that In Spain, is if the bank take your house and the equity is less than the debt, people will lose their houses, and still they will have to pay the banks till they repaid their debt. Most countries (at least the ones I have lived) you can go bankrupt and you start over, yes you lose the asset, but you dont have any debt.
@Cloud290654 жыл бұрын
So it’s better to go bankrupt then ?
@clarazegarelli58614 жыл бұрын
@@Cloud29065 So for the individual affected, of course! but for the economy there are studies that indicate that is also a good thing.
@Cloud290654 жыл бұрын
@@clarazegarelli5861 if I’m in Spain and in debt I will deploy this plan thank you 🙏
@clarazegarelli58614 жыл бұрын
@@Cloud29065 to the best of my knowledge (and my info can be obsolete) Spain does not have an equivalent to USA Chapter 13 or Chapter 7. Anyhow you might want to check with a lawyer.
@joaqermeister69044 жыл бұрын
The idea is to cover the debt with the asset. When the bank takes the house they are not taking the property of it, they are exercising their right to sell the house to cover the debt that you have with them. The problem comes when the bank cannot find a buyer(Which is quite common in Spain) so they have to lower the price of the house to sell it(A public auction is held to sell the house in which the bank itself can participate, but banks, in general, are not interested in houses). If they sell it for an amount lower than the debt, you still owe them the missing part. It can be negative for people with low economic resources, but if you look at it from the point of view of real estate investors or people with more resources, it is the fairest way to do it.
@abdeldorado4 жыл бұрын
What the euro did is: Too many factories in Germany Too many public servants in France Too many houses in Spain
@sebastiaanmeijer49224 жыл бұрын
🙄 and uhh TOO MANY ...... in The Netherlands. ⛲
@rachidaitcherif25724 жыл бұрын
@@sebastiaanmeijer4922 morrocans ?
@xute894 жыл бұрын
We are the biggest bar in Europe, come and enjoy our landscapes, we don't\can't offer nothing more
@Wa7edmenalnass4 жыл бұрын
@@rachidaitcherif2572 "stoners/hookers"
@julianshepherd20384 жыл бұрын
The Euro made France spend money on public services ? The Euro does not mean governments can go to the beach.
@kerias14 жыл бұрын
The quality of the images is worth seeing!
@omegaRST4 жыл бұрын
I was also surprised by that, they look amazing! Even the magic trick video
@Atheist20224 жыл бұрын
Quality* amigo
@kerias14 жыл бұрын
@@Atheist2022 thx! ;)
@anastecco56844 жыл бұрын
Totally 🤩
@Davidman39763 жыл бұрын
Stock footage. The easiest way to illustrate your video is... buying it in fragments.
@danielgarciarey86373 жыл бұрын
As an Spaniard I have to say that the video has been great and interesting but you left out Spain’s biggest problem: the Retirement Pension system. That actually costs 45% of the total public spending. I suggest you reading about it because it’s a very interesting topic. The 9% of the GDP in used in paying the debt interests, 15% in public healthcare system, 10% in education, 45% in the pensions, and the rest in state workers, politicians, helps, and all the state structure.
@GeorgiaMoore. Жыл бұрын
At the very least, I now grasp the concept of leverage. Creating wealth and financial freedom isn't as tough as many people believe. Building wealth and remaining financially stable indefinitely is a lot easier with the appropriate information. Participating in financial programs and products is the only true approach to make a high income and remain affluent indefinitely.
@Delighted316 Жыл бұрын
Most people simply enter the foreign exchange market without comprehending matters like this. The first stage in building money is determining your goals and risk tolerance, which you may do on your own or with the assistance of a financial counselor who works with a verified Finance agency. And also you can learn the facts about saving and investing and create a clear plan, you should be able to acquire financial security over time and enjov the benefits of income management.
@raymanmorrison3994 Жыл бұрын
I was curious after reading what you shared, so I Googled his name. I came across his webpage..
@Chuckeandrews Жыл бұрын
I've been making more than six figures passively investing with John Desmond Heppolette, who showed me the right community to join and grow mv finances and I don't have to do much work. It doesn't matter if the market is crashing, I will always make returns.
@priyansubhagabati81574 жыл бұрын
You are growing crazy man, I remember when you had like 800 subs a few months ago 👍
@AltSimplified4 жыл бұрын
Thanks! Happy to reach 25k 👍
@falkjanen50504 жыл бұрын
@@AltSimplified Congrats! And I wouldn't be surprised if it's six figures by the end of the year.🥳
@sarthsingh32714 жыл бұрын
You here too?
@AltSimplified4 жыл бұрын
@@falkjanen5050 OG from day 1! Hold you're well my man 👍
@falkjanen50504 жыл бұрын
@@AltSimplified Lucky for both of us, I was interested in the Turkish lira crisis. So I stumbled over your channel and have been subscribed since. Keep up the good work. 😀
@nickg17894 жыл бұрын
The parallels with Spain's economy pre 2007 and the current Australian and New Zealand economy and it's reliance on over valued real estate are plain to see. Hopefully this video will give insight to many. Thanks 👍
@luispalaciosmoreno67784 жыл бұрын
It doesn't end up well mate. I can tell you that much.
@playerone69954 жыл бұрын
Those countries don't have the massive unemployment that Spain has, though.
@brendanlowe98003 жыл бұрын
Both Australia and NZ have housing shortages, 2011 stats show Spain has approx 3.4 million homes lying empty.
@tonylittle35083 жыл бұрын
It was fascinating that at one stage, 1 in 8 in Spain were involved in construction work. Here in NZ we are bemoaning the housing shortage, & we must get more houses built. But the core issue is that all builders and other construction people are flat out busy. I cannot seem to get anyone to do a little renovation project. Yet much larger places like Spain & Dubai are through their building booms and presumably have unemployed skilled people. In our town real estate prices have increased 34% in one year so you would think a bubble is about to burst, but it will probably take a change in the supply/demand equation or a large movement up in interest rates. So who can predict what will happen?
@Yomismo283 жыл бұрын
Yeah, we are still kinda fucked here in Spain... Getting a job is already a great challenge for a lot of people, just don't even talk about owning a house. Even renting a flat is too expensive for many here.
@richardlynch80093 жыл бұрын
I'm surprised renting a flat is difficult financially. I make a quarter of what I made in the US now and pay 1/6th the rent of a comparable apartment. 300 euro a month by the sea for 2 or 3 bedrooms is something you can live on even with the worst 2 euro an hour 104 hour work week job. Must depend heavily on where you live.
@ibrahimqabalan84983 жыл бұрын
@@richardlynch8009 you work 104 hours a week??? for 2 euros an hour???
@richardlynch80093 жыл бұрын
@@ibrahimqabalan8498 I was doing a favor for a local business owner who broke his arm and couldn't cook in his restaurant. I hadn't been in a restaurant as a cook in 25 years but I offered. At first, it was supposed to be 35 euro per shift. I only worked the early shift at first. Then he asked me to come in at night. That would have been 70 a day. Then he said "Oh, no. I meant 35 for the day..." If you are seeing the MO it only gets worse. Getting paid was a horror story. I opened at 8, put all the tables and chairs out on the street, began prepping the kitchen. If I ran out of things to do I started working on the cockroach problem. People kept asking me "why don't you sit down?" The restaurant would close about 3.30pm, and then re-open at about 5 to prep for dinner. I'd work till 11 or 12 and close by taking all the stuff back in. 7 days a week. At one point he just stopped paying me and I said "look... I'm not coming in if I don't get paid." He didn't believe me. I stopped going. He called promising to pay and I said "pay when I walk in the door or I go home." He didn't. I went home. He told everyone he fired me for drinking on the job, stealing from the till, stealing food...I never even ate there and he knew it. He still owes me about 1000 euro. He went to jail for cocaine possession with intent to sell (he actually tried to force me to take steroids one day...). He got out for a little bit and got arrested for the SAME THING. I believe he is now in the slam for a long time. It was quite a wonderful experience. He screwed other people out of months of pay. He's in jail where he belongs. I went to the police, but it was a waste of time. He was a good 'ol boy... I currently freelance as an editor. I have an education (MFA writing) and skills. I don't bother trying to look for jobs in Spain. But that was my one experience.
@BlackHoleSpain3 жыл бұрын
@@richardlynch8009 That's just your experience with a thieve. I couldn't say that's the normal bahaviour in other businesses. But hiring an apartment in other big cities like Madrid, Barcelona or Palma de Mallorca, is almost impossible unless you're willing to spend 900 euros per month. With salaries not going above 1200-1500 euros, it's quite tough to survive, even if you're an skilled worker.
@richardlynch80093 жыл бұрын
@@BlackHoleSpain @Francisco Javier Crespo I live in a small town and freelance around the world via the internet. If you live in a big city and can't afford it, maybe that's not the right way to go. I didn't think it was normal for all of Spain. However, right now my land wants to raise the rent...because I asked for a contract so I could prove things and get my residency. That's a really crappy thing to do in a pandemic. And don't say "he needs money too." He's been on pension for like 20 years and he's loaded. He still gets what he was getting and I never ask him for anything. I'm not insulting Spanish people in general, I know some of the best. But business practices here are weird. Maybe the rents are so high because it is impossible to throw people out when they don't pay? Maybe if more Spanish people were open to speaking other languages they might attract more business from around the world? Don't think I'm defending other countries, but there is a lot Spain can do to compete in a global economy other than relying on tourism.
@starkofasshai4 жыл бұрын
A HUGE factor in Spain’s housing bubble was that legally speaking, as soon as a parcel of land was zoned as urban it was valued counting how many real estate you could build on it, and you could ask for a bank loan based on that valuation
@johnnypickles52564 жыл бұрын
The problem is that lending was not proportionate to people's earnings and therefore it enhanced the chances of not meeting that debt.
@nicosmind33 жыл бұрын
The interest rate was far too low for the Spanish, it encouraged more borrowing than they could afford, and discouraged savings, hurting the Spanish economy in two ways. Theres too many people out there that think the bubble bursting is the trouble. But its the bubble being blown in the first place thats the real trouble. And cheap credit is nearly always the cause
@AnzuBrief3 жыл бұрын
Sadly Spanish voters cannot use criting thinking skills. Half the country will vote for the left-wing parties because they hate right-wing parties, and the other half will vote for right-wing parties because they hate left-wing parties. They are so busy hating each other that as long as they can blame someone they dont care to improve things around
@SimonTimbers4 жыл бұрын
I’m in Spain (the s is silent)
@AltSimplified4 жыл бұрын
Damn that's a pain!
@Alaryk1114 жыл бұрын
Took me a second to understand good one XD
@LaowaiDaveJCP4 жыл бұрын
😂
@bokhans4 жыл бұрын
😢❤️
@hitsugayatoshiro95174 жыл бұрын
Bread in french
@lony58234 жыл бұрын
I am from spain and I can say that you have explained the crisis better than anyone here could, even the media.
@JoaoHenrique-mb2tz4 жыл бұрын
Great video, really!!! Congrats! I'd love to see you tackle the Portuguese economy and it's current situation in the same vein as you did in this video, about our neighbours! Best wishes and keep up the great work. Stay safe!
@AltSimplified4 жыл бұрын
Thanks! We're certainly planning to 👍
@alcaudon4 жыл бұрын
response from Spain: POLITICIANS, THEY ARE THE BIG PROBLEM. Corruption, corruption, corruption
@DrBXXI4 жыл бұрын
Politicians are the administrators of the country. Ofcourse they are responsible: The gov (politicians) decides the type of interest at which it lends the money to the private banks, if the interest is low the banks borrow more money and uses it to lend it to people, this creates more investment. This is how the bubble is created, because the saving don't mach the interests since the interest has been decided by the gov without considering the savings. Since the interest was so low people invested in long term because they thought the savings were high and there for they could keep borrowing money. However the savings eventually expire and we get a lot of unfinished projects unable to give back the money to the economy or the banks, this is when the bubble explodes. After this there is a perior of time at which the money is lend at it's real interest and only real productive investments can be created, this period of time is called CRISIS. The same means used to scape from a crisis can be used to avoid it in the first place. The politicians just need to stop deciding the type of interest at which the money is lend without considering the savings to gain political revenue for themselves. THE POLITICIANS, THEY ARE THE BIG PROBLEM.
@diegoo.34034 жыл бұрын
I would add some fault to all the builders and plumbers evading taxes, “poor” guys drop from school rode the wave made a lot of money but didn’t invest it. All of them always asking “la factura sin iva?” Or not asking at all.
@DrBXXI4 жыл бұрын
@@diegoo.3403 While evading taxes is bad for the economy, it barely contributes to create any bubble, it just lowers the savings, but doesn't distort them. If anything it just makes a little harder to finish the crisis once the bubble explodes. I'm not sure how school dropping affects the economy to create any kind of bubble, so I can't say anything about that.
@albertoelhambriento4374 жыл бұрын
Lefties is the problem
@jf54474 жыл бұрын
Nuestros políticos son un cáncer desde luego, has dado en el clavo amigo
@raulloma24304 жыл бұрын
Nice video, but you forgot to talk about the bankruptcy of the pension system, which is a very big problem nobody wants to talk about it. Cheers from Spain
@pieterdentoom63324 жыл бұрын
We have a very similar problem in The Netherlands, it's no secret that the system is not sustainable, yet for 30 years no action is being taken.
@simonvanek85264 жыл бұрын
Pieter den Toom Same problem in Czech republic. I think most of the european countries struggle with that
@rbasket84 жыл бұрын
The grand fraud of public pensions. The biggest pyramid scam known.
@welshtoro32564 жыл бұрын
Raul, VisualPolitic has just posted a video about that very thing
@eduesmalo3 жыл бұрын
"At the end of the spanish civil war..." It´s a very common way to start any bold statement in spain, and also, any fight in a bar.
@KAD0109003 жыл бұрын
Why is it in that way? You managed to defeat the terrorists and communists
@jordifolch78334 жыл бұрын
Nice video, well explained. I am Spanish, from Barcelona, and I am one of those who left the country to find a better life. Went to the Netherlands, and now I will be moving to Germany. I work on research and science, and in Spain it's really badly supported to do this job. No future for science and innovation at all.
@jackgonz65804 жыл бұрын
The comment section is a clear reflection of Spain lol: Some people blaming things on the conservatives/ fascists, others on the socialist/ commies, nationalists, independentists, blaming it on the eu, etc... what Spain truly needs is cooperation between its political parties and for the people to stop seeing the fellow Spanish on the side as the enemy. Before anyone jumps to conclusions, i am spanish
@ahiezeralaoiz4 жыл бұрын
You're both spaniards. Spanish is the language you speak, not your nationality.
@rialpleya4 жыл бұрын
@@ahiezeralaoiz You are wrong: www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/spanish Both Spanish and Spaniard can be used to denote nationality whereas only Spanish can be used for the language
@jrussellmoore4 жыл бұрын
Sad, but true. I've been living in Spain for the past 12 years give or take, I don't think I'll ever understand why there are such fights (and I think they've been worsening lately). And not only between regular people, even when there are events that affect the whole country, government officials seem not to be able to have open dialogues among the different parties to deal with them, much less compromise on the matter. Everything is becoming polarized...
@randomaether4 жыл бұрын
@@jrussellmoore this is the oldest and saddest truth of Spain, this is all started long before Lorka or Machado where born, Spain is old and as those previously mentioned activists said, "Ya hay un español que quiere vivir y a vivir empieza, entre una España que muere y otra España que bosteza. Españolito que vienes al mundo te guarde Dios. Una de las dos Españas ha de helarte el corazón" What he tried to say during the civil War was that Spain is polarized, extremely so, and has been so since 1874 and before, there are extremely marked ideologies in Spain and the past that the Civil War left us has only made the two sides more antagonistic and more prone to extremism (as seen specially in Vox and subtly on Podemos).
@danialfred4443 жыл бұрын
@@randomaether Best comment i ever rode on KZbin about Spain. Im spanish too xD I vote for Podemos but i gotta say they are not subtle at all xD Not as extremist as Vox but not subtle either. Thing for me at least is that Podemos actually cares about the poor people.
@alvinlajara23374 жыл бұрын
I'm early today, great video as always. Please do a video about Switzerland.
@AltSimplified4 жыл бұрын
Thanks! Definitely on the list 👍
@investigativejournalism83934 жыл бұрын
You are Already rich.What's the need of economy....... Too much illegal money are going to Switzerland
@Hansulf4 жыл бұрын
Having an arquitect father, grandfather and aunt, yep... I can tell we had one hell of a big hause buble.
@BasileusRex4 жыл бұрын
House*
@حاتمالشمري-ظ7ل Жыл бұрын
يا راوول. اجلبهم لنا بالسعوديه نحتاجهم. لاننا نبني مدينه نيوم وتكلفتها 1000 مليار دولار. تعالوا حياكم الله 😅
@snowsinger58733 жыл бұрын
I still remember when I saw an ad on the underground just before the crisis hit hard in Spain that read: "Mortgages for young people; 50 YEARS so you can pay for your home at ease", or something among those lines. So saying there was a housing bubble is an understatement. It made me so depressed about the future. Thankfully now I live in London, where mortgages are... WAIT A MINUTE!
@mirasmith86373 жыл бұрын
Spain is always optimistic in terms of making the best out of their economy
@kimhyuwong21643 жыл бұрын
Working smart is actually making what others are making monthly weekly without stress.
@marinagloria40163 жыл бұрын
@@kimhyuwong2164 God has blessed us with resources that can fetch us money just giving it a little attention.
@marinagloria40163 жыл бұрын
That's right, people work their ass off just to make $5000 weekly which is totally wrong.
@morganangel3404 жыл бұрын
Dubai probably had the World's Greatest Housing Bubble.
@ravinchowdhury52154 жыл бұрын
Laughs in China
@danielkudo48004 жыл бұрын
That would be Shanghai or Shenzhen
@morganangel3404 жыл бұрын
@@danielkudo4800 Shanghai or Shenzhen are not countries, Dubai City is the entire Dubai.
@morganangel3404 жыл бұрын
@@ravinchowdhury5215 Dubai's economy was Oil, Real Estate and Tourism, China's economy is way more than that. Is not so much the size of a sector, is more about the share of that sector in the entire economy.
@ravinchowdhury52154 жыл бұрын
@@morganangel340 i don't understand how the subtleties work with dubai being an emirate and all, but isn't dubai a city in the UAE?
@christopherflack76294 жыл бұрын
Excellent vid no wonder it's currently the most popular vid on the channel. Well done.
@Duck-wc9de4 жыл бұрын
will you cover the economies of italy and portugal in the future? I just want to know, because Im interested in the way that the mediterran economies work.
@Happy-wb8gi4 жыл бұрын
I think Italy is a particular country. They have alot corruption and Mafia, but they are also one of the biggest manufacturing countries in the world. It surprises me how they manage, but this shows how strong they are! If you take away the Mafia and corruption, image what they could do. Since they joint the EU they went down hill and this is what Germany wanted, as Italy was a major competitor to them, especially in engineering. I love Spain and they have great resources, let's hope for the best amico. Also, Italy has 9ne of the biggest gold reserves in the world, I think only second to USA and Germany.
@mwanikimwaniki68014 жыл бұрын
@@Happy-wb8gi Rwanda and Botswana are less corrupt
@ilFrancotti4 жыл бұрын
Italy now is basically Japan in the 90s, Italian GDP has not grown for over 10 years by now (2009-2021)+ massive level of corruption and mafia.
@alexm50594 жыл бұрын
@@Happy-wb8gi i think you need to take in consideration the different between north and south. North is one of the largest economic zones in europe and works fine but the south is the corrupted mafia itlay that comes to your mind with a lot of dependency in agriculture and tourism and almost no manufacturing industries
@Happy-wb8gi4 жыл бұрын
@Justin Case great👍👍👍😁
@Benzknees4 жыл бұрын
I remember friends trying to buy Spanish properties off plan back in 2007, when it seemed a one way bet with double digit annual increases in value. Ditto what I was hearing about Irish property. It was obviously a bubble, but back then it wasn’t atall obvious when it would burst. The odd thing is why central banks didn’t see the danger, and raise interest rates a lot higher to restrain credit growth. In many ways we’re still in the crisis that inevitably followed, with excess private credit having been replaced by excess public credit via QE programmes. Now worsening a whole heap more with covid spending. It is terrifying to think what will happen when this massive credit bubble bursts, and we get hyperinflation, followed by economic collapse and a decade of deflation.
@bhaaratsharma60234 жыл бұрын
I'm really glad I found another channel like Economics Explained. Excellent content!
@rabertodrbigpapa90554 жыл бұрын
It also suffers of masive population ageing. The pensions system is going to collapce in the near decades
@levyroth4 жыл бұрын
Covid will take care of that problem, no worries.
@eloymendez66264 жыл бұрын
As a Spanish citizen, I believe you only scratched the surface of the real problems here (although you rightly mentioned the high unemployment rate due to unrealistic job market regulations). In my opinion the roots of the rot (so to speak), come from an exacerbated statism. This has been relentlessly promoted through corrupt media and the public education system, so the main aspiration of the average citizen is to get a job in the public sector, which in most cases here is for life. I will sum up some data (and I apologize in advance for the long comment): - The amount of politicians is about 400.000 with a population of 47 million. I would say that around 90 per cent of them are useless parasites. For example Germany has about 100.000 with nearly double the population. - There are about 13000 publicly financed companies which in most cases have only one reason to exist: to employ in well paid jobs friends and relatives of politicians. Although it is difficult to quantify the amount of money squandered here (transparency is not a strong point of the Spanish government), some estimations are that they cost the tax payer over 30.000 million euros a year. - There is and endless stream of public subsidies to the most quaint individuals and organizations. Again it is difficult to know the money that every year goes down the drain this way, but the most reliable reports I was able to find mention a figure well over 100.000 million euros a year. I am not going to dwell in the outrageous tax regime, because it is like being held up at gun point, but suffice it to say that this legalized theft is not enough to finance all the parasites, so the public debt (before COVID, but much more now with the lockdowns) keeps growing and growing. The future looks really bleak for the country.
@betuni26884 жыл бұрын
@K M Entonces criticamos a España o le decimos Viva, en qué quedamos?
@marcor58864 жыл бұрын
Italy has 1 million people living on politics out of 60 million people, you can do the math. The more I read comments about Spain the more I realize Italy is the same. We also have an industrialized area (the north east) as well as Catalunya.
@revertjoy58764 жыл бұрын
Can’t agree with you more .
@betuni26884 жыл бұрын
@K M ¿Y qué piensas hacer para cambiarlo? ¿Gritar Viva España?
@quoth_raven4 жыл бұрын
@@betuni2688 Mientras las banderas valgan más que los derechos básicos y universales, se permitirá esa corrupción en nombre de la patria. Abajo las banderas! Vivan... los seres vivos!! ☮️
@_4l3x_843 жыл бұрын
What a pleasent evening, entering youtube and one of the first videos you see is telling you that your country is a bubble.
@priyansubhagabati81574 жыл бұрын
Even though I have an exam tommorow, I feel watching this is more important :D
@AltSimplified4 жыл бұрын
A wise choice.
@pseudoeverything16564 жыл бұрын
@@AltSimplified by a margin
@AltSimplified4 жыл бұрын
@@pseudoeverything1656 no diminishing returns here!
@pseudoeverything16564 жыл бұрын
@@AltSimplified yes 😂😂😂
@pilroone4 жыл бұрын
Its called procrastination
@sunmarin68733 жыл бұрын
Another problem is the almost non existing economic knowledge of Spanish voters. This leads to crippling and sadly populist labor legislation.
@TheYvesable3 жыл бұрын
And you know this how?
@sunmarin68733 жыл бұрын
@@TheYvesable I'm Spaniard and the IMF released a statement about this
@TheYvesable3 жыл бұрын
@@sunmarin6873 Probably the ones who have economic knowledge are the ones that votes like you, right?
@sunmarin68733 жыл бұрын
@@TheYvesable absolutely not, sensible economic policies are not considered as important in no side of politics
@VashdaCrash3 жыл бұрын
@@TheYvesable Yeah, there's actually no political party which has solid econimic policies. It's like they don't care or something. I'm opting for null vote next elections.
@7john7able3 жыл бұрын
Great Video. Every clear explanation of a very complicated subject.
@dylreesYT4 жыл бұрын
This was probably the most education I've had about Spain's economics ever. Thanks!
@thelogxd88124 жыл бұрын
Well well well,Wlcome to the Spanish Fan club,Soy español y soy el lider del club de fans de españa,porque no hay nadie mas que yo...
@dylreesYT4 жыл бұрын
@@thelogxd8812 I'm not a fan of a Spain, sorry 😅 Most people from the UK 🇬🇧🏴 (mostly English🏴) love Spain but I like France 🇫🇷 and Nordic Countries 🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇯🇫🇮🇩🇰🇮🇸
@dylreesYT4 жыл бұрын
@@arney444 so all Spanish people are lazy, your evidence for this is based on how governments wasted (that's how you spell it btw, a waist is the part between your upper and lower body) money 300+ years ago? OK, maybe you should make a video then and see how many people disagree with your opinions as opposed to AltSimplified's facts and figures.
@dylreesYT4 жыл бұрын
@@arney444 As to your second point, fair enough. For your first point, making such a generalisation is just wrong. You're speaking of millions of people (in a culturally diverse country) all believing that the Government is what must give them a good life. I shall take your opinion into mind, since I now see it's a stereotype of the Spanish, although beyond that I disagree. So at the very least we can agree to disagree. I personally think the Spanish Governments have been largely (although the government in itself is big so not every single individual) inept; having had both bad luck (making the wrong economic bet) and bad policies. You can blame Spaniards for electing such governments which is fair but I put more blame on those who throughout time have had the most influence in Spanish policy making. Admittedly, I don't know any of them since I've never been taught much on the economics of Spain (other than it relies heavily on tourism). Hence why I enjoyed this video so much. Thanks for your input and I hope you have a lovely day :)
@rsnankivell19624 жыл бұрын
@@arney444 What? You just say bullshit. Why don't you say how Spain, in ruins in 1939, got 20 years later to be the 7th power in the world without any help? with lazy people no, for sure! ... why don’t you say what the other empires robbed in its whole history from its colonies? you’re just another Imao. Are you from Russia or any other country where people write with Cyrillic alphabet? ... hahaha, no more to say ... LOL
@PrexXyx4 жыл бұрын
Never understood why Mediterranean-Europe is so economically unstable.
@falkjanen50504 жыл бұрын
Before the Euro they could always devalue their currencies but that also meant higher interest rates. So people were rather cautious when borrowing. Then suddenly there was seemingly endless cheap credit and high growth so people took advantage of what looked like a great opportunity.
@bingo7374 жыл бұрын
@Igor Senkin EXACTLY!
@investigativejournalism83934 жыл бұрын
Because they colonized others.................and looted from world.
@kacpermurach58434 жыл бұрын
@@investigativejournalism8393 Well then, why is France and UK not economically unstable when both countries also had huge empires and looted nations?
@PrexXyx4 жыл бұрын
@@kacpermurach5843 Not to mention Germany, which barely had any colonies at all, yet it's one of the most stable economies in the world.
@leojiang62103 жыл бұрын
Amazing content. Thank you for making this!
@philipvincent33422 жыл бұрын
The world economy is collapsing and Bitcoin is still at $19,000..
@amyritchie44902 жыл бұрын
For nearly 14 years the Fed supported the U.S. economy on a foundation of cheap money. This created malinvestment, misallocation of resources, asset bubbles, and excessive debt and consumption.
@legilooks2 жыл бұрын
People believe their currency has the worth it does because they have no other option. Even in a hyperinflationary environment, individuals must continue to use their hyperinflationary currency since they likely have minimal access to other currencies or gold/silver coins.
@younglee-segredo8312 жыл бұрын
@@legilooks, You are right! I diversified my $100K portfolio across various markets with the aid of an investment advisor, I have been able to generate a little bit above $300k in net profit across high dividend yield stocks, ETFs and bonds during this red season.>
@elizabethangus66282 жыл бұрын
@@younglee-segredo831 How can I contact this adviser of yours? because I'm seeking a more effective investment approach how good is this person at portfolio diversification, particularly with regard to digital assets?
@younglee-segredo8312 жыл бұрын
_My advisor is ’Cintra V. Bedassie’ In terms of portfolio diversity, she's a genius. You can glance her name up on the internet and verify her yourself, she has years of financial market experience.>
@Albert-bu1qv3 жыл бұрын
Spains entry to the euro was very good in some ways where economy was boosted, specially the housing market, with a huge bubble. At the same time everything became so much more expensive. A coffee almost doubled in price in 1 year after the new currency.
@owenblr4 жыл бұрын
As a Spaniard myself I love the country, I live in Barcelona and to me it's the most amazing city in the world. It's a shame I need to be constantly worried about the economy, I think I'll end up moving abroad because it's a nightmare here. So sad tho...
@taiyoqun4 жыл бұрын
Why thought? If you live in Barcelona and want to leave Spain just wait for a bit and you'll get what you want
@betuni26884 жыл бұрын
@@taiyoqun start to learn
@taiyoqun4 жыл бұрын
@@betuni2688 excuse, would you mind explaining what exactly do you mean by that? I genuinely do not get what you are trying to say to me, if you wouldn't mind rephrasing it I would be grateful
@edgardoromero96074 жыл бұрын
Why to much explain?? Few banks and few rich people take control, and make big money, later they take away the money and the business when things go down!! Who pay Spanish population an Europea Unión and money and wehalthy go away!! Why Spanish banks are all over Latinoamérica where the money come from?? Easy.
@betuni26884 жыл бұрын
@@taiyoqun you are not in the country and you don't know what is the real situation here, learn the laws, learn how Spain works and then you will be able to say that typee of things.
@ilFrancotti4 жыл бұрын
All these pictures of beautiful Spanish cities make me want to buy a house there though.
@PureAlbania4 жыл бұрын
Yes, let's see when all remote workers from North of Europe will want to come to South countries.
@cssain-w2g4 жыл бұрын
@@PureAlbania Apparently this is already happening, as witnessed especially in the south of Spain, with cities such as Málaga really growing in the technology sector through remote workers establishing there. At the end of the day, it is a very nice area to live in, safe, good healthcare, nice weather, excellent food, landscape, and good connections with the rest of Europe.
@ricardopontes71774 жыл бұрын
@@cssain-w2g the locals though
@kriskisbulck7864 жыл бұрын
And you should. Pensioners from all over Europe flock there and spend all their money there. They rather live there than in Luton for example with it's sharia courts. Spain is nowhere on the brink of bankruptcy and this channel is, as usual, talking from it's ass just to roll out video's. For a channel that claims to explain economy they understand very little about the global economy.
@ricardopontes71774 жыл бұрын
@@kriskisbulck786 go to Turks and Caicos
@side-fish4 жыл бұрын
Decided to sub today after just watching your stuff regularly. Also wouldn’t be fair since I sub to Economics Explained and your videos are just as good if not better.
@hardikkoul3804 жыл бұрын
I'm glad I came across this channel . This channel is really a hidden Gem!
@AltSimplified4 жыл бұрын
Welcome 👍
@quoth_raven4 жыл бұрын
I like how the comment sections of youtube gives you a glipse into the paralell universe some people live in
@mariolopez86464 жыл бұрын
Just wait here in the US we’re heading to another real estate bubble burst. Can’t believe that here in California house prices are even higher than 10 years ago when we developed the crisis.
@blaspayri3 жыл бұрын
I am in Spain and for once I find that this analysis made abroad is very accurate and synthetic, yet it underlines the real problems of Spanish economy. Brilliant. The touristic images of Spanish cities don't bring any relevant information and seem merely decorative, but they don't hurt the discourse either.
@AltSimplified3 жыл бұрын
Thanks Blas. Great to hear from a local 👍
@davidcampbell72094 жыл бұрын
I love Spain the people the weather the food all absolutely fantastic. Millions of people want to visit the country and so many local people are employed for the high numbers of tourists. This past year has been an absolute disaster as millions of tourists became a few thousand. It seems that we are not going to allowed to travel for the next few months very possibly until after the summer the summer is the big season when Spanish businesses make enough money to see them over the winter season this year if things don't pick up they will go out of business. As such high numbers of Spanish are dependant on tourism it is a bigger problem than for other countries. This past year has been a difficult time for everyone and the people of Spain especially.
@TheRaul453 жыл бұрын
Yes, true, but Tourism in Spain represents 12% of its economy. There are many other sectors. As in the previous real estate crisis, and as can be seen in the statistics, Spain knew how to reinvent itself and began to export because it had no other option. Perhaps these moments of change allow Spain to seek new lines of business.
@mistermatm82854 жыл бұрын
The inability of Spain to depreciate its exchange is what differentiates it from Argentina. That's not a bad thing, but the biggest advantage of being in the Eurozone.
@fernandopimentel54634 жыл бұрын
No it's not. It's a much more painful way to experience a downturn for the people. Citizens would almost not notice if the currency depreciated by 30%, there would be a slight uptick in inflation and that's that. Now if the economy has to contract by 30% to normalize since the euro is fixed, then society will definitely notice and you'll see anger across the board with shit like Catalunya independence, extreme politics etc...
@gavasiarobinssson51083 жыл бұрын
Euro only serves Germany.
@ComeCaramelos_3 жыл бұрын
Corruption in both major parties in the growing years was the biggest hit to the economy
@Abelius3 жыл бұрын
We're a weird bunch, yeah. I've traveled around a bit, and I always return to the homeland, even with the issues it's still a freaking nice country.
@juanherrero39364 жыл бұрын
@Hi AltSimplified. As a spaniard I can say it is good video in general, maybe a bit sensationalist, but that's the Brittish style. I agree with most of what you say overall. Just a couple of points here that need further discussion. As you pointed out there was a housing bubble, originated during the conservative party's rule and continued during social democrate's administration when soil legislation became dysregulated and tax cuts facilitated the acquisition of a house. The latter, was fueled by the cheap access to credit, mainly through some public regional banks. But not all 42 were affected, most of them could have survived, although they decided to merge healthy and toxic banks, inject around 120 bn, 42 bn from Europe (of which 23 have been given back already). These banks products (among others) were bought and traded in markets like (dysregulated during 80's amid a neoliberalist wave) New York or London were they were happy to gamble with toxic finantial products.......until the finantial sector (world wide) turn from greed into fear an it collapsed in 2008. When that happened the party was over everywhere, but in Spain in a particular fashion, more than 15% of goverment revenue came from the construction sector. By 2010 all that was gone. And started the real bubble which was debt-based. But remember debt is a two way concept (revenue and spending). Spending, except for 2009, was cut year after year, actually so fast that harmed the economy so drastically that the revenue was reduced even further (a bunch of nobel prize awarded people warned about how wrong this dogmatic austerity was). Here, the goverment deficit grew and to cover those losses they have to access the market, BUT unless the UK or USA where the house and finantial bubbles were at least as strong as in Spain, the latter didn't have any support of any Central Bank (quick remider, according to EU legislation this can't happen). So what happened by 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013 and 2014? Spain's deficit was more focused on paying the interests put by a market more interested, once again, in short-term greed than in long term rationality. This happened, remember, when countries were happily regarded as PIGS by Brittish and extreme-neoliberalist-populist media, and deemed (without knowing anything about the people lossing their jobs, households, families, lives,....) as worse than pigs by readers of those newspapers. However, neoliberalist dogmatic views starting to change by 2014-2015 and the ECB was kind of "allowed" to entervene the secondary markets, just as the BoE or the Fed did half a decade earlier. By 2016, the economy stabilazed and by 2017 was the fasted growing economy in western Europe, with better productivity than in 2008, with exports rising from 22% to 34% of GDP, unemployment decreasing from 27 to 13,8% (youth unemployement from 48% to 30%) and public debt finally sitting at 95,5% in 2019 from a maximun of 100,4% four years earlier, even school dropouts went from 31 in 2008 to 17% in 2019 (but with north atlantic regions and Madrid with figures bellow 12% in contrast to mediterranen and southern sitting at around 19%) and it managed to attract 700000 migrants, although most of them working in areas related to tourism. Also the industrial composition of IBEX35 went from almost only big banks, retail and construction- or tourism-related companies, to Tech, Biotech, Pharma or renewable energy companies, with much lower compostion of banks, in any case the former are not enough to substitute the levels prior to 2008. Now, the current crisis, is showcasing that Spain's tourism industry (which made only in 2019, 74bn euros) should not rely on low income Brittish, Germans, French,....which provide low income seasonal jobs and higher early leavers rates. Spain is clearly transforming its economy but at pace which will still take years to provide top notch jobs for many. Also needs to reform its labour market and not having super safe jobs for some and precarious for others. Finally, with most recent data, the GDP will fall somewhere between 10-11% (4 points more than the EU average) this year but is predicted to undergo a strong recovery later this year and the following ones.
@AltSimplified4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the detailed points! Commenting so this gets pushed up the comments section 👍
@elpred04 жыл бұрын
La única pega que tiene es la falta de párrafos, shift + enter ;). ¡¡Gracias por una información tan detallada!! ¿Como cojones tienes tantos datos en la cabeza sobre el tema?
@playerone69954 жыл бұрын
This video is probably better than anything or most of what we see on Spanish media, so funny you say it is sensationalist and that it is british style, would you say Spanish media is sensationalist?
@juanherrero39364 жыл бұрын
@@playerone6995 oh spanish media is crap, don't get me wrong. It has become toxic actually. But brittish media uses extensively eye-catching headlines,and exaggerations, it almost seems as if they were trying to sell you something instead of informing you. Although that's something that constantly happens in social media too. There is a clear lack of pause and reflection. Brettish media also have another problem, they are in the hands of very few. But in general, information in western countries has become something volumetric, where quantity has become far more important than quality. That's my opinion, I may be wrong but I'm glad you find it funny, I certainly don't. I think it's harming our democracies considerably. In any case, the aim of my comment was not other than promoting better ways of conveying the story, which for the rest was executed perfectly.
@quoth_raven4 жыл бұрын
@@AltSimplified @Juan Herrero This comment is objective and thought out, I can agree with this analyisis 100%, spot on! 👍👍
@leandroalbero4 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this video, and greetings from Spain! 🇪🇸
@pamelad67743 жыл бұрын
Bitcoin sky rocket above $50k and would hit $100k by Dec. Start buying cryptocurrencies is good they're a huge help down the road for financial progress.
@leandroalbero3 жыл бұрын
@@pamelad6774 $1M in a few years. the fed has no printing limit
@pamelad67743 жыл бұрын
@@leandroalbero if you've been following the news you've probably heard they can appreciate in value by hundreds of dollars espically bitcoin.
@thetrashmaster13524 жыл бұрын
Please do a video on the economy of Ethiopia. I have no clue how interesting it would be but they are doing something right with their 5 year average GDP growth of 9.40%. Plus, nobody ever talks about African nations' economies.
@bemnet71494 жыл бұрын
Great idea,Countries like nigeria, ghana, south africa that look like they are going to dominate africa in the near future
@mwanikimwaniki68014 жыл бұрын
@@bemnet7149 Ethiopia, Rwanda, Tanzania and Kenya is where you should be looking
@mwanikimwaniki68014 жыл бұрын
I wanna see this
@hunterashwill57664 жыл бұрын
Don't get me wrong its impressive, but still a bad economy, basically what happened was Ethiopia finally stopped internal fighting, and they built a damn to generate electricity for its people. But tension are picking up and it looks like the country will fall apart again. Keep in mind fast growths is impressive, but something it can just mean people are barley getting out of extreme poverty. Also I'm not trying to be negative, but just take a look at China the government picks of a lot of wealth, but that doesn't mean the citizens are rich.
@ayanlejaguar35394 жыл бұрын
I’m sorry to say this but ethiopia is becoming poor country cuz of no freedom plus the country internet is censored just like china and north korea and russia
@graemesydney384 жыл бұрын
"If you borrow $100,000 and can't repay you have a problem; if you borrow $100mil and can't repay the bank has a problem." Sounds like D.J. Tramp's mantra.
@nigelhamilton8154 жыл бұрын
That's because it is😄
@anthonymitchell88934 жыл бұрын
a cheap dig at trump there I think one of the r.o t h c I l.d s made that remark
@graemesydney384 жыл бұрын
@@anthonymitchell8893 Everything about Trump is cheap.
@graemesydney384 жыл бұрын
@K M Troll or an idiot - choose wisely.
@malcolmrose33614 жыл бұрын
@@anthonymitchell8893 It's a misquote of J.Paul Getty - "If you owe the bank $100 that's your problem. If you owe the bank $100 million, that's the bank's problem."
@adrianabad98234 жыл бұрын
Best thing of Spain is its citizens, worst its politicians. If you can skip Politicians, then its among the best lands in earth to live good life. Not only because the weather is powerful, the land is rich in minerals (romans settled very strongly for this unique reason), and its very low populated, but because its constitution runs amongst the most free one in europe( doesn’t forbid independent political parties to exist), the judicial power is independent. Though there are problems that will take some more years and that need resolution like lowering the public expenditure and lowering the taxes to make it easy for new companies to seattle. But nowadays this region of the Iberian peninsula (Portugal and Spain) enjoys best experiences in the world, eating experiences, travelling experiences, social experiences, security, freedom, and medical services for all citizens for free. But work needs to be done yet to improve the economy.
@welshtoro32564 жыл бұрын
Trying to improve the economy of 'Spain' has been an urgent issue for the past 500 years.
@fernandom50704 жыл бұрын
Remember ... Politicians are elected by the people ... We are all responsible for the good and bad things ... That is the magic of democracy .
@fedecdelivery58244 жыл бұрын
*It's unfair on how things has turned up to be due to the recent world pandemic things has been so difficult* *we see complains here and there in the social Media from different people in different countries all around the world* *The government has less or no time for their people anymore* *I think we all should try to engage in different things to make money and stop hoping on the economy*
@robertfoster25774 жыл бұрын
Yes ! For real It is very important to have different streams of income and a diversified portfolio as for me I have already invested in crypto which is very profitable and easy to gain
@kingsleydominic19214 жыл бұрын
Exactly I'm also happy to start investing too than to have my money sleeping in bank
@renteriawilliams84474 жыл бұрын
Stocks are good but we have to make the right plans
@haroldchristopher44794 жыл бұрын
Yes Stocks are good but they are alot of businesses more convenient than stocks
@andrewroberts90654 жыл бұрын
That’s the fact well I only invested in stocks and will love to know a better investment too
@nickdoughty5184 жыл бұрын
Current Account surplus! Something the UK seems destined never to achieve.
@dionisioareopagita95333 жыл бұрын
Hahahahahahahahaha
@pecadodeorgullo59633 жыл бұрын
That might change but that's something that only time will tell.
@juanlucas56494 жыл бұрын
I am one of the spanish who had to emigrate. I came to Canada and not planning to go back. I love Spain, but I will only move back there when I am retired and don't have to care about employment.
@malvarez84844 жыл бұрын
Donde vives en Canadá..... a mi me paso exactamente igual. Nuestro políticos son una mierda sin hablar de tanta gente tonta que vota y sigue votando al psoe
@juanlucas56494 жыл бұрын
@@malvarez8484 Vivo por temporadas entre Vancouver y Yukon. Un poco lejos de España! Psoe, PP... me da igual. No hay uno bueno.
@malvarez84844 жыл бұрын
@@juanlucas5649 es verdad a mi juicio el pp es el menos malo. Yo vivo en Calgary
@dionisioareopagita95333 жыл бұрын
Wise
@TheLuisaco3 жыл бұрын
@@malvarez8484 Que solo cites al psoe dice mucho de tu conocimiento sobre actualidad política en España.
@alexandrinabob14 жыл бұрын
Please do a video with the Romania economy also. We also had a great house bubble burst in 2009, after the crash from 2008.
@andrecurtis76533 жыл бұрын
El comercio de divisas afecta la economía tanto a corto como a largo plazo. La actividad económica determina la demanda de una moneda en particular, lo que a su vez tiene un efecto sobre el valor de la moneda. ... En general, las fuerzas de la demanda determinan en última instancia el desempeño del mercado de divisas y, por lo tanto, la economía en su conjunto.
@sergiobernard98313 жыл бұрын
¿Realmente vale la pena forex?
@andrecurtis76533 жыл бұрын
@@sergiobernard9831 Convertirse en un comerciante de divisas vale la pena, ya que potencialmente puede generar ganancias y ayudarlo a aumentar su riqueza. El comercio de divisas también puede ayudarlo a diversificar su cartera y hacerse un nombre. Aunque vale la pena convertirse en un operador de forex, requiere mucha educación, dedicación y autocontrol para tener éxito.
@torquatocaverzasi29433 жыл бұрын
La inversión en Forex es excelente a diferencia de otros mercados financieros. no tiene una ubicación centralizada ya que opera las 24 horas del día en diferentes partes del mundo.
@eleonoraluca5083 жыл бұрын
La gran cantidad de estafadores ha hecho que muchos crean que Forex no es más que una estafa, lo cual es una suposición completamente incorrecta. El experto David Nathan en calidad y profesionalismo en el comercio me ha hecho creer que todavía hay personas genuinas para el trabajo, solo que son bastante pocas.
@sergioalejandro65453 жыл бұрын
@@eleonoraluca508 Hola Eleonora, ¿Cómo puedo ponerme en contacto con el experto David Nathan?
@dag24_d3 жыл бұрын
Interesting video. Greetings from Barcelona, Spain.
@xmaniac994 жыл бұрын
The skyrocketing of house prices is an ongoing asset bubble where I currently live (Netherlands).
@juri36784 жыл бұрын
yeah, the netherlands actually performs worse than spain in that area, but you guys have better salaries lmao
@jarumboy14 жыл бұрын
@@arney444 Nah you're wrong, the large problem is that real estate in the Netherlands is seen as if you're buying shares on the market. Houses are being bought up en masse by large companies or rich people and being left empty to just wait until they pumped up the value enough by artificially decreasing supply and thus making people desperate. It's not really a bubble in the traditional sense, but it's quite similar.
@xmaniac994 жыл бұрын
@@arney444 the whole countryside is practically a big flat green grass field. The Netherlands has no mountains, no swamps, almost no hills, basically all available free land is suitable for residential development. It's the toxic and criminal political arbitrage between the city councils and provinces which makes the costs of developing land artificially expensive. It's a scam, and scams never last. And I agree with you that a lot of criminal (if not criminal than at least dirty) money has flown to the Netherlands (and other western countries) as an investment in real estate. This has been going for more than 25 years but seems to be accelerating the asset bubble.
@papyrustrousle43393 жыл бұрын
As a spaniard myself I am sad to say the future for Spain is grim, many people I know are leaving or want to leave, and I think it's for the best really
@TheRaul453 жыл бұрын
I don't know anyone in Spain who wants to go. I know millions of people from Europe and other continents who want to come to Spain.
@TheRaul453 жыл бұрын
A street sweeper in Spain earns € 1,900 Net per month, has 4 extra payments per year, and works 7 hours a day. A Teacher earns € 2,000 per month A police officer between € 1600 to € 2,400 per month. A house rental costs € 600 on average (Cheaper areas, others more expensive) Food is one of the cheapest in the West, Health is one of the best in the world, education is very good, you have a good climate .. people are positive compared to my country. Honestly, I think that you need to travel a little and see the reality of other countries so as not to be constantly thinking the rest is better.
@papyrustrousle43393 жыл бұрын
@@TheRaul45 in fact, I have lived in more than 4 different countries, including Greece, Germany, UK, Sweden and the US. I think you need to think things twice before assuming other people's opinions are based on ignorance rather than on their own analysis of the world around them. Actually, this is one of the things that I find fascinating with Spaniards, and part of the reason of their problems as well: they blind themselves with their own subjective opinions and prejudices that are unable to have a civil conversation without resorting to some kind of personal attack, even when ignoring completely the other person's life or experiencie for that matter
@rajchoudhary43493 жыл бұрын
Nice narration..!! Wonder how the factors and figures can be tricky
@juan484854 жыл бұрын
The populist policies of the government right now is one of the biggest issues to get out of this crisis, in my opinion. More taxes, zero cuts and more expenses (a lot of them probably useless). A big debt crisis is looming. And add to this the problem of the unsustainability of the pension system. Painful reforms have to be made but politicians don´t have the courage.
@jaimemartinezgiron34374 жыл бұрын
La verdad que jode ver como juegan con nuestro futuro por ganar elecciones
@antoniopinerorobles18593 жыл бұрын
It's really funny how you guys ignore that 2020 has changed the economic paradigm in the academy. Every major economic institution (IMF, ECB, etc), top level economic newspapers like FT or prestigious economy academics now recommend to increase taxes, rise the public spending to avoid the fall of the demand, and reinforce public services in order to reduce inequality. It's really obtuse to pretend economic consensus hasn't changed at all since 2008.
@juan484853 жыл бұрын
@@antoniopinerorobles1859 Increase taxes? I think if there is a consense between economist is that increasing taxes slows down growth, thats why all the economies are increasing debt but trying not to do the same with taxes (spain is the exception, why? because we are over indebted). Continuing with superfluous expenses or a bankrupt pension system is not good whether there is a crisis or not; and it´s no funny at all.
@antoniopinerorobles18593 жыл бұрын
@@juan48485 Insisto, es sorprendente la absoluta ceguera ante los hechos y el intenso debate que se está manteniendo en la actualidad en el seno de la academia. Desde el inicio de la pandemia, se habla continuamente de política fiscal expansiva, de la vuelta a la política industrial activa por parte de los estados, del fortalecimiento de servicios públicos esenciales como la sanidad (por motivos obvios), de la posible reversión de la deslocalización en la producción de bienes esenciales como mascarillas o respiradores, del fortalecimiento del papel de los estados en la economía, etc Se ha mutualizado la deuda europea con la creación de los eurobonos, algo impensable en 2008, y las autoridades económicas están dando una respuesta absolutamente opuesta a la crisis financiera global de la pasada década. Incluso Schäuble ahora está de acuerdo con los eurobonos (www.ft.com/content/ba177185-90c6-41cc-8989-5efe77689392). De nuevo, me parece delirante la disposición que muestran algunos a mantenerse impermeables ante los hechos y los datos. Dejo unos cuantos links: www.ft.com/content/7eff769a-74dd-11ea-95fe-fcd274e920ca elpais.com/economia/2020-10-14/el-fmi-llama-a-subir-los-impuestos-a-los-mas-ricos-y-a-las-empresas-rentables-para-pagar-la-factura-de-la-crisis.html elpais.com/economia/2021-01-25/los-economistas-de-davos-alertan-de-un-aumento-de-la-desigualdad-por-la-pandemia.html
@juan484853 жыл бұрын
@@antoniopinerorobles1859 No creo que nada de lo que comentas invalide, o por lo menos de gran manera, nada de lo que yo decía en mi primer comentario. En cuanto a la deuda: efectivamente esta deuda común es un gran paso (o un gran alivio porque sino estaríamos ante una probable bancarrota), pero va a venir acompañada de vigilancia y parte de esa vigilancia es que no nos endeudemos más y reduzcamos el deficit (y la deuda). Porque si no exite tal problema de deuda por qué habría que tener cuidado con el deficit?. Esto nos lleva al segundo punto. Impuestos: Como no quieren hacer recortes pues van a tener que subirlos. Y van a subir para todos: directos e indirectos. (Ójala solo se los subieran a los ricos...) Y eso es malo para la economía incluso desde un punto de vista puramente Keynesiano. Pensiones: sistema quebrado, dicho por Europa y por cualquiera que sepa sumar. Y otro de los puntos que nos va a exigir reformar la UE. Y en cuanto a las políticas populistas a las que hacía referencia pues me parecen claras (probablemente a ti no...y entiendo que aquí si que cabría debatir); pero básicamente gran parte del programa de gobierno que, precisamente por esta fiscalización por parte de la UE, no se va a poder llevar a cabo porque la comisión lo considera nocivo para nuestra economía. Una cosa es que se haya decidido atacar esta crisis con políticas expansivas (emitiendo una gran deuda) y otra que no vayamos a pasar unos años jodidos y que no tengamos que atajar serias reformas en nuestro país. En mi opinión pensar eso si que tener una buena ceguera. Pero bueno, al tiempo. Veremos lo que pasa, es posible que esté totalmente equivocado, por supuesto.
@hannecatton21794 жыл бұрын
I remember Top Gear going to Spain and finding a newly built airport that had never been used .It still is unused today. This should give you a strong indication of the financial thinking there !
@pilroone4 жыл бұрын
Yes, there was big thought in all of that but only for short term political reasons (the 17 Autonomies playing who was the coolest) and politicians getting big bribes along the way. Same with the high speed railways and many other big expenditures. When people who vote are dumb its so easy for politicians to sell the whole country.
@alexneverstop4 жыл бұрын
Hello Hanne, unfortunately there are more than one "ghost airpors" all around Spain, the problem starts with the bribery from the politicians and the lack of control from the central government. As members of the EU, Spain received founds from "European social founds" as a policy to develop the infrastructures in the country, unfortunately all this money was mishandled and wasted in useless faraonic projects by the politicians in the government at that time. They were subsidized by local government to promote low cost airlines to bring tourist to regions that were not having the resources to accommodate this kind of economic model. Result: massive clusterfuck. check this link if you want to know a little more about ghost airports in Spain. 15mpedia.org/wiki/Lista_de_aeropuertos_fantasma By the way, guess who bought these airports at 10% of the real cost to bring their goods and have their own chain of logistics and speed up the Custom process? China.
@diegols62634 жыл бұрын
@@alexneverstop Believe me, the central government is the first one that spends all this money in useless stuff to get votes and brainwash people. For example in the middle of this Covid crisis spending 127 millon € to pay the media to say good things about the government. I am spanish, but i think we are doomed.
@giakichanpan40224 жыл бұрын
I believe that airport was in the region of Castellón, in the autonomous comm. of Valencia, which at the time was ruled by extremely corrupt politicians (most of them are now in jail or under investigations), they took unofficial payments by the building firm, (whose owners were often friends with the gov. of Valencia) and ballooned ridiculously the building costs (we are talking about a threefold increase in some instances).
@cpazlz4 жыл бұрын
hi hi ho ho
@juanignaciotejero4 жыл бұрын
0:14 that's Zaragoza, my city. Great video!
@eldelfrente73124 жыл бұрын
Bro tenemos que ,votar q vox o pp psoe y podemos están hundiendo españa... y la gente ha esta diciendo que españa está undida como este vídeo como no votemos a pp o vox nos undimos más todavía
@eldon60544 жыл бұрын
Hola compa
@AnimationESP4 жыл бұрын
@@eldelfrente7312 Gane quien gane, tenemos que salir del euro y acabar con las 17 taifas
@eldelfrente73124 жыл бұрын
@@AnimationESP pero como quieres salir del euro tú estás loco jajjaaja
@theendofmytether3 жыл бұрын
One aspect of Spain's economy which is largely ignored both in Spain and in this video is the low birth rate. Pensions take up the lion's share of public spending and this is becoming increasingly difficult for a proportionally smaller workforce. As the issue is unrecognised, zero help by the government to promote young couples to have children is available and the problem gets worse, like a viscous circle. I liked the video by the way. Pretty accurate.
@alejandrosrwebmaster3 жыл бұрын
That is true but it did not afect us. Actually the opposite, the population piramid was highly benevolent to us spaniards back then regarding to pensions. It is turning the opposite now, and we will be most affected in a few years. Look for "baby boom". Those boomers were most of the population and they were working back then in 2007. They are starting to retire NOW and we will suffer the consecuences in a very few years. We have not seen anything like that yet...
@richardvaldes39594 жыл бұрын
All I care about is the shippments of that dry salted ham keep coming
@AltSimplified4 жыл бұрын
This guy has his priorities sorted! 👆👏
@Ma-ttga4 жыл бұрын
We'll do our best Richard, you're our top priority right now.
@richardvaldes39594 жыл бұрын
@@Ma-ttga I said ham not weed
@JunWisewar4 жыл бұрын
@@richardvaldes3959 why not both? Salted ham infused with marijuana essence 😗
@richardvaldes39594 жыл бұрын
@@JunWisewar your right. Send both
@michaelharvey72544 жыл бұрын
Spain has never really recovered since the time Napoleon invaded and put his brother on the throne.
@jmcr19634 жыл бұрын
I lived in Franco’s time and life was wonderful, believe it or not. People spent 1 month holidays, had their homes and car and could sustain 4 members with just one salary. That’s the reality. Spaniards enjoy the longest life span in the world. Then came the EU and leftists and everything started to decline. That’s the reality
@michaelharvey72544 жыл бұрын
@@jmcr1963 You aren't alone in those thoughts. The Euro currency is a crippling straightjacket for Spain. What would be good fiscal policy for Spain would not be good for the Netherlands or Germany - and vice versa. Spain needs to devalue their currency, but can't since it's controlled in Frankfurt. It has led to permanently high unemployment, lost generations, brain drain and being a "mileurista" as a dream for many.
@jonpaul38684 жыл бұрын
Spain was a huge empire. Was as big as the brit.😂😂😂
@felipeyanez77864 жыл бұрын
Ancient history, mix contemporary history....
@meilong23384 жыл бұрын
@Aitana Torres the Psoe
@klugyboy15004 жыл бұрын
Let's talk about the bloated bureaucracy, labor laws that make it difficult to hire/impossible to fire/stifle productivity along with taxes that leave you with a few crumbs after all of your hard work. We could go on about the judicial system, corruption, and a political class that is very much out of touch with the average person.
@Radam893 жыл бұрын
I moved to Spain in November, and arrived with the hope of setting up as self-employed. My experience is that the bureaucratic processes involved are sluggish, overly-complicated and delayed. This is true when even accounting for delays from the Covid pandemic. There also seems to be a problem of 'it's not what you know but who you know' when it comes to getting jobs. This prevents the brightest and best from getting positions which could drive growth in companies and reduce the likelihood of them moving away to other economies. Although this is somewhat the case in many countries, including my country of origin, it seems to be particularly acute here. I love my new country, and hope to raise kids here. It isn't unusual for Spanish graduates to have a couple of degrees; something which I hope is harnessed before more leave for northern Europe.
@TheRaul453 жыл бұрын
I do not understand this repeated comment about the difficulty of creating a company in Spain. I have created 3 companies in Spain. I advise going to an "agency" where for € 60 and sometimes free (if you become their client) they register you in "Self-employed" If you need a company, it can cost € 200 and put € 3,000 as collateral. I put them through a bank guarantee once, and once with an iMac computer bill. And nothing else .. in a few days you can start billing. Hope you are lucky with your new projects Adam!
@kingpuppo58803 жыл бұрын
Go home
@Radam893 жыл бұрын
@@kingpuppo5880 Haha, you salty little xenophobe. I think I’ll stay, thanks 👍
@Radam893 жыл бұрын
@@TheRaul45 Thanks MJI!
@kingpuppo58803 жыл бұрын
@@Radam89 go home
@rafalobo53084 жыл бұрын
Just in the middle of the crisis a book called "Simiocracia" was published, for those interested is a deep dive into what happened and why. Nice video. Next one do UK, just for the "blind" and "hard of hearing" 😉
@xangarabana3 жыл бұрын
Autor?
@edwardbyard65403 жыл бұрын
I own a place in Spain. The hoops you need to jump through are crazy. The French are well known for being bureaucratic, but Spain is on a whole other level. Paper forms in triplicate, rubber stamps on rubber stamps, VERY slow to get anything done. They have a massive public service and it just grinds. Almost nothing can be done online and that which can is insanely complex. They just need to modernise and learn from places like Estonia.
@Kanal7Indonesia4 жыл бұрын
Spain is so beautiful
@carlosoramasramos89114 жыл бұрын
Thanks! Im sure your country has a lot of beautiful places too (from a spaniard)
@Kanal7Indonesia4 жыл бұрын
@@carlosoramasramos8911 😊 I'm from Indonesia ❤️
@mr.frankfurt49863 жыл бұрын
That has absolutely nothing to do with the video, but damn you are right