Bank of Spain data showed a net 66.2 billion
euros ($82.0 billion) was sent abroad last month, the most since records
began in 1990. The figure compares to a 5.4 billion net entry of funds
during the same month one year ago.
Spaniards
are worried about the health of their banks, hit by their exposure to a
2008 property crash, and have been sending money to deposit accounts in
stronger economies of northern Europe.
The capital flight data predates the nationalization of Spain's fourth biggest lender Bankia (BKIA.MC) in May when it became clear the bank could not handle losses from bad real estate investments, compounded by a recession.
I'll bet that Spain wishes that it could recovered all the
many billions of dollars it squandered on green energy.
Saddled with a budget deficit more than twice the European
Union limit and a ballooning gap between income and costs in its
power system, Spain halted subsidies for new renewable-energy
projects in January. The surprise move by Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy one month after taking office helped pierce investor
confidence in stable aid for clean energy across Europe.
“They destroyed the Spanish market overnight with the
moratorium,” European Wind Energy Association Chief Executive
Officer Christian Kjaer said in an interview. “The wider
implication of this is that if Spanish politicians can do that,
probably most European politicians can do that.”
Spain’s $69 billion of investment in power capacity from
2004 to 2011 was about triple the spending per capita in the
U.S. in that period, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance
data and U.S. Census Bureau population estimates. Most of the
2012-2013 spending will be for the legacy of projects approved
before the aid cuts to wind, solar, biomass and co-generation.
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