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No pain, no gain for Spain

Overwhelmed by recession since 2008, Spain's economy seems to have turned a corner but faces an anti-austerity backlash that could set it back

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Spain is not out of the woods.
David Brown

Spain is starting to win plaudits. Two years after a near sovereign default, the crisis weary economy seems to have turned the corner. The financial bailout is officially over and investors are returning to Spain's financial markets.

But rebuilding Spain's battered economy will take time. And it comes at a heavy price.

The government is still clearing up the mess caused by the collapse of Spain's property bubble in 2008.

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Spain has been overwhelmed by recession for five out of the last six years. Consumers are bearing the brunt of heavy economic reconstruction costs. Unemployment has skyrocketed. Living standards have plummeted for those hardest hit by the crisis.

Slow recovery guarantees the deficit continues to widen without tougher austerity policies

But there are some tentative signs of recovery. Spain's economy has just edged back into positive growth territory, following twin recessions in 2008-2009 and 2011-2013. Gross domestic product expanded by 0.2 per cent in the fourth quarter last year, its second successive period of expansion.

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