This reminds me of the great Mark Twain who invested his fortune in publishing 
the memoirs of President Grant.   No one else would touch them, they were too 
toxic and revealing of the corrupt in the society;  Twain believed that history 
should always be published.    So he went into debt and published them.   The 
bankers came after this man who was the great American literary treasure and 
demanded their money with interest.   Twain responded by going on a world wide 
speaking tour that brought great credit to the nation.    At the end of the 
tour he fell exhausted but with his bills paid and died and early death.     

 

No what did America really get out of all of that except a dead genius?  

 

From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Michael Gurstein
Sent: Sunday, July 18, 2010 1:50 PM
To: [email protected]; 'RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, 
EDUCATION'; 'p2p research network'
Subject: [Futurework] FW: Spain’s unemployment devastates residents, adds 
country to European nations in crisis

 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Sid 
Shniad
Sent: Sunday, July 18, 2010 6:56 PM
Subject: Spain’s unemployment devastates residents, adds country to European 
nations in crisis


http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/spains-unemployment-devastates-residents-adds-country-to-european-nations-in-crisis/article1643243/


Globe and Mail                                                                  
                                                       July 17, 2010


Broken Europe


Spain’s unemployment devastates residents, adds country to European nations in 
crisis 


 Jaime Cadena at his Barcelona home 
<http://beta.images.theglobeandmail.com/archive/00769/715_06_JPG_769401gm-a.jpg>
 

Jaime Cadena at his Barcelona home Siqui Sanchez/Getty Images for The Globe and 
Mail

‘I’ll need the rest of my life to get out of this,’ says resident Jamie Cadena

Doug Saunders 

Barcelona — If you could peer into the very centre of the converging economic 
forces tearing at the fabric of Europe, you would find a small, politely 
bewildered man named Jaime Cadena. 

This week, Spanish Prime Minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero became the 
latest European leader to announce huge cuts to government departments and 
programs in order to save his country from becoming another bankrupt victim of 
the continent’s debt crisis. At the same time, Mr. Cadena discovered his own 
personal place in that crisis. 

The 44-year-old construction worker sat at the folding table in the tiny living 
room of his basement apartment on the outskirts of Barcelona and tried to grasp 
the larger meaning of a letter from the bank informing him he no longer owned 
the property. 

The apartment will be auctioned at a fraction of the price he’d paid for it 
four years ago, when his fast-rising salary seemed a sure ticket to 
middle-class stability for his family. If a buyer is found this week, he and 
his four teenaged children will be evicted. As Spain has no personal-bankruptcy 
law, he will still owe the bank almost €200,000 – more than the current market 
value of the apartment – even if he loses it. 

 Jaime Cadena at his Barcelona home 
<http://beta.images.theglobeandmail.com/archive/00769/spain_769461gm-b.jpg> 

Siqui Sanchez/Getty Images for The Globe and Mail

Jaime Cadena at his Barcelona home

“It’s like a terrible weight I’m forced to carry,” Mr. Cadena says. “I feel 
like the whole country’s problems have fallen on my back.” 

With an unemployment rate of nearly 20 per cent, the highest in Europe, it 
could be a long time before he finds more than the occasional month-long 
construction job. But the spending cuts launched by Mr. Zapatero this week will 
likely lead to reductions in the welfare and unemployment-insurance programs 
that were Mr. Cadena’s only hope of staying aloft until jobs materialize again. 

Mr. Cadena’s family are part of an estimated 1.4 million Spaniards now facing 
court action over unpaid mortgages. During the late 1990s and 2000s, a 
freewheeling mortgage market gave Spain the highest rate of homeownership in 
Europe and possibly in the Western world, at 85 per cent. But property values 
quickly collapsed across Spain – falling more than 40 per cent in Barcelona – 
at the same time as 2.5 million jobs were wiped out, so there are now a million 
Spanish families in which all the members are unemployed. 

In economic terms, Spain’s simultaneous property-bubble collapse and debt 
crisis mean the country will face years of adjustment to a lower living 
standard and a less generous government. Given the country’s comparatively 
strong underlying economy, it does not face a Greek-style lender panic, but it 
will likely be more than a decade before its economy returns to its previous 
levels. 

The new Europe 

In human terms, it means millions of Europeans who had been given a foothold in 
the middle-class world of property ownership, secure employment and university 
education have now been plunged into lives of rented rooms, paltry minimum-wage 
jobs and dependency on an increasingly feeble state. Many face huge burdens of 
debt. 

Map: Financial data by country 


View Doug 
<http://maps.google.ca/maps/ms?hl=en&ie=UTF8&msa=0&msid=103335406819895550235.00048b85fff4a4c4ef717&ll=54.572062,15.46875&spn=41.456223,105.292969&z=3&source=embed>
  Saunders: Broken Europe in a larger map

While it now seems likely the euro currency will remain intact after Germany 
and France acted to secure the debt of their faltering neighbours, and most 
economies will recover, there is a widespread sense this year’s harsh austerity 
measures will mark the end of “the social Europe”: the continent’s systems of 
social safety nets, job-security guarantees and early-retirement protections 
that made middle-class life sustainable for those able to enter it. 

In Spain, the government this week asked the people to share a major national 
sacrifice in order to prevent a disastrous future. 

“I want to tell you that this is a transcendental moment for Spain, a crucial 
moment for its immediate future and for the coming decades,” Mr. Zapatero told 
parliament on Wednesday. “We need to adopt measures to reduce the impact on our 
economy of the worst crisis we have known, and at the same time we need to 
drive forward the most intense economic transformation of our country in recent 
times.” 

Across Europe, governments are preparing enormous cutbacks. In Britain, Prime 
Minister David Cameron this month asked ministers to draw up plans for a 40 per 
cent cut in every department. Italy this week passed a budget cutting 
€25-billion over two years, and Ireland was warned by the International 
Monetary Fund that its brutal slashing may not be enough to keep debt in check. 

But the relatively manageable fiscal crisis in many European countries – 
Spain’s debt situation, like Britain’s, is roughly comparable to the one faced 
by Canada in the early 1990s – is disguising a far more dire human situation 
that leaves millions of Europeans fearing for their future. 


Doug Saunders tweets from across Europe


Follow Doug Saunders as he researches and reports from some of Europe's hardest 
hit nations


Contacting Twitter...


The middle-class dream 

Mr. Cadena’s case is typical in many respects. He is, along with one-10th of 
all Spaniards today, an immigrant – in his case from Ecuador – who worked hard 
for a dozen years, married, raised a family and was stably employed enough to 
became naturalized. A house seemed a logical next step; in fact, his neighbours 
told him, it was insane to continue renting. 

In 2006, a Barcelona bank offered him a “free” mortgage – with no down payment 
– that was offered, signed and closed in one day. His salary of €1,100 a month 
was combined with his wife’s earnings of €600, and the bank asked them to claim 
they worked weekends (they didn’t) in order to make their income appear high 
enough to qualify them. 

Before he had a chance to think about it, Mr. Cadena was given the keys to the 
apartment and a 2-centimetre-thick package of fine-print pages he either 
couldn’t or didn’t read, and was told the mortgage payments would be €900 a 
month, withdrawn from his account. 

He had no idea how much he’d paid for the 3-bedroom basement apartment (only 
this year did he realize it was an extraordinary €253,000) or the interest rate 
(5 per cent above prime). 

The monthly payments, he soon learned, were calibrated to rise over time, first 
to €1,100 euros and then, in 2009, to €1,600 – a mortgage structure, also 
popular in the United States, that only made sense under the assumption both 
the borrower’s income and the house’s value would rise quickly and constantly. 

They didn’t. The collapse of Spain’s property bubble coincided with the rising 
mortgage rates faced by Mr. Cadena (and many others). In early 2009, his 
construction company cut his shifts to six hours per day; in November they 
folded completely. 

Success, interrupted 

His wife left him, apparently frustrated by his sudden loss of fortune, and he 
is now a single father watching over children aged 14 to 21 who face even worse 
prospects than him: Spain’s youth unemployment rate is more than 40 per cent. 
Two years ago, he expected to be using his home equity to pay for 
post-secondary educations for them; now he is worried they might fall into 
gangs and drugs in an apartment neighbourhood that is becoming a ghost town. 

Mr. Cadena spends his days looking for jobs, but so far this year, he has only 
had a month of steady work. Beyond that, he is dependent on the state. At the 
moment, unemployment-insurance payments give him €1,100 a month, but will end 
in November, a year after they began; after that, he will rely on welfare 
payments of €420 a month. 

It is widely believed Mr. Zapatero will have to slash Spain’s welfare and 
unemployment-insurance programs in order to meet his deficit targets, although 
he has refused to speculate on the possibility. If these benefits are cut, 
millions of people like Mr. Cadena will be thrust into even worse situations. 

“I talk to hundreds of people in this position, and many of them just decide to 
take their own life,” says Adria Alemany, head of a housing-rights group 
pushing for an end to the mortgage policies that cost Mr. Cadena his home. “And 
why not? What is there to live for? Fighting back for them is the only way to 
survive.” 

For Mr. Cadena, a surprisingly fit and cheerful man in the face of personal 
doom, survival is for his children. “I had my chance,” he says, “and I hope 
they will do better in their time. I’ll need the rest of my life to get out of 
this.” 

About the series: 

The debt crisis has turned the formerly stable countries of Europe upside down. 
Even as the economy begins to emerge from recession, drastic efforts to avoid a 
debt and currency emergency have changed life in the Old World forever; ending 
ancient working traditions, rupturing families and communities and forcing 
long-dormant societies to seek new ways of getting by. Doug Saunders looks at 
the human effects of a continent’s economic disintegration, visiting people and 
families in six countries at the centre of the crisis. 

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