http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/financetopics/financialcrisis/4292055/SandP-strips-Spain-of-its-AAA-credit-rating.htmlThe credit-rating agency's downgrade comes at a delicate moment for Euroland's weaker bloc. Several states already face difficulties raising money on the bond markets. The yield spreads on Spanish debt rose yesterday to a post-EMU high of 122 basis points above German Bunds, though still below levels for Italy, Ireland and Greece.
Explaining the downgrade, S&P cited the "structural weaknesses in the Spanish economy" and predicted a long recession that will raise public debt by 18pc of GDP and may entail a huge bank bail-out.
Brussels predicted that unemployment in Spain would reach 19pc by next year, pushing the jobless total to near 4.5m. Opposition leader Mariano Rajoy called on finance minister Pedro Solbes to step down as a "patriotic duty". "This is a man who has thrown in the towel. He's given up, he's got no ideas left and no clue what to do next," he said.
Myriam Fernández, S&P's lead analyst, said Spain's euro membership provided stability but also tied Madrid's hands as it tries to respond to the crisis. "It doesn't have control over monetary policy and lacks the flexibility to correct its current account by devaluation," she said.
Alberto Mattelan, an economist at Inverseguros, said the key risk over the next two years is Spanish companies' debt load. "They are very dependent on external credit. At 10pc of GDP, it's the highest in Europe. There won't be a real recovery until 2011," he said.
Spanish politics may not wait that long. Some 35,000 trade unionists marched through Zaragoza, in the county's north-east, on Sunday to demand "job protection" after a clutch of factory closures in Aragon's industrial hub. It was the first big labour protest against the Socialist government of Jose Luis Zapatero. "We're paying the bill for this crisis and we are not going to pay the bill any longer," said union leader Julian Buey.