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Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Shut Out of the Debt Markets, Catalonia Asks Madrid for Emergency Aid


The following is an excerpt from an article in 



The New York Times
Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Shut Out of the Debt Markets, Catalonia Asks Madrid for Emergency Aid

By RAPHAEL MINDER

MADRID — The most economically important region of Spain, Catalonia, asked the national government on Tuesday for more than 5 billion euros in emergency financing, underscoring a growing regional debt burden as the country struggles to pull out of its economic tailspin.

Catalonia says it can no longer obtain loans in the financial markets to support its debt. Just last month, the Valencia and Murcia regions both said that they would need help from a new 18 billion euro, or $23 billion, fund set up by the Spanish government.

The government of the Spanish prime minister, Mariano Rajoy, has been struggling to meet its budgetary commitments to the euro zone and avoid requiring a Greek-style bailout. Already, Europe has committed to lending Spain up to 100 billion euros to prop up its banking industry.

Whether Spain will itself have to request a European rescue depends in part on whether its 17 semiautonomous regions can clean up their finances and stick to budgetary targets this year. The fact that a region like Catalonia cannot meet its debt-financing obligations “is the big problem in this country at the moment,” Mr. Rajoy said Tuesday.

Mr. Rajoy was speaking after meeting on Tuesday in Madrid with Herman Van Rompuy, the president of the European Council, the administrative arm of the European Union. Both denied that Spain was already negotiating aid beyond the bank bailout. Mr. Van Rompuy said it would be up to Spain to decide whether to apply for more aid.

For more, visit www.nytimes.com.

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