Spain's economy 'on track for growth'

Spain's economy is on track for growth this year and the government does not plan any new taxes as it works to cut the deficit…

Spain's economy is on track for growth this year and the government does not plan any new taxes as it works to cut the deficit, economy minister Elena Salgado said in a radio interview today.

Ms Salgado also defended three government initiatives seen as playing to leftist voters who punished the ruling Socialist party in regional elections in May over pro-market austerity measures and the European Union's highest jobless rate.

The initiatives are relief for borrowers stuck with mortgage payments on homes seized by banks, a Central Bank review of incentive pay for banking executives, and central government loans to city halls struggling to pay providers.

With voters unhappy over the Socialists' deep spending cuts, the measures are seen as trying to boost the hopes of Socialist candidate Alfredo Perez Rubalcaba, who is polling 14 percentage points behind centre-right Popular Party leader Mariano Rajoy.

General elections are due by next March, and Ms Salgado said she was against calling early elections.

Government ministers have spoken in recent days of more taxes for banking executives, but Salgado said what the government really wants to do is to make sure that incentive pay does not push bankers into too much high-risk lending.

"We have to be especially careful with bonuses, with incentives for certain acts," she said. "The Bank of Spain will oversee incentives given to people working in the financial sector to make sure those incentives don't increase risk that weighs on the solvency of the financial system in the future."

Lending in Spain is largely stagnant after a housing bubble burst in 2007, leaving banks with heavy exposure to bad property loans.

Ms Salgado said a slowdown in economic growth in Europe in the second quarter would not knock Spain off track. The government's official forecast is for 1.3 per cent economic expansion this year, compared with market consensus of 0.8 per cent growth.

"I have reports on my desk that show that there is a slowdown in the second quarter, probably in all of Europe, but Spain's economy will continue to grow and we'll meet our targets," she said.

Some experts have said that if growth is tepid this year and falls short of the official forecast, the government will have trouble meeting its target to cut the deficit to 6 per cent of gross domestic product in 2011 from 9.2 per cent last year.

But Ms Salgado ruled out raising taxes.

Reuters