About Get Alerts Login
November 20, 2009
Browse by Regions and/or Topics

Immigration Policy a Casualty of Unemployment in Spain

Soeren Kern | Bio | 13 May 2009
World Politics Review

Login to Discuss EmailEmail | Print IconPrint | Share Icon Share | Reprint IconReprint

BARCELONA, Spain -- As the once-vibrant Spanish economy plunges deeper into recession, the government of Socialist Prime Minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero is struggling to staunch the country's skyrocketing jobless rate. And among the first casualties is Spain's famously lenient immigration policy.

With employers shedding jobs at a record pace, Spain's unemployment rate has nearly doubled over the past year to 17.4 percent, the highest in the European Union. More than 4 million Spanish workers are now unemployed, and that number is expected to reach 5 million by 2010 (.pdf). One million Spanish families now have no source of income, and unemployment benefits, which last for a maximum of two years, will run out for millions more in the near future. All of this has the government worried about the potential for social unrest in Spain. ...

subscribe to World Politics Review

WPR

Subscribers receive:

  • Access to in-depth feature articles
  • Regular Strategic Posture Reviews
  • Regular WPR Special Reports
  • Access to our Document Center
  • Access to WPR’s entire archives
  • Enhanced search across the entire site
  • Participation in our discussion section

Click here to subscribe »
Click here to take a free trial »
Already a subscriber? Login here.

Login to Discuss EmailEmail | Print IconPrint | Share Icon Share | Reprint IconReprint