From BBC News
One of the most important parts of this "liberalisation" of the job markets (which was literally approved by the government the same day Spain played in the World Cup, to lessen public attention) is lowering the severance pay for improper firing by about 25%, with a further 17% of the cost to be paid by the state rather than the ex-employer.Spain is taking the right measures for economic stability, the head of the International Monetary Fund has said.
Dominique Strauss-Kahn said he was "confident" Spain's economy would recover and called on all Spaniards to back the government's austerity work.
He was speaking after a meeting in Madrid with Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero.
Mr Zapatero had earlier denied his government was seeking an IMF bailout, but markets have been nervous.
Mr Zapatero said on Thursday that Spain's economy was solid and solvent, and the visit by Dominique Strauss-Kahn was a scheduled one.
'Determination'
Mr Strauss-Kahn said all the measures being put in place by the Spanish government were "clearly being done for the benefit of the economy".
"I am really confident in the medium and long-term prospects for the Spanish economy, providing the efforts that have to be made will be made," he added.
He specifically praised continuing efforts to liberalise the Spanish labour market, saying they went in "the right direction".
Mr Zapatero said that during the meeting he had conveyed to Mr Strauss-Kahn "the determination of the Spanish government to implement and to make effective every single one of these reforms that we have launched".
Nervous markets
Mr Zapatero's government recently introduced a package of spending cuts and a reform of the labour market in an attempt to persuade nervous financial markets that Spain's finances are under control.
However, that's a difficult task, as after the crisis in Greece, the financial markets have been concerned that Spain could be the next country to require outside financial assistance.
As a result, Spain is having to pay record rates to sell its debt, and this week a senior banker revealed that Spanish financial institutions are struggling to get funding on international markets.
Spain is now promising to publish the results of what are known as "stress tests" on its banks, to prove that any fears of their failure are unfounded.
The country is still reeling from the collapse of the construction sector, has a budget deficit of 11%, and one in five workers is unemployed.
To help reduce the jobless count, the Spanish government wishes to liberalise labour laws that currently deter Spanish firms from taking on full-time staff because of the difficulty of making redundancies.
However, this has already faced strong opposition from unions, who are threatening to hold a general strike in September.
Obviously, this is going down about as well as a lead balloon, though the situation is compounded by the fact that our larger national unions are scorned by a large majority of the population, since it is widely believed that they are in cahoots with the government to keep the subsidies flowing and that the September general strike is little more than theatrics.
The situation might finally become explosive next year. Long term unemployed aren't getting any money at this point, the sometimes retarded "shovel-ready" jobs that the public sector has been paying over the last couple of years are over and the European Commission has demanded that Spain make budget cuts worth some seven billion euros next year (on top of the ten billion euros already cut), so the government will be forced to either raise direct taxes (unlikely) or make additional cuts to the salaries of public sector workers (fairly likely, since the recent public sector strike was only followed by about 15% of the workforce by the most reliable accounts).
So... thoughts?