The
crisis has caused Spain’s black market economy to grow significantly over the
past few years, according to a study released Wednesday by the union of the
technical staff of the Finance Ministry (Gestha).
Gestha’s
report calculates that the value of under-the-table business in 2012 amounted
to 253 billion euros, equivalent to 24.6 percent of GDP – that’s 6.8 percentage
points, or 60 billion euros, more than at the start of the crisis in 2008.
The
report, entitled “The Underground Economy Takes Its Toll. The Increase in Fraud
during the Crisis,” calculates that black market deals increased annually by 15
billion euros in the period 2008-2012.
“The
underground economy has increased particularly in the regions most affected by
the problem of unemployment and the bursting of the property bubble, such as
Andalusia, the Canaries, Extremadura, Castilla-La Mancha and other regions in
the central belt,” the report said.
The
provinces with “strikingly low” levels of black market activity are those with
a concentration of large national and international companies such as Madrid,
Tarragona, Lleida, Barcelona and La Rioja. However, this fact is offset by the
fact that such companies are more prone to use financial engineering to reduce
their tax burden.
The
report, drawn up by Jordi Sardà of the University Rovira I Virgili, does not
include figures from the Basque Country, Navarre and Ceuta and Melilla, which
have different tax systems.
The
report highlights that almost 70 percent of cash transactions in black market
activity use 500-euro notes.
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