In U.S. charm offensive, Spanish PM highlights recovery to lure 
		investment
						
		 
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		 [July 22, 2021]  By 
		Belén Carreño and Clara-Laeila Laudette 
		 
		NEW YORK (Reuters) -Spain's recovery plan 
		needs the support of U.S. investment, Socialist Prime Minister Pedro 
		Sanchez said on Wednesday during a trip to the United States where he 
		highlighted his country's improving economic prospects. 
		 
		Spain's economy expanded an estimated 2.4% in the second quarter from 
		the preceding three months as it recovers from the impact of the 
		COVID-19 pandemic, and is on course to grow 6% this year and 7% in 2022, 
		Sanchez said on Wednesday. 
		 
		Employment grew by 4.9% in the same period, he told a Reuters Newsmaker 
		event, expressing the hope that Spain would soon become "the 
		fastest-growing economy in the developed world" with the support of 
		government reforms, planned in areas such as labour, pensions and the 
		environment. 
		 
		Spain was one of the countries which suffered the most from the first 
		wave of the pandemic last year, and its subsequent strict lockdown led 
		to a record GDP slump of 10.8% last year. 
		  
						
		
		  
						
		 
		Sanchez said Spain aims to attract $500 billion in private investment to 
		complement a recovery programme financed by European Union aid, and he 
		hoped modernisation projects spanning education, energy and 
		digitalisation would draw in U.S. investors. 
		 
		Spain will receive a total of 140 billion euros ($165 billion) in 
		European recovery funds, half of it in grants. This year, Spain is due 
		to receive 19 billion euros. 
		 
		Sanchez met in New York with several major investors including Bloomberg 
		founder Michael Bloomberg and Larry Fink, CEO of BlackRock Inc. He will 
		continue his tour in Los Angeles and San Francisco where he will meet 
		with CEOs from the entertainment industry and Silicon Valley. 
						
		  
						
		
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			Prime Minister of Spain Pedro Sanchez speaks during a Reuters NEXT 
			Newsmaker event at Instituto Cervantes in Manhattan, New York City, 
			U.S., July 21, 2021. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly 
            
			
			  
CLIMATE SHADOWS 
 
Sanchez said Spain would allocate 40% of its European recovery funds to projects 
related to sustainability and the environment. 
However, he highlighted the contradictions of some of the measures proposed in 
Europe to fight climate change, in particular a proposed carbon tax, a tax on 
energy brought in from third countries where the 'cleanliness' of production 
could not be certified. 
Spain was one of the first countries to call for such a tax in Europe. 
 
"It's a matter of having a level playing field - in Europe we don't feel we're 
playing with the same level of protection," he said, referring to competitors in 
Asia. 
 
However, Sanchez warned the policy could have a "regressive" effect by hurting 
low income consumers and said European leaders needed to consider potential 
impacts. 
 
"It's key that this transition has an inclusive and not elitist perspective," he 
said. 
 
Pointing to the end of coal mining in Spain, which included a compensation fund 
for former coal workers, Sanchez said similar mechanisms may be needed to 
minimise the inequality-deepening potential of the proposed carbon tax. 
 
(Reporting by John Foley in New York, Belen Carreño and Clara-Laeila Laudette in 
Madrid, editing by Andrei Khalip and Richard Pullin) 
				 
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