@article{López_Rodríguez_2012, place={Berlin, DE}, title={Das spanische Modell}, volume={42}, url={https://www.prokla.de/index.php/PROKLA/article/view/21}, DOI={10.32387/prokla.v42i166.21}, abstractNote={<p>Prior to the debacle of 2008,<br>Spain’s economy was an object of particular admiration for Western commentators. In the<br>context of the global crisis, however, Spain has been hovering on the brink of classification as<br>a case for Eurozone bail-out, following Greece, Ireland and Portugal. We borrow from Robert<br>Brenner’s concept of ‘asset-price Keynesianism’ in order to analyse the recent crash of the<br>Spanish economy as well as its social and political consequences. The bursting of the Spanish<br>bubble has torn the veil from a highly polarized social order, with a large proportion of the<br>population deep in debt, many out of work and dependent on public services doubly hit by<br>spending cuts and privatization.</p>}, number={166}, journal={PROKLA. Zeitschrift für kritische Sozialwissenschaft}, author={López, Isidro and Rodríguez, Emmanuel}, year={2012}, month={Jan.}, pages={113–134} }