Spanish unemployment rises to 24 percent

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5.4 million people were out of work in Spain at the end of December 2011. (File: AAP)

5.4 million people were out of work in Spain at the end of December 2011. (File: AAP)

Spain's unemployment rate has jumped to nearly 24 per cent in the fourth quarter, Finance Minister Cristobal Montoro says, confirming the country is still in the throes of a long and painful economic crisis.

Spain's unemployment rate has jumped to nearly 24 per cent in the fourth quarter, Finance Minister Cristobal Montoro says, confirming the country is still in the throes of a long and painful economic crisis.

Montoro told a parliamentary commission on Thursday that official figures due out on Friday will show 5.4 million people were out of work at the end of December, up from 4.9 million in the third quarter, when the jobless rate was 21.5 per cent.

Spain already has the highest unemployment rate in the 17-nation eurozone and is near its record of 24.5 per cent unemployment set in 1993.

The new conservative Popular Party government has pledged major labour reforms in a desperate bid to halt further job losses. A similarly aimed reform in 2010 by the previous Socialist government appears not to have had a major effect on the labor market.

The economy is expected to fall back into recession this quarter - GDP fell 0.3 per cent during the last three months of 2011 and is expected to slide further through March.

"The government's policy must be to overcome, and do so as quickly as possible, the worst economic crisis in our history, the biggest destroyer of employment, the one that has most sapped our youths' confidence in their future," said Montoro.

He said the crisis had placed Spain at "the epicentre of the euro's problems".

Spain, which also has a swollen deficit, is battling to avoid being dragged further into a debt crisis that has already forced Greece, Ireland and Portugal to seek financial bailouts.

The 5.4 million jobless cited by Montoro on Thursday was up from a 5.3 million estimate conservative Popular Party Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy made recently. Rajoy took office in December after his party won a landslide victory in elections the previous month.

Spain began in 2010 to emerge from a near two-year recession triggered by the collapse of a property and construction bubble that fuelled growth for nearly a decade.

But that recovery has gone into reverse. The Bank of Spain predicts the economy will contract 1.5 per cent this year, saying the eurozone debt crisis has wasted business confidence and choked off bank credit, causing a massive drop in domestic demand, only partially offset by strong exports.

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