
Spain's public
debt reached a record high in June, the country's central bank said.
The figure has
risen to 942.8bn euros (£792.5bn; $1.3 trillion), equal to 92.2% of the
country's entire economic output, the bank said.
This is nearly 15%
higher than the same period last year and above the Spanish government's target
limit of 91.4%, despite severe public spending cuts.
Austerity measures
have led to street protests as unemployment now tops 26%.
Prime Minister
Mariano Rajoy's government is aiming to reduce public spending by 150bn euros
between 2012 and 2014, but rising unemployment and the consequent benefit
payments, is making this target difficult to reach.
The bank believes
public debt could top 100% of gross domestic product over the next three years,
its highest level in more than a century, as the government struggles to revive
the country's flagging economy.
Bank borrowing
Mr Rajoy may
derive some comfort from other figures showing that the country's debt-laden
banks have been successfully reducing their borrowing from the European Central
Bank (ECB) over the year.
Spanish banks
borrowed 249.3bn euros from the ECB in August, making it the 12th successive month
their borrowing has fallen.
In August 2012,
they borrowed 411bn euros from the ECB, a record high, reflecting almost total
lack of investor confidence in the country's stricken banking sector.
The banks received
41bn euros of EU bail-out funding in 2012.
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