Spain is widely regarded as one of Europe's strongest-performing economies. GDP continues to grow. Employment has reached record levels. Tourism repeatedly breaks new records. International institutions frequently highlight Spain as one of Europe's leading post-pandemic success stories. Yet beneath these encouraging headlines lies a more complex reality.
In Spain's Economic Mirage, Bernd Riemann examines the widening divergence between headline economic statistics and the underlying structural realities of the Spanish economy. Rather than presenting Spain as either an economic success or a nation in decline, this book offers a rigorous diagnostic analysis of an economy increasingly reliant on extensive rather than intensive growth, where apparent resilience conceals a gradual erosion of its productive foundations.
Backed by extensive, official economic data, this book moves beyond political rhetoric to evaluate the quality of Spain's economic growth. It focuses on the institutional incentives shaping performance to determine whether current trends are sustainably strengthening or undermining the country's long-term capacity for prosperity.
The analysis begins by examining the statistical façade through which modern economies are often assessed. It explores how aggregate indicators-including GDP, employment, investment, and public expenditure-can present an incomplete picture when interpreted without structural context. The book explains how population growth can inflate total GDP while diluting output per capita, how expanding public expenditure may boost national accounts without proportionate gains in productive capacity, and why headline employment figures alone reveal little about the quality, stability, or productivity of work.
It then turns to the institutional mechanisms driving these outcomes. The labour market is examined through the lens of contractual reform and employment composition, while the investment environment is analysed to explain why capital increasingly flows toward defensive assets such as real estate instead of productive enterprise. The book also evaluates the long-term consequences of sustained fiscal intervention, questioning whether recent public spending programmes have generated durable private-sector dynamism or have instead reinforced economic dependency.
The final section addresses the broader institutional and social consequences of these structural trends. It explores the effects of regulatory complexity, rent-seeking behaviour, procurement incentives, subsidy dependence, revolving-door relationships, declining business dynamism, and persistent barriers to entrepreneurship. Particular attention is given to how these institutional arrangements influence innovation, productivity, capital allocation, and social mobility, gradually reducing the economy's capacity to create sustainable long-term wealth.
Using an objective, evidence-based framework, the book combines empirical data with institutional economics to analyze Spain's trajectory. Rather than praising or criticizing specific political administrations, it examines the underlying incentive structures that drive actual economic outcomes.
The central argument is both simple and profound: Spain's greatest economic challenge is not a lack of activity, but a misalignment in how that activity is generated. An economy can produce impressive headline statistics while its productive foundations steadily weaken. Genuine prosperity depends not merely on growth itself, but on the institutions that reward innovation, productive investment, competition, entrepreneurship, and merit.
Spain's Economic Mirage challenges readers to look beyond short-term headlines and statistics. It demonstrates why institutional quality matters most and details the necessary changes required to secure Spain's long-term, sustainable prosperity.