BTCC / BTCC Square / Cryptopolitan /
Spain’s Economic Boom Sparks Universal Credit Rating Upgrades

Spain’s Economic Boom Sparks Universal Credit Rating Upgrades

Published:
2025-09-29 10:55:15
5
3

Spain earns across-the-board rating upgrades on strong economy

Madrid's economic engine is firing on all cylinders—and the ratings agencies are taking notice.

The Upgrade Cascade

Not one, not two, but across-the-board rating improvements hit Spain's financial profile. The strong economic performance left analysts scrambling to adjust their outlooks upward.

Beyond the Numbers

This isn't just about spreadsheets and projections—it's about fundamental strength rewriting the narrative. The upgrades reflect real momentum, not the usual financial voodoo that typically passes for economic analysis.

While traditional finance celebrates its paper victories, digital assets continue building the actual infrastructure for tomorrow's economy—but hey, at least someone's still impressed by credit rating agencies.

Ambitious regularization program targets 1 million new residents

This isn’t the first time Spain has worked to regularize undocumented workers as there have been six other times between 1986 and 2002 that helped 1.2 million people. But this is part of the most ambitious effort so far.

Through this program and another one aimed mostly at Latin Americans, Spain is set to add close to 1 million new residents over the next three years. A system for seasonal worker visas is also being expanded.

Spain used to be a country where people left to find work elsewhere. It only became a place where immigrants came in the early 2000s as the economy grew, with foreigners taking jobs that Spaniards couldn’t do or didn’t want. Numbers from the OECD show Spain has had one of the fastest demographic shifts in developed countries this century, with foreign-born people going from 1.6% to 14% of the population in less than 30 years.

Growth projections exceed euro area expectations

The government said earlier this month that it thinks GDP will grow by 2.7% this year, higher than the previous guess of 2.6%, and way above the 1.2% growth expected for the broader euro area.

Earlier this month, S&P Global gave Spain a rating upgrade too, pointing to “notable improvement” in how the country’s balance sheet looks and better resilience to economic shocks.

Judith Arnal works as a senior fellow at the Elcano Royal Institute, a think tank in Madrid. She said Spain has come out as the clear growth leader among the euro area’s largest economies in recent years.

“Spain’s growth has relied not only on booming tourism but also on dynamic non-tourism services, such as business, telecoms and IT services. This marks a shift in the country’s growth pattern, showing that Spain has competitive firms able to export beyond traditional sectors,” Arnal told CNBC by email.

“Growth has also been closely linked to demographic dynamics and job creation. More than half of the jobs created since 2020 have been taken up by immigrants, which has supported overall GDP expansion but meant that GDP per capita has advanced less strongly. This reflects a more extensive than intensive growth model,” she added.

Looking forward, Arnal said that even though political uncertainty hasn’t kept Spain from leading euro area growth, the country could do even better with more stability.

If you're reading this, you’re already ahead. Stay there with our newsletter.

|Square

Get the BTCC app to start your crypto journey

Get started today Scan to join our 100M+ users