Planes de vivienda de la Comunidad de Madrid para dinamizar la actividad económica y la creación de empleo en la región

  1. Julián Salcedo Gómez
Revista:
Economistas

ISSN: 0212-4386

Año de publicación: 2023

Número: 181

Páginas: 164-169

Tipo: Artículo

Otras publicaciones en: Economistas

Resumen

2022 has been a disastrous year for the global economy. When the crisis caused by the pandemic, finally seemed to be over the invasion of Ukraine by Russia has caused a new crisis, energetic, which has fundamentally affected the European economies, giving way to a scenario of low growth (recession in several countries) and high inflation, which has become structural, making the ghost of stagflation appear. The measures adopted by the Central Banks have been the classic recipes: rises in interest rates and draining liquidity from the financial system, to curb runaway inflation, at the risk of contracting the economy. Spain, despite growing more and having an inflation rate lower than European Union average, will be the last economy to recover the levels prior to the Covid19 crisis, and almost all macroeconomic indicators have worsened: GDP, deficit and debt, with prospects for 2023 down. In a context of high uncertainty and low growth, not only in Europe but worldwide, the construction and real estate sectors are presented as essential due to their driving capacity for job creation and economic activity, despite the change in the cycle they are facing the real estate sector in all developed countries and the tightening of financial conditions that will hinder investment. For this reason, legal certainty and institutional stability are essential to attract capital to our country, as has been made clear in the Comunidad de Madrid, which has concentrated more than 70% of all investments received in our country in 2022.