At the start of Spain's fifth year of recession, there are at last reasons to believe that the worst may be over, and that the beginning of a slow recovery may not be far away.

Since 2009, the divergence between Spain and the core countries of the euro zone has been to a large extent corrected: inflation, which peaked at 4.3 percent in 2008, was negative in 2009 and is less than 3 percent today, despite sharp increases in indirect taxes; the spread in unit labor costs with respect to the euro zone average, which was 19 percent, is now 9 percent, both across the whole economy and in industry. The current account deficit, 10 percent of GDP in 2007, was less than 2 percent in 2012.