Spain’s “Strong Economy”: The Monetary Illusion

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The “Strong Economy” Myth

When Spain’s M3 money supply grew ~25% in three years while real GDP grew only ~8% (2022: 5.4%, 2023: 2.5%, 2024: ~2.9%), the so-called “growth” was largely an accounting trick:

Nominal GDP Growth = Real Growth+Inflation

Not productivity. Not innovation. Just monetary debasement.

The euro-only path 2022-2024 left the average Spanish household with 12 % less food, whereas converting the same €1 600 into Bitcoin would have given roughly €6 000–€7 000 extra food-budget value by the end of 2024. Got your attention?

The Money Supply Surge

YearM3 Growth Pattern
2022High growth following pandemic stimulus, elevated inflation
2023Growth continued but moderated as ECB began tightening
2024Further moderation as interest rates remained elevated

Context: Spain’s M3 averaged around €1.05 trillion from 1997–2026. The current level (€1.77 trillion) is 68% above historical averages. This reflects Eurozone quantitative easing (2020–2022) masquerading as “recovery.”


Prosperity is an Illusion

The 30.7% cumulative food price increase (December 2019–August 2024) aligns remarkably well with the ~25% M3 expansion plus the initial 2020 monetary surge.

Why “Supply Shocks” Don’t Fully Explain It

ExcuseReality
War in UkraineFertilizer/energy costs spiked, but farmer input costs rose 55% while food prices rose 30.7%—the pass-through was partial and lagged
Supply chain disruptionsLargely resolved by 2023, yet prices remained elevated
Corporate greedNo evidence of sustained margin expansion; producers were squeezed too

The persistent elevation in prices—especially essentials like olive oil (+32% in 2024 alone)—suggests monetary debasement rather than temporary supply constraints.

The Timeline Tells the Truth

Whether farmers absorbed losses or not, the key insight remains: inflation wasn’t purely “cost-push.”

MetricPeakFinal (Aug 2024)
Farmer input costs+55% (Aug 2022)-21% from peak, still +22% vs 2019
Food pricesRising+30.7% vs 2019

Result: Input costs spiked then fell back 21%. Food prices kept climbing to +30.7%. This suggests monetary factors (M3 expansion) sustained price levels even after supply shocks moderated.


The Mechanism

When M3 expands 22–25% in three years but real economic output grows only ~8–10%, you have more money chasing relatively fewer goods:

Inflation = Money Supply Growth−Real GDP Growth

Spain’s ~15% “excess” money growth aligns roughly with the sustained price level shift.


The Cover Narrative

Governments and central banks prefer supply-side explanations because they:

  1. Shift blame externally (Putin, climate, “greed”)
  2. Avoid acknowledging that inflation is the chosen policy—the cost of financing pandemic spending and energy subsidies through monetary expansion

The ECB raised rates eventually (2022–2023), but only after the monetary damage was baked into the price level. The money supply was already circulating.

Bottom line: The correlation isn’t just damning—it’s predictive. When M3 grows faster than productive capacity, the tax on purchasing power follows.


What Actually Happened to Households

MetricReality
Nominal spendingUp significantly (more euros circulating)
Real outputModest gains
Purchasing powerDown (prices rose faster than wages)
Household food budgetsUp 19.5% in nominal terms, down 3.7% real

The “strong economy” headlines measure nominal activity—more transactions because more money exists. Not more value created.


The Circular Logic

Governments claim: “Economy growing! Unemployment low!”

But dig deeper:

  • Jobs grew in nominal terms (more euros paid)
  • Real wages stagnated or fell for many sectors
  • People feel “richer” in euro terms but buy less

The 26% of household expenditure now going to food (up from 23.4% in 2019) tells the real story: more money chasing the same calories.


The Inescapable Equation

More Money + Flat Productivity = Higher Prices

Not:
More Money = More Wealth

Spain’s “economic miracle” is largely inflationary nominal growth—the ECB printing euros that flowed into asset prices, housing, and consumer spending, creating the appearance of prosperity while eroding the purchasing power of each euro. Whilst there are energy shocks and Putin issues, it’s the political framing that emphasizes the temporary supply shock while downplaying the lasting effect of the extra euros that remain in circulation.

The damning evidence: Food prices up 30.7% while real household food consumption fell 3.7%.

That’s not prosperity. That’s monetary extraction.

The State Extraction Machine

When real productivity grows at ~2-3% but the state collects:

MechanismGrowth Rate
Tax revenue+6.4% to +10.4% annually
M3/money supply+25% over 3 years
Fines/sanctionsRecord levels (6.1 million penalties)

…the state is growing faster than the economy that supposedly supports it.

How It Works

The state doesn’t produce wealth—it extracts it:

  1. Taxes → Direct confiscation of productive output
  2. Inflation → Silent wealth transfer via monetary debasement
  3. Fines → Penalization of behavior for revenue
  4. Debt → Future extraction committed today

The Perversion

What They ClaimWhat Happens
“Public services”Bureaucracy expands while service quality stagnates
“Social welfare”Dependency increases, self-sufficiency decreases
“Economic growth”Nominal metrics rise, real purchasing power falls
“Record employment”More people working to pay more taxes for less value

The Result

Household food spending:

  • Nominal: +19.5%
  • Real: -3.7%

People work more hours, pay more taxes, face more fines, hold more nominal euros—and yet eat less, save less, own less.

The “strong Spanish economy” is strong for the state, not for Spaniards. The state grows through extraction while the productive economy—the actual creation of value—stagnates.

This is the stationary bandit model: monopolize violence, extract surplus, grow the apparatus. The only difference from historical feudalism is the sophistication of the extraction (inflation, debt, regulatory fines) versus direct tribute.

States and fiat financial systems grow until constrained by collapse or revolution.

Why Bitcoin?

Many observers argue that the “inflation story” in Spain is largely a monetary-supply phenomenon – the euro-denominated money supply expanded, but the real-economy (food, wages, output) barely kept pace. Bitcoin, being a global, non-sovereign asset, captured the broader surge in global money creation and risk-appetite, turning a modest €1 600 food budget into a multi-thousand-euro “investment” in just two years.

Put another way: the euro-only path leaves you with 12 % less food, whereas converting the same €1 600 into Bitcoin would have given you roughly €6 000–€7 000 extra food-budget value by the end of 2024.

That’s the story Bitcoin has been screaming since 2009. Please listen 🙂

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