Spain

2005 Results

Aid

What it measures

Aid quality is just as important as aid quantity, so the CDI adjusts gross aid as a share of GDP for various quality factors: it subtracts debt service, penalizes "tied" aid (making recipients spend aid money only on donor goods and services), rewards aid to poor but relatively un-corrupt recipients (and vice versa), and penalizes overloading poor governments with many small projects.

Spain Overall
  • Score: 2.6
  • Rank: 16
Spain Strengths
  • NA
Spain Weaknesses
  • Low net aid volume as a share of GDP (0.22%; rank: 17)
  • Small amount of private charitable giving attributable to tax policy (rank as a share of GDP: 14)
  • Large share of tied aid (44%; rank: 17)
  • Weak on project proliferation (7% of Spanish development projects cost under $100,000; rank: 17)
  • Weak on selectivity; large share of aid to less poor and undemocratic governments (rank: 19)


Trade

What it measures

International trade has been a force for economic development for centuries. The CDI measures trade barriers in rich countries against exports from developing countries.

Spain Overall
  • Score: 5.8
  • Rank: 10
Spain Strengths
  • Low barriers against textiles (rank: 3)
  • Low barriers against apparel (rank: 3)
Spain Weaknesses
  • NA


Investment

What it measures

Rich-country investment in poorer countries can transfer technologies, upgrade management, and create jobs. The CDI includes a checklist of policies that support healthy and productive investment in developing countries.

Spain Overall

  • Score: 5.2
  • Rank: 14
Spain Strengths
  • Wide official political risk insurance coverage
  • Provides official support for design of securities regulations and institutions in developing countries
Spain Weaknesses
  • Does not allow domestic investors to take advantage of developing country tax incentives
  • Non-participant in EITI and other G-8 anti-corruption initiatives


Migration

What it measures

The movement of people from poor to rich countries provides unskilled immigrants with jobs, income, and knowledge. All of this increases the growth and flow of remittances while abroad and the transfer of training and skills when the migrants return home.

Spain Overall
  • Score: 5.1
  • Rank: 9
Spain Strengths
  • Large increase during the 1990s in the total number of unskilled immigrants from developing countries living in Spain (rank as a share of population: 7)
  • Large number of immigrants from developing countries entering Spain in 2002 (rank as a share of population: 2)
Spain Weaknesses
  • Bears small share of the burden of refugees during humanitarian crises (rank: 18)
  • Small share of foreign students from developing countries (41%; rank: 19)


Environment

What it measures

Rich countries use a disproportionate amount of scarce resources and poor countries are most likely to be hurt by global warming and ecological deterioration, so the CDI measures the impact of environmental policies on the global climate, sustainable fisheries, and biodiversity.

Spain Overall
  • Score: 5.1
  • Rank: 16
Spain Strengths
  • Low greenhouse gas emission rate per capita (10 tons of carbon dioxide equivalent; rank: 6)
Spain Weaknesses
  • Increase in greenhouse gas emission rate between 1999-2003 (average annual growth rate/PPP GDP, 0.1%; rank: 21)
  • Large number of endangered species imports (rank: 20)


Security

What it measures

Based on the notion that security is a prerequisite for development, the CDI rewards contributions to internationally sanctioned peacekeeping operations and forcible humanitarian interventions, rewards military protection of global sea lanes, and penalizes arms exports to poor and undemocratic governments.

Spain Overall
  • Score: 3.6
  • Rank: 15
Spain Strengths
  • Few arms exports to poor and undemocratic governments
Spain Weaknesses
  • Small financial and personnel contributions to internationally sanctioned peacekeeping and humanitarian interventions (overall contribution rank over last 10 years as share of GDP: 19)
  • No protection of global sea lanes


Technology

What it measures

Rich countries can contribute to development through the creation and dissemination of new technologies. The CDI captures this by measuring government support for R&D and analyzing the strength of intellectual property rights regimes.

Spain Overall
  • Score: 5.4
  • Rank: 5
Spain Strengths
  • High tax subsidy rate to businesses for R&D (44%; rank: 1)
Spain Weaknesses
  • Low business expenditure on R&D as a share of GDP (rank: 17)
  • High share of government R&D expenditure on defense (26%; rank: 19)
  • Offers patent-like proprietary rights to developers of data compilations, including those assembled from data in the public domain