Delete

Mark Nayler

Colaborador

Quién soy

A freelance journalist, Mark wrote for Spear’s magazine and the New Statesman in London before relocating to Spain. In addition to his weekly finance column and features for SUR in English, he also writes on Spanish politics for The Spectator.

Contacto

Últimas publicaciones

  • 19 Apr 2024 18:43

    The Euro Zone opinion

    Mark Nayler

    What's the forecast?

    Currently headed by Bulgarian economist Kristalina Georgieva, the IMF changes its fiscal predictions so often - a slight increase here, a tiny decrease there - that they have limited practical value, and are usually only of interest to economists, politicians and journalists writes Mark Nayler

  • 12 Apr 2024 16:47

    The Euro Zone opinion

    Mark Nayler

    Struggling for recognition

    Spain hopes to lead the EU to official recognition of Palestine, something for which the bloc's parliament first called in 2014, writes Mark Nayler

  • 05 Apr 2024 17:26

    The Euro Zone opinion

    Mark Nayler

    Hands off hospitality

    There aren't many laws covering bar and restaurant opening hours and the sale of alcohol in Spain, which is why the country has one of the most open, vibrant and (perhaps paradoxically) least drunken nightlife scenes in Europe, writes Mark Nayler

  • 28 Mar 2024 16:25

    The Euro Zone opinion

    Mark Nayler

    Lying low

    Luis Rubiales, the spectacularly fallen former president of the Spanish Football Federation. has plenty in common with the ex-king: as Juan Carlos was back in 2020, he is at the centre of a corruption probe into alleged kickbacks and money-laundering

  • 22 Mar 2024 16:47

    The Euro Zone opinion

    Mark Nayler

    A clapped-out government

    One thing you can't fail to notice about Spain's cumbersome four-party coalition is the sheer amount of clapping it does. What's less obvious is why it believes any kind of self-congratulation to be justified

  • 15 Mar 2024 17:04

    The Euro Zone opinion

    Mark Nayler

    False hope

    If Catalan secessionists lose the May election, which is likely, Pedro Sánchez might expect them to stop making awkward demands in exchange for parliamentary support, writes Mark Nayler

  • 08 Mar 2024 16:34

    The Euro Zone opinion

    Mark Nayler

    Power corrupts

    Over the last year or so, it has started to seem as if the world of Spanish football might be almost as murky as the country's politics, writes Mark Naylor

  • 01 Mar 2024 16:42

    The Euro Zone opinion

    Mark Nayler

    Show us the money

    The EU Commission is concerned about potential misuse of the emergency Covid funds it gave to Spain

  • 23 Feb 2024 17:44

    The Euro Zone

    Mark Nayler

    Three's a crowd

    Spain's dilemma can be stated very simply: it can't please Morocco without riling Algeria, and vice versa

  • 16 Feb 2024 14:27

    The Euro Zone opinion

    Mark Nayler

    No size fits all

    Protesting farmers have drawn the EU's attention to the fact that its greenhouse emissions and carbon reduction targets just aren't working on the ground - literally

  • 09 Feb 2024 18:42

    The Euro Zone opinion

    Mark Nayler

    Border control

    According to Spanish officials, some of the 200 million euros earmarked for Mauritania will be used to bolster its border-control authorities

  • 02 Feb 2024 19:37

    The Euro Zone

    Mark Nayler

    No change

    Spain still has a "serious problem" with corruption, according to Transparency International's latest Corruption Perception Index (CPI), released this week

  • 26 Jan 2024 19:37

    The Euro Zone

    Mark Nayler

    Practically impossible

    Along with the EU, the UK, US and UN all claim that a dual-state arrangement is the most viable option for peace in the Middle East. The trouble is that neither of the protagonists supports the idea

  • 19 Jan 2024 17:43

    The Euro Zone

    Mark Nayler

    A sound investment

    Foreign investors have become so accustomed to governmental deadlocks and zombie administrations in Spain that they simply don't notice them anymore, writes Mark Nayler

  • 12 Jan 2024 16:15

    The Euro Zone opinion

    Mark Nayler

    Please come home

    The reason for the mass corporate exodus in the first place was political uncertainty caused by Catalan separatists, why would these businesses come back if there is still a possibility of more of the same in the near or medium-term future?

Publicidad

Noticia Patrocinada