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Spain’s budget delayed as government rushes to cushion economic hit from Iran war

By Thomson Reuters Mar 19, 2026 | 8:16 AM

MADRID, March 19 (Reuters) – Spain will delay the presentation of its annual budget, Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said on Thursday, as the cabinet puts together a package of emergency measures to ​counter the economic impact of the Iran war.

These measures – due ‌to be announced on Friday – will focus on cushioning the blow from rising fuel and electricity prices caused by the closure of the Strait of Hormuz. Gas prices have risen by more than 60% since the U.S. and Israel started attacking Iran ‌on ​February 28.

“We’re working on the budget, but nobody ⁠predicted this war. The government ⁠needs to work on the most urgent matter – and the urgent matter now is this (the war’s impact),” Sanchez told reporters in Brussels ahead of an EU summit dedicated to seeking ways to curb the ​impact of the energy price spike.

He did not specify a new deadline for the budget.

Madrid had earlier committed to presenting the 2026 budget ⁠by the end of March, long ⁠past the usual deadline of three months before the end ​of the previous year.

The plan needs to be approved in parliament, where ​the Socialist-led coalition government lacks a clear majority and depends ‌on balancing the competing demands of several smaller parties.

Sanchez has been unable to muster enough votes to pass a budget since 2023, forcing him to roll it over twice.

In November, the government’s attempt to raise the spending ⁠ceiling failed in the lower house as it was opposed by the conservative People’s Party, hard-right Vox and hard-left Podemos, further cementing the gridlock.

Roughly 103 ⁠billion euros ($118 billion) in ‌EU pandemic recovery funds have allowed the government to ⁠keep financing new investment – but the final deadline for ​payments ‌from the European Commission is the end of this ​year.

“Prorogued budgets ⁠have not been a problem when it comes to handling all the issues we’ve had on the table,” Budget Minister Maria Jesus Montero said on Thursday, adding she was certain a new budget would be in place before the EU funds ran out.

($1 = 0.8715 euros)

(Reporting by Victoria Waldersee, Emma PinedoEditing ​by Gareth Jones)