Because they won't be fine for much longer under their socialist government. Look at Spanish economy: high public debt, high unemployment, low productivity growth. All this results in low competitiveness, and will inevitably lead to the necessity to get off the train of taxing everyone into prosperity.
> Because they won't be fine for much longer under their socialist government
How long would a state required to be socialist before you consider it to not be in a perpetual state of "this will fail tomorrow"?
Since you consider Spain socialist, that means you probably consider Sweden socialist as well then, since it's more "socialist" on basically every metric I can think of? If so, Sweden been socialist close to 100 years (about 3 times longer than Spain), is Sweden also about to go down the drain then because of the welfare policies?
> Look at Spanish economy: high public debt, high unemployment, low productivity growth
Good example. For the last 10 years, debt is slightly worse, unemployment is dramatically better and the productivity remains unchanged. Yet, we have public health care. So seems socialism might not actually be so bad after all.