Spain, which has had not a lot to celebrate in the financial realm in recent memory, is basking in the glow of its annual exercise in literally throwing scads of cash to the wind: Yesterday's "El Gordo" lottery saw some $3.4 billion awarded to thousands of winners in a four-hour televised marathon that spreads holiday cheer and cold, hard cash to the masses. As Reuters reports, residents of working-class towns Mondragon and Leganes appeared to be the big winners, taking in some $738 million of the total haul.
"I'm on cloud nine!" says one ticket seller in the Basque town of Mondragon. "We've been in the press for so many unpleasant reasons"—among them, the recent layoff of 2,000 workers at the country's biggest appliance company, which is headquartered there—"and for something which brings such joy to happen here is a real support for the people." Residents of Madrid suburb Leganes will also likely see an economic uptick after residents there won about $490 million. But there is one nod to austerity this year, notes the AP: In a first, the government will collect a 20% tax on winnings greater than $3,400. (More Spain stories.)