MADRID (Reuters) - Spanish debt yields jumped and shares in Bankia SA plunged to record lows on Monday after the government, struggling to sort out its finances, put forward a plan to revive its fourth-largest lender involving more public debt. Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy pinned the blame for rising Spanish borrowing costs on concern about the future of the euro zone and again ruled out seeking outside aid to revive a banking sector laid low by a property boom that has long since bust. Elections Foreign Exchange Market Market and Exchange Mariano Rajoy Europe Republic of Ireland Consumer Confidence Credit and Debt Restructuring and Recapitalization Debt Market Government Debt Germany "There...
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