Category Archives: Ireland

Counting to 3%

One thing about the 2015 budget is for sure: the planned €2bn spending cuts and tax hikes will be watered down for reasons both economic and political.

Ever since the Troika left late last year, the government has been making noises about easing the burden of austerity on Irish families. There is also a sense that now Ireland has ‘regained its sovereignty’, and that the economic emergency can be considered over, people are not willing to wear the hair-shirt any longer. This is precisely the message the governing parties have taken from the drubbing they received in the recent local and European elections.
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Bubble, bubble, toil and trouble?

We are a nation obsessed with the price of bricks and mortar. During the heady days of the Celtic Tiger, people would marvel that they were ‘earning’ more through the increase in the value of their home than in their wages. Having peaked in 2007, prices cratered and many of the same people, mortgaged to the hilt, were acutely aware of just how deep a ‘negative equity’ hole they were in.

The run-up in prices in the decade to 2007 was a textbook ‘bubble’, fuelled by a toxic mix of easy credit, frantic speculation and suspended belief. When the bubble burst, prices more than halved and the number of homes being bought and sold – along with the credit to finance them – dried up.
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Definitive take on Ireland’s boom and bust

Insightful if controversial book sets out a hierarchy of blame, with joyriding politicians at the top…

Click here to read my Irish Times review of The Fall of the Celtic Tiger: Ireland & the Euro by Donal Donovan and Antoin E. Murphy.

Troika departed, time to party… like it’s 2007?

Remember the ‘good old days’? When budgets were giveaways, not hairshirts? When politicians ratcheted up the bidding to cut our taxes come election time? Sure, we didn’t need those billions from Stamp Duty. And, wasn’t income tax too high anyway? Yes, remember the good old days the next time you hear someone wax lyrical about why ‘we are where we are’.

So, where are we now then? The economy is still half banjaxed, even if it has been on the mend of late, but no sooner had the Troika rolled out of Terminal 2 than it was like déjà vu all over again. At a time when they’re still planning to make a billion or more in spending cuts at the next budget, government Ministers were hitting the airwaves with variations on the same tax cutting mantra. ‘Middle Ireland’ needs a break, apparently. Well, who doesn’t?
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Top Posts of 2013

This blog is two years old this week.

In 2013, two of the top three most popular posts in terms of hits were also in the top three for 2012, reflecting enduring interest in reading the tea leaves of Mexican politics during President Peña Nieto’s first, reform-heavy year in power (Mexico: A Political Risk Assessment; 2013 rank: 1; 2012 rank: 3) and in tracking the rise and fall of Ireland’s economy (The Boom Bust Life Cycle of Ireland’s Balance of Payments and Net Foreign Assets; 2013 rank: 2; 2012 rank: 2).

Third was an ‘Econ 101’ post breaking down the components of Irish GDP. Fourth was a post looking at Ireland’s Top 1%, and their income share which has been trending upwards since the mid-1980s. Rounding out the top five was a look at the psychology of taxation in the context of budget consolidation in Ireland.

Will 2014 be a happy new year?

Writing this time last year, I looked forward with trepidation to 2013 as another ‘year of living dangerously’. Risks abounded. Every silver lining presaged a cloud. The path ahead was strewn with banana skins and danger lurked around every corner. It’s not for nothing they call economics the dismal science!

Confounded by years and years of growth falling short of forecasts, of the recovery on the horizon being just another mirage, economists can be forgiven maybe for feeling that stagnation was the new normal.

But, could this time be different? Continue reading

So, how big was the budget hit?

Ireland’s 2014 budget was an ode to Janus, the two-faced Roman deity. Not only was it concocted and communicated to simultaneously placate different audiences, it was ostensibly designed to mark the so-called return of sovereignty – peace in our time.

To Ireland’s lenders, current and future, the budget was a clear statement of intent: that the government would continue to meet all its obligations, including a full €3.1bn adjustment in accordance with the letter of the Memorandum of Understanding signed with the troika.

To Ireland’s citizens, it was sold as an alleviation of austerity, a symbol that we will soon have of control over our own destiny. There was ‘only’ €2.5bn in permanent tax hikes and spending cuts, much worse than it could have been. In fact, Ministers Noonan and Howlin announced a mere €1.85bn in ‘new pain’ on budget day – €0.35bn in net new taxes and €1.5bn in spending cuts, a ratio of 4.3 to 1.

Which of these statements are true?

All of them.
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Dude, where’s my recovery?

It may not be perceptible to the naked eye, and for most of us it sure doesn’t feel like it, but the Irish economy may be ready to leave intensive care. Make no mistake, a long and difficult period of treatment is in store, but there is mounting evidence that the worst is over.

Certainly, the last set of headline economic growth figures suggested a case of severe winter flu. This was due in large measure to an export engine stalling in the face of weak global demand and an end to patents on some of the blockbuster drugs produced for foreign consumption in our vast pharmaceutical sector.

Over the course of an uncharacteristically sunny Irish summer, however, the economy’s vital signs took a turn for the better. Unemployment fell slowly but steadily to reach 13.4%, improving by roughly 0.1% per month. Nor is this solely down to emigration and people giving up on the job search; 9,000 full-time jobs were being created monthly up to the end of June. Retail sales surged 6.1% in July, in part because the new 132 number plates encouraged people to buy cars in mid-summer rather than wait until January. Continue reading

Irish Corporation Tax: Running out of Road in a Zero Sum Game ?

The Irish economic model is premised on the ability to attract an out-sized share of Foreign Direct Investment, particularly from the US, and has been for decades. As a result, we have a vibrant multinational sector that directly or indirectly supports hundreds of thousands of jobs. There are many factors at play, but there can be little doubt that our tax regime is the key driver.

Across the political spectrum, there is near unanimous agreement that the 12.5% corporation tax rate, in place since 1998, can’t be touched. It simply isn’t seen as a policy variable. Any suggestions that this may be otherwise are quickly silenced. Moreover, protecting Ireland’s right to set its own rate has long been a diplomatic priority at EU level. Continue reading

Now, more than ever, Ireland needs a Strategic Investment Bank

Five years have passed since the Irish economy began contracting. The economy has begun growing again, slowly. Unemployment remains unacceptably high and is likely to remain in double digits for much of the remainder of the decade. Ireland’s banking system is broken, and deleveraging is set to continue for some time. Public and private sector investment is at its lowest level in the country’s recorded economic history, undermining growth and job creation in the short-term, and productivity in the long-term.

Recognizing the challenges imposed by tight fiscal constraints and still-fragile access to sovereign bond markets, it is time to revisit the Labour Party’s pre-election proposal for a Strategic Investment Bank (SIB) to finance investment in infrastructure and lending to SMEs. Using funds from the National Pension Reserve Fund (NPRF), such a bank could off-set austerity without impacting negatively on the budget balance. Every €1bn can support 10-15,000 new jobs.

There are long-standing, successful models of state investment banks the world over, not least in Germany. Chancellor Merkel made KfW central to their economic stimulus efforts immediately after the financial crisis struck. More recently, the UK has set up a Green Investment Bank to finance environmentally friendly infrastructure and is in the process of setting up a Business Bank to finance SMEs. President Hollande established a Public Investment Bank in France soon after being elected, incorporating the Strategic Investment Fund established by his predecessor. President Obama has been a strong advocate of a national infrastructure bank in the US.

Ireland’s Programme for Government includes a commitment to establish an SIB, and many of its building blocks are already in place, notably the nascent Strategic Investment Fund (SIF). The SIF has yet to have a real impact in driving investment. It requires urgent legislative change to clarify its investment mandate. Moreover, €1.15bn, or 50% of the proceeds from the sale of Irish Life and Bank of Ireland bonds, should be allocated to capital investment, in line with the government’s commitment and troika agreement, and could be allocated to the SIF.

Along with such an expanded SIF, and the three new SME funds and one infrastructure fund managed by the NPRF, some €2.5bn of existing funds could be used to capitalize a fully-fledged SIB capable of funding €6bn in assets and ultimately supporting total public and private sector investment of €25bn. In the short term, steps must be taken to free up NPRF funds for productive investment in Ireland rather. In the medium-term, an SIB would add significant value to Ireland’s banking landscape.