The European Tribune is a forum for thoughtful dialogue of European and international issues. You are invited to post comments and your own articles.
Please REGISTER to post.
Ireland's debt/GDP ratio ballooned from 25% to 120% during the crash and banking crisis which has left a bit of a debt-phobia scar in the national psyche, although not on the same scale as Germany's.
However the problem then wasn't even the level of public debt - private and corporate debt had reached 430% of GDP. This has been coming down slowly since 2016 to about 380% - still v. high, driven by corporate debt and Ireland's high rate of owner occupation and mortgage financing.
Since then the absolute volume of national debt has remained roughly constant at c. 210 Billion although the has declined from 120% to 65% of GDP largely due to the "Leprechaun economics" growth in Irish GDP.
The Irish statistics office has developed an alternative measure of the size of the Irish Economy stripped of the distortions caused by the activities of global corporates in Ireland called GNI*. By this measure Ireland's debt/GNI* ratio is currently 104%, still high by international standards.
Every now and then the papers publish scare stories about Ireland having one of the highest national debt/capita ratios in the world, at 44,000 or 90,000 for every worker. This, of course, ignores the fact we also have one of the highest incomes.
With interest rates at record lows, this is, of course a good time to borrow and to recycle past debt. Ireland has paid 60 Billion in interest on its debt in the past decade but this burden has been coming down each year, from 8 Billion in 2014 to 4.5 Billion next year.
But with concerns about the sustainability of Ireland's corporate tax take - due to international reforms of the corporate taxation system - the government is taking a conservative approach to additional borrowing for anything other than infrastructural or Brexit related expenditures.
Nevertheless I think we are in relatively good shape to take a no-deal Brexit related hit to our economy and finances. The problem is more the asymmetrical nature of any shock - hitting farming and agrifood businesses in more rural parts which are already doing much less well than Dublin and the urban centres.
Politically this is dynamite for Varadker's hopes of re-election, as he is already perceived of as representative of the urban professional property owning middle classes and insensitive to rural and more working class concerns. Index of Frank's Diaries
by Frank Schnittger - Sep 24 1 comment
by Oui - Sep 19 17 comments
by Oui - Sep 13 31 comments
by Frank Schnittger - Sep 11 5 comments
by Cat - Sep 13 9 comments
by Frank Schnittger - Sep 2 2 comments
by Frank Schnittger - Sep 241 comment
by Oui - Sep 1917 comments
by gmoke - Sep 173 comments
by Oui - Sep 153 comments
by Oui - Sep 15
by Oui - Sep 1411 comments
by Oui - Sep 1331 comments
by Cat - Sep 139 comments
by Oui - Sep 123 comments
by Frank Schnittger - Sep 115 comments
by Oui - Sep 929 comments
by Oui - Sep 713 comments
by Oui - Sep 61 comment
by Frank Schnittger - Sep 22 comments
by gmoke - Sep 2
by Oui - Sep 1167 comments
by Oui - Aug 315 comments
by gmoke - Aug 302 comments
by Oui - Aug 304 comments
by Oui - Aug 3010 comments