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Economy
Ireland treads the path from austerity to prosperity
2016-04-28
[Wash Times] DUBLIN -- They called it the Celtic Tiger, a period of prosperity between 1995 and 2008, during which everything in Ireland appeared to come up shamrocks.

According to Wikipedia, between 1995 and 2000, the long-dormant Irish economy took off, expanding by a startling 9.4 percent. There was a building boom; roads were widened to accommodate more traffic; newly confident people started buying things they had long denied themselves, including bigger and nicer houses, which, it turns out, many could not afford.

Even after 2000 when the Irish economy continued to grow at an average rate of 5.9 percent, still well above the American average, confidence in the economy remained high. By 2008, a dramatic reversal had occurred with gross domestic product contracting by 14 percent. Unemployment levels rose to 14 percent by 2011 and 15 percent the following year.

The reasons are familiar to Americans. Mostly it was a property bubble. Banks approved loans for people who could not handle big mortgages, which led to a recession, not unlike the one experienced in the United States.

As a much smaller country, Ireland’s comeback has progressed faster than in America, where real unemployment is much higher than last month’s misleading Labor Department announcement of 5.0 percent.
Being smaller isn't the only reason...
The Irish economy has experienced a dramatic reversal under the leadership of Prime Minister Enda Kenny, who is struggling to form a new government after two elections denied his party a parliamentary majority from a less than thankful public that has tasted prosperity and wants more of it now. Sound familiar?

Emerging from a joint European Union-International Monetary Fund bailout program, Ireland’s growth rate stood at a respectable 4.8 percent in 2014, declining slightly to 3.5 percent last year, but still better than any EU country.

While much credit belongs to the political leadership that has bitten the bullet and imposed austerity on government spending programs, causing howls from the left, and to the resilient Irish people who are experienced when it comes to suffering, foreign investment has also played a major role. Much of that investment has been driven by the anti-business tax policies imposed on corporations by the U.S. government, prompting many U.S. businesses to seek tax relief overseas.
And there you go...
According to a report last year in The Guardian newspaper, 700 U.S. companies now do business in Ireland. This has meant $277 billion of U.S. direct foreign investment in the past two decades. Ireland has gained more from American firms than Brazil, Russia, India and China combined, says the newspaper.
Something to be learnt here possibly.
Posted by:Besoeker

#1  Smaller government and less interference and taxing businesses means booming economy, job and income growth?

Where have I heard that before? It used to be the GOP. And part of the GOP still believes in this.

The problem is most of the leadership fell in love with the power big government gives them and the ability to restrict the economy in favor of cronies with taxes and tailored loopholes. Donald Trump believes such things as well based on his history and his touting of government healthcare, expanded government power, and tax increases. Not too different from Shrillary when you get down to it.

Its a matter of degree between the Beltway Dems and The Beltway Repubs these days, with a few exceptions.
Posted by: Andy Elmoting7772   2016-04-28 07:22  

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