Anyway you look at it, Ireland's economy is in shambles. The formerly fastest growing member of the EU is now the fastest shrinking - with a rosy, Government forecast of -8% change in GDP this year.
Finance minister Lenihan defiantly claims the nation does not need a bailout from the EU. He defiantly claims that in spite of his staggeringly expensive (1/2 annual GDP equivalent) rescue of the Irish banks, "there will be no bailout of the banks."
The government, not having the luxury of being able to print up money, is being forced to raise taxes to service the new debt as well as meet existing obligations in the face of what would otherwise be rapidly declining tax revenues. This, of course, will soon be seen as a fatal policy blunder. Raising taxes in a Depression is, as everyone who was paying attention in economics class knows, a big no-no. It is taking money out of the hands of the people when they need it most.
Mr. Lenihan is merely a crony and cannot exactly be blamed for this misstep. Presumably, some policy wonks in the Irish Finance Ministry - taking a cue from the Yanks perhaps - are thinking (in Irish Gaelic, of course), "If we reliquify the banks, they will lend again and people can buy houses again, 'n stuff." So pinching the average worker is an acceptable trade-off.
We'll bet any taker that Irish banks won't do squat to revivify the Irish economy, and that the masses are going to have to cut spending even more. We sense a vicious cycle forming.
The end state will be Ireland out of the EU (sans bailout) and its economy worse off than it has been in decades. Emigration will not prove the safety-valve it has in the past as the former destination lands will look less kindly on newcomers. We suspect Ireland is where damage from the 2007 Depression may be most acutely felt, completing the rags-to-riches-to-rags cycle.
Thursday, April 9, 2009
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