Brendan Burgess
Founder
- Messages
- 54,802
The single-currency project, and Ireland’s participation in it, had been vigorously debated within the Irish economics community in the 1990s.
A very interesting talk coming up. Frank Barry is a very engaging speaker.
The single-currency project....had been vigorously debated within the Irish economics community in the 1990s.
No (but I've always had an interest in economics and have closely followed, and therefore have been generally aware of the issues discussed in the course of, all our major economic policy debates during the past 30-odd years - which indeed prompted my question and associated observation) and yes.TMcGibney- serious questions - are you a member of the Irish economics community? If you are, were you in Ireland in the 1990s?
Odyssey06,
The abstract specifically refers to the debate within the Irish economics community. All I was doing was asking TMcGibney whether he was a member of this community because if he was, I believe that he wouldn't have made the comment he did. [The point being that the abstract is the premise of the discussion. It undermines the integrity of the discussion if the premise is undermined and I was keen to correct any false impressions that may have been created. My purpose, therefore, was to correct what I perceived was an error - no more, no less!]
I most certainly did not create a false impression of anything.
Another poster has in the meantime corroborated my observation.
And you haven't made any effort to correct anything.
All you've done is to question my capacity to comment.
I'll might start taking lectures from you when you are brave enough to put your name to your posts here.
To what extent was it recognised that membership might increase Ireland’s vulnerability to external shocks?
Would membership inhibit or facilitate an appropriate response,
and were the implications of membership for the appropriate conduct of economic policy correctly identified?
A bit of a silly question. As interest rate setting powers were given up by the Irish Central bank that inhibited a response from that quarter to that extent at least. The ability to respond at Euro level for the block as a whole obviously facilitated the ability to respond at that level, while the ability to fine tune the response to the needs of individual countries was lost.
I've always been of the opinion that we should have introduced property tax when we joined the Euro and used them in the sane way we used to use interest rates to take the heat out of consumer led inflation.That isn't necessarily the case. It was open to the Central Bank to ameliorate the effects of low interest rates by means of, for example, requiring that the retail banks set tougher limits on mortgage applications and so on. For some reason, they tended not to use those powers, or if they did they didn't use them sufficiently to prevent a property bubble. All retro-active granted, but it would be interesting to examine why.
I've always been of the opinion that we should have introduced property tax when we joined the Euro and used them in the sane way we used to use interest rates to take the heat out of consumer led inflation.
That was my opinion at the time. We were losing one of the two main tools used to control inflation. We needed to replace it with something.Had a property tax been introduced, or more accurately re-introduced, at the time we joined the Euro, then yes, you are surely correct that it would have impacted on the property market, but we are talking in hindsight.
I've always been of the opinion that we should have introduced property tax when we joined the Euro and used them in the sane way we used to use interest rates to take the heat out of consumer led inflation.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?