Gross external debt is not a very informative statistic. You need to look at a net figure or at least have some idea of the assets standing behind the debt to come to any reasonable conclusion.
If I have a mortgage of € 100,000,000 which is the biggest in the country but own assets worth € 150,000,000 this isn't a problem. If someone else owes me € 200,000,000 then I'm OK as well.
Yes, Im afraid we are great news fodder at the moment, with a recent new york times article entitled 'Erin go broke'. (USA's debt is over 12 trillion?)
a recent new york times article entitled 'Erin go broke'.
That article was written by a guy called Krugman, a guy with far better credentials than Cowen or Lenihan, or many of our glorious leaders. This guy won the Nobel prize for economics! This is the type of guy we need to listen to, not some government spin doctors, or some teacher dressed up as a minister. We really have to wake up here to the fact that we are so badly served by our politicians and the leaders in our various government departments. So badly served. Not just the politicians, but the heads of departments. Look at the department of finance? How can the managers there still retain credibility? They have made such a mess of running the country, particularly in the last ten years, and these people are still in charge! My god, if that isn’t scarier than ‘The Exorcist’ then I don’t know what is.
So instead of knocking Nobel prize winning economists, or calling George Lee and his ilk ‘doctor doom’, we should be looking for the heads of those who have run this country into the ground. We need those heads, so this never happens again. If there’s no sanction for destroying an economy and hundreds of thousands of lives, then how can there be sanction for anything?
We need those heads, so this never happens again. If there’s no sanction for destroying an economy and hundreds of thousands of lives, then how can there be sanction for anything?
If we fire every civil servant, banker, builder, developer and FF voter.
(i'm not on the list BTW)
If we put them on a ship to say Tasmania.
How are we any better off.
The Americans learned an expensive lesson when they invaded Iraq and dismissed all the existing infrastructure. Police, army etc.
Its time to stop the blame game and move forward!
If we fire every civil servant, banker, builder, developer and FF voter.
(i'm not on the list BTW)
If we put them on a ship to say Tasmania.
How are we any better off.
The Americans learned an expensive lesson when they invaded Iraq and dismissed all the existing infrastructure. Police, army etc.
Its time to stop the blame game and move forward!
That is such a load of bollocks.....the size of the financial sector in relation to the size of the economy is far bigger in a country like Switzerland and Luxembourg. No big tears being poured in those two countries....in that sense, Ireland is unique.No idea where they get the figures but I would be sceptical. Ireland is unique in that we have are such a small economy and the IFSC and multi-national activities probably distort the figures. I take these things with a pinch of salt.
Are we going to get a digital display like they have in N.Y. showing their national debt?
That is such a load of bollocks.....the size of the financial sector in relation to the size of the economy is far bigger in a country like Switzerland and Luxembourg. No big tears being poured in those two countries....in that sense, Ireland is unique.
Nevertheless, Sunny, the point still stands that other countries have large financial centres. They just aren't larger than the host economy they are attached to. Should we have a crisis of confidence and those treasury operations decide to move elsewhere, we would experience capital flight on an unprecedented scale (relative to GDP/GNP). I am sure that is part of the reasoning behind the governments decision to leave corporation tax unchanged - we are effectively locked into the current rate. I accept that the sort of operations that are in the IFSC have different elements, but some of them are the same as elsewhere - the listing of bonds/funds on the IFSC, for example.
Any idea what proportion of GDP/GNP the IFSC represents?
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