Duke of Marmalade
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5.8%; seems a gimme after the scares
That is an interesting point but surely it is not that crude a ruse. Kevin Cardiff went on about how the NPRF currently only earn 1% on their cash and that in fact the 5.8% should be mitigated by these considerations. I would love to see the details of these calcs.18B of that is our own money - from the NPRF. So the interest rate on the rest I think is about 7%. Can anyone calculate it exactly?
Why do people think that this is a bad deal?
I am missing something here.
They have made a fund of €50m available to us at 5.8% to fund the exchequer deficit. If they had not done so, we would have to borrow it on the bond markets at around 9%. And this is to pay for social welfare, old age pensions and the health service.
Many of us have taken our money out of the Irish banks, so they have made a further €35b available to replace this money.
All we have had to do, was to contribute €17.5b of money we had elsewhere.
Why do people think that this is a bad deal? Do they want us to default on paying salaries to public servants, social welfare and old age pensions?
I am no economist but it seems the Germans lend money to our banks wrecklessly and the ordinary tax payer of ireland is paying for all of it.
It's much more complicated that that.
Brendan
€50billion of this money is to finance the exchequer deficit because the government is spending more than the tax income.
Use our reserve fund to cover this, along with tax increases and reductions in public spending. It would be far cheaper in the medium term. The idea that nurses and teachers would suddenly stop getting paid is spurious.€50billion of this money is to finance the exchequer deficit because the government is spending more than the tax income.
There’s a big difference between depositors who put their money into a bank for safe keeping and people/companies who bought bonds as an investment. The higher rates of interest than was paid to them than the depositors is indicative of the implied risk that they were taking.It was not just the Germans who lent us the money. It was also the Irish depositors and Irish institutions who deposited money in our banks, "recklessly" as you put it.
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