Skip to main content

Irish Emergency Budget...

World reaction to Budget...


The reaction to the Budget from European and US websites was wide ranging, with news organisations throughout the globe reporting on the new measures introduced by the Government.

The story was picked up not only the usual large media organisations such as the BBC and the Independent, but also by papers less familiar to Irish taxpayers, such as Canada's Toronto Star.

The Times online carried a short video clip about the emergency budget and what it would mean for Britain's economy. Describing it as a "bust budget", the video said Minister for Finance Brian Lenihan was delivering his second emergency Budget in seventh months, describing it as a grim task for any finance minister.

However, it pointed out that Ireland had some advantages over Britain, with a smaller national debt, and said that markets would now be looking to Britain's fiscal position.

The accompanying article described the measures as a way to address the "runaway" fiscal deficit, with Mr Lenihan predicting a budget deficit 10.75 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP), down from 12.75 per cent.

The BBC website said the Budget was the second in six months to deal with what it described as a "rapidly contracting economy". The article highlighted a large rise in taxes, spending cuts and the formation of an independent agency to take over banks' bad debts in a bid to restore lending. The BBC said the country is dealing with a "deepening recession" and correcting the "worst deficit in Europe". According to BBC economics editor Stephanie Flanders, there is "method to his madness", warning there were lessons for the UK - mainly that as a country gets deeper into debt, fiscal stimulus loses some of its power.

The Financial Times led with the higher taxes that are to hit "the middle classes" of Ireland, with the establishment of the national asset management agency following close behind.

The same paper carries a second article focusing on the establishment of the government-controlled agency to tackle the banks' bad debts. The plan has already been criticised by the main opposition party as a “big time bomb” for taxpayers, it said. This will make Ireland the first European country to offer to take over the toxic assets of privately owned lenders. It points out that similar proposals elsewhere have been deemed too difficult to value the assets.

The Wall Street Journal's website carried a brief article from the Dow Jones newswire that said the European Commission has reacted positively to efforts to control the growing budget deficit, praising the efforts made.

Forbes.com published a similar article from Reuters saying the European Commission viewed the new measures as "decisive action" to contain the rising deficit. It said a preliminary assessment was that "decisive, broad-based action" had been taken in the budget. It also confirmed that the Government had consulted with the Commission before announcing plans to create the agency to deal with impaired assets from banks.

A short piece appeared on the website of the Toronto Star, describing the measures as "hefty hikes in income tax and service spending cuts" in a bid to restore confidence in the "shaky finances of debt-stricken Ireland". It is not yet clear if the Irish taxpayers agree with its assessment of the Budget as a "painstakingly negotiated plan".

The Independent had a more gloomy take on things, describing the current situation as "the dismal business of adjusting to a generational drop in living standards with the end of the Celtic Tiger boom and the prospect of a new era of austerity".

It said the Budget lived up to fears it would be the toughest in Irish history. The paper drew attention to the cuts in expenses and pensions for TDs, and the loss of five junior ministerial posts. It said the package of cuts and tax hikes was aimed at impressing Irish voters and international opinion, both of which have been less than bowled over by the current Government. It also commented on the "loadsamoney" culture that has developed among many Irish young people, most of whom have never experienced hardship felt in other generations.

A cartoon in the opinion section, meanwhile, shows a caricature of Brian Cowen measuring up an already dead Celtic Tiger, declaring that it has to go on a diet until it is healthy again.


Report - Irish Times.

Popular posts from this blog

Property Crash Homes For Sale...

Hundreds of repossessed homes in Ireland to be sold by auction... UK property consultancy Allsop to hold auction in April at Dublin's Shelbourne hotel: Flats in Ireland that could have fetched €150,000 in the Celtic Tiger years are to be put on the market for as little as €25,000 (£21,000) in the country's first ever mass auction of repossessed homes. And, in a sign of how wide the property crash is, the latest item to turn up in liquidation sales in Dublin is a job lot of 15 cranes, including a pair towering over Anglo Irish Bank's half-built headquarters in the city's docklands. "Tower cranes were among the most sought-after heavy plant and machinery 10 years ago," Ricky Wilson of Wilsons Auctions says. "You couldn't buy them quick enough. Now they are left idle for two or three years on sites." He has 15 cranes worth €500,000 going on sale on 26 March, with German, Dutch and Polish buyers expressing interest. But it is the auction ...

Property Ireland - Irish Land Values Go Up Like A Rocket & Fall Like A Stone...

Land values go up like a rocket and fall like a stone... SITE EVALUATION: Why would a developer bid €225,000 an acre in 1999 and €2.8m an acre in 2007? Bill Nowlan explains WHY HAS THE value of development land fallen so precipitously, by over 50 per cent in the past 12 months, when residential and other property values have only fallen by 25 per cent or 30 per cent? There is an old property cliché which says that "land values go up like a rocket and fall like a stone" and this seems to have been bourne out in Ireland over recent years. Why does this happen? To answer this question requires an insight into the way developers prepare their bids for development land and I set out below a glimpse into that process. Let me start by looking at how a developer in normal times estimates his bid for a plot of land with planning permission, which in estate agents' parlance is ready-to-go. The key starting point in a developers equations is the expected sale price of the finished b...

Ireland's Celtic Tiger Excesses...

'Bang twins' may never get to run a business again... POST-boom Ireland is awash with cautionary tales of Celtic Tiger excesses, as a rattle around the carcasses of fallen property developers and entrepreneurs will show. Few can compete with the so-called Bang twins for youth, glamour and tasteful extravagance. Simon and Christian Stokes, the 35-year-old identical twins behind Bang Cafe and exclusive private members club, Residence, saw their entire business go bust with debts of €9m, €3m of which is owed to the tax man. The debt may be in the ha'penny place compared with the eye-watering billions owed by some of their former customers. But their fall has been arguably steeper and more damning than some of the country's richest tycoons. Last week, further humiliation was heaped on them with revelations that even as their businesses were going under, the twins spent €146,000 of company money in 18 months on designer shopping sprees, five star holidays and sumptu...