Social Policy and Macroeconomics : The Irish Experience
The remarkable performance of the Irish economy in recent years has attracted much attention. Within a 10-year period the economy went from an 18 percent unemployment rate to nearly full employment, while the ratio of debt to GDP fell from 120 perc...
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Language: | English en_US |
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World Bank, Washington, DC
2014
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2001/12/1660274/social-policy-macroeconomics-irish-experience http://hdl.handle.net/10986/19417 |
Summary: | The remarkable performance of the Irish
economy in recent years has attracted much attention. Within
a 10-year period the economy went from an 18 percent
unemployment rate to nearly full employment, while the ratio
of debt to GDP fell from 120 percent to less than 50
percent. Inevitably, this success was also accompanied by
problems, as infrastructure came under increasing stress,
environmental difficulties became more evident, and a
changing social structure resulted in some groups becoming
increasingly marginalized. What worked and what did not? In
particular, are there lessons that may be relevant for other
countries facing similar difficulties, especially in Asia
and Latin America? McCarthy focuses on three features of
Ireland's economic achievements. Two of these features
are external: the opening to Europe and the role of foreign
direct investment. The third and perhaps most
"exportable" feature is domestic: the role of a
social pact. This pact was initially between employers,
trade unions, and the government. Subsequent pacts were
extended to include a variety of other groups. McCarthy
discusses the far-reaching impact of this series of pacts on
health, poverty, employment, education, and social welfare.
Ireland now faces a number of challenges, including the
slowdown in the global economy, a fall in resource transfers
from the European Union, and the potential effects of the
entry into the EU of Hungary and Poland. |
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