
— June - July
Against the Grain –Constantin Gurdgiev
Croke Park talks about public-
sector reform and Ireland’s Policy Kindergarten
is still agitated by cuts in Government expendi-
ture. The logic of arguments from the likes of Tasc,
the Irish Times, and an army of Union-employed
‘economists’, is perverse: ‘In order to get the econ-
omy back on track, we need to borrow more and
spend on public services and wages’.
There are three basic reasons why stimulating
the Irish economy though increased public spend-
ing won’t work in current conditions - even in the-
ory, let alone in practice. These are: the structural
nature of the fiscal crisis we face, the size of the
debt we face, and the lack of evidence that stimu-
lus can work in a country like Ireland.
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Economists distinguish two types of deficits:
cyclical and structural. The first type of deficits
occurs when a temporary economic slowdown
leads to an unforeseen decline in revenue and
acceleration of certain components of spending
(e.g. unemployment insurance and social wel-
fare). By its definition, the cyclical deficit will
be automatically corrected once the economy
returns to its long-term growth path.
In contrast, structural deficits arise independ-
ently of short -term changes in economic growth.
They are the outcome of unsustainable increases
in permanent spending and/or declines in the
long-term growth potential.
In the case of Ireland, both of the latter fac-
tors are at play. Estimates of the extent of struc-
tural deficits carried out by the likes of the IMF,
the OECD, the European Commission, the ESRI
and independent analysts range between one half
and two thirds of the General Government
deficit, or -.% of GDP.
Reckless expansion of Government spending
in the period - is the greatest cause of
these – not the collapse of our tax revenue. In the
meantime, our economy’s long-term growth rate
has declined from the debt-and-housing-fuelled
.% per annum to a Belgian .% per annum.
In , the General Government Structural
Balance stood at roughly -.% of GDP. By
this has fallen to almost -% courtesy of mas-
sive permanent staff increases in the public sec-
tor, rises in welfare rates, an explosion in health
spending and creation of a gargantuan army of
quangoes and supervisory organisations.
Take one example. Currently, the Financial
Regulator (CBFSAI) is paying on average
€, per annum in wage and related costs
for its staff of (shortly to rise to ). Per
average Irish taxpayer the cost is % greater
than in other EU countries. Yet, CBFSAI has
roughly half the responsibility or work load
per employee when compared to our peers. Of
course, given the body performance over the last
years, you might as well have cut their staff
down to one receptionist with an ‘Approved’ rub-
ber stamp and an answering machine with a ‘No
Comment’ message.
Forget, for a second, that most of this expen-
ditures represented pure waste, delivering noth-
ing more than top jobs for friends of the ruling
class, plus scores of jobs for public- and quasi-
public sector workers. Between and today
Ireland has recorded not a single year in which
the Government structural balance was positive.
Windfall stamps-duty, VAT and capital -gains
-tax receipts over - have masked this
reality, as Goldman -Sachs -structured derivatives
masked the reality of Greek deficits.
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Over recent months, the Government has
been eager to ‘talk up’ our major selling points.
Ireland, it goes, is a country with stabilised pub-
lic finances and a low debt-to-GDP ratio.
In March, Eurostat and the bond markets
exposed the lie behind the ‘stabilized public
finances’ story. It turns out our Government
has decided to sweep under the carpet billions
of Euro it borrowed in to recapitalise
Anglo. Courtesy of this, our deficit for
was revised to a whopping .% of GDP – top-
ping that of Greece.
But Irish General Government deficit this year
is expected to come in between .% and over
% of GDP, depending on who is doing the fore-
casting – the Department of Finance or the ESRI.
And this is before we factor in the March
statement by the Minister for Finance, promis-
ing over € billion for the banks this year. This
means that, as the rest of the world is coming
out of the recession, our fiscal deficit for
is expected to either match or exceed the revised
level achieved in . Some stabilisation.
Irish Government debt is expected to reach
-% of GDP by the end of – on a par
with the Eurozone’s second sickest economy,
Portugal. With Nama and bank recapitalisations
factored in, Irish taxpayers will be in a debt hole
equal to between % and % of GDP by
and to % by . At the point of the
Greek debt implosion last year, Greece had sec-
ond highest debt to GDP ratio in the EU at %,
after Italy with a massive %.
In short, the current crisis-management
approach by the Irish State is going to cost
every Irish taxpayer in excess of €, in
added tax liability. Neither Iceland nor Greece
comes close.
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Still think that we should be stimulating this
economy through more borrowing?
Take a look at the private sector debts. In
terms of external debt liabilities, Ireland is in a
league of its own amongst the advanced econo-
mies. Our overall debts currently are in excess
of the critically high liabilities of the Heavily
Indebted Poor Countries (HIPCs) to which we
are sending intergovernmental aid. And rising:
in Q , our external debt liabilities stood
at a boggling USD . trillion, up .% on
Q . Of these, roughly % accrue to the
domestic economy – more than six times our
annual national income.
So you think we should
stimulate the economy
through borrowing?