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Ship of Fools - How Stupidity and Corruption Sank the Celtic Tiger (Hardcover)
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Ship of Fools - How Stupidity and Corruption Sank the Celtic Tiger (Hardcover)
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The death of the Celtic tiger is not an extinction event to trouble
naturalists. There was, in fact nothing natural about this tiger,
if it ever really existed. The"Irish Economic miracle" was built on
good old-fashioned subsidies (from the European Union) and the
simple fact that until the 1980s Ireland was by the standards of
the developed world so economically backward that the only way was
up. And as it began to catch up to European and American averages,
the Irish economy could boast some seemingly remarkable statistics.
These lured in investors, the Irish deregulated and all but
abandoned financial oversight, and a great Irish financial ceilidh
began. It would last for a decade. When the global financial crash
of 2008 arrived it struck Ireland harder than anywhere-even Iceland
looked like a model of rectitude compared to the fiasco that
stretched from Cork to Dublin. There was an avalanche of statistics
as toxic as the property-based assets that lay beneath many of
them: type="disc" The International Monetary Fund was predicting
that Ireland's Gross Domestic Product (GDP) would shrink by 13.5
per cent in 2009 and 2010-the worst performance among all the
advanced economies and one of the worst ever recorded in peacetime
in the developed world. type="disc" Government debt almost doubled
in a year. type="disc" In May 2008, &euro13.5 million was paid
for a 450-acre farm in Warrenstown, County Meath-one of the highest
prices ever paid for agricultural land anywhere in the world. By
2009 the level of debt among Irish households and companies was the
highest in the European Union. type="disc" The country's gross
indebtedness was larger than Japan's, which has thirty times the
population. type="disc" Between 1994 and 2006, the average
second-hand house price in Dublin increased from &euro82,772 to
&euro512,461-a rise of 519 per cent. By 2009 Irish house prices
had fallen more rapidly than any others in Europe. type="disc" With
a fifth of its office spaces empty, Dublin had the highest vacancy
rate of any European capital and was rated as having the worst
development and investment potential of twenty-seven European
cities. type="disc" The Irish stock exchange fell by 68 per cent in
2008 type="disc" The average Irish family had lost almost half its
financial assets type="disc" Unemployment rose faster than in any
other Western European country, increasing by 85 per cent in a
year. type="disc" Ireland's bad bank, the National Assets
Management Agency (Nama), which had to take over &euro90
billion in loans to developers from banks that would otherwise be
insolvent holds more assets [sic] than any publicly quoted property
company in the world, dwarfing giants such as GE Capital Real
Estate and Morgan Stanley Real Estate, which own assets of
&euro60 billion and &euro48 billion respectively.And under
all this rubble lay the corpse of the Celtic Tiger. How Ireland
managed to achieve such a spectacular implosion is a stunning story
of corruption, carelessness and venality, told with passion and
fury by one of Ireland's most respected journalists and
commentators.
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