_A look at how a former beacon of booming development and social prosperity has been plunged into economic desperation. _Ireland has been one of the largest casualties in the global financial crisis, which began during the banking collapse of 2008 and has continued to impact markets and destabilise the developed world ever since. Following a government guarantee to underwrite the country’s six major banks shortly after the crisis broke, Ireland’s population of 4.5 million was shouldered with an enormous debt of €400bn ($515bn), proportionately the highest per capita commitment in the world. Yet with bank liabilities accounting for an eye watering 309 per cent of GDP, it quickly became apparent that Ireland would fail to find its own way out of the economic downturn. As a consequence, in 2010, the EU and IMF stepped in to offer Ireland a rescue package worth €85bn ($109bn) - then one of the largest bailouts in history. How different it had been only a couple of years earlier. Then the country was riding high, revelling in its reputation as the ‘Celtic Tiger’. With low interest rates, upwardly spiralling property values and seemingly inexhaustible lines of credit available from the banks, for a decade the Irish economy had seemed to be a pin-up for the new age of market deregulation. With money so easy to borrow and fantastic returns apparently offered by even the most speculative investments, property developers became the new heroes of the economy - lauded for their ability to magic profits out of thin air. According to one of them, Simon Kelly: “We didn’t think we were borrowing it, we thought our businesses were borrowing it for the purposes of owning buildings or building hotels or doing commercial activities, which we all did.” But it was not just the developers who were enjoying the boom; the country’s rapidly expanding middle classes felt richer too and enjoyed spending the money that seemed to flow so easily into their hands. With more consumers came more retail outlets, more hotels, more developments .... Of course, like all bubbles, it had to burst eventually. And when it did the liabilities of Irish banks were so huge they threatened to take the whole economy with them - hence the government’s decision to prop them up. The problem is that all this debt now has to be paid for, by higher taxes, reduced pensions and a shrinking public budget for things like social security, education, health and jobs. The EU and IMF loans required the Irish government to hack public spending to the bone - by €12bn ($15bn) over the next three years. That may not sound like a huge sum of money in these days when international financial commentators talk blithely of trillions and quadrillions of dollars, but for a small country, with a population of only 4.5 million it is a huge sum. And as the public sector has tightened its belt to meet these cuts, so the public sector has felt the pain too - businesses have closed, jobs have been lost and unemployment has soared. And inevitably the public mood has soured too. In 2011, the Fianna Fail ruling party was comprehensively crushed in a general election dominated by angry recriminations over who was responsible for the crisis. But the problems facing Ireland have not gone away and as the years of austerity and cutback stretch out ahead, increasing numbers of young people are emigrating overseas, something that earlier generations of the Irish had been forced to do but which during the boom years had never seemed necessary. Against this background, filmmaker Sinead O’Shea investigates how Ireland, once a beacon of booming development and social prosperity, could have reached such a point of economic desperation and asks whether the country can ever turn its fortunes around.
16 Comments
Colm Kelly, IRE
22/1/2012 07:00:08 pm
This film is right on the mark, we Irish have always deferred to the British, church, Government and America, although we have had an image of freedom fighter we have always been controlled by someone. When will we wake up? Probably never, we like to talk the talk but really we can't walk the walk, it's a sad time for Ireland, it's such a beautiful country with beautiful people and a great spirit, but we have no trust in ourselves and our abilities. I have tried to explain the "Irish mentality" with regard to political change and politics in general to foreign friends, it's not easy, the creedo of the ordinary Irish person is "keep your head down and hopefully they won't notice you" this goes for government, the taxman, the Garda any authority figure. We are so afraid of being noticed and picked out to be made an example of that we sit in impotence while our country is sold to the banks that caused our problems. I love my country, but I hate that when it comes down to change we are cowards, what can be more frightening than knowing that through your inaction you have basically consigned your children, grandchildren and quite possibly great-grandchildren into servitude! Because that is what it is, when every penny that you earn is going to pay a foreign debt that you did not create what else can you call it? It's time to stop being afraid and stand up for ourselves, don't fool yourself by saying, "ah sure they've done all they can, what more can they do to us?" We are facing into something that we have not seen since the famine, you may laugh, but when people are dying weekly through suicide and there is mass emigration what other comparison could you draw? Ireland needs change and NOW, don't leave it up to the next generation, they will hate you for leaving them such despair and debt. Show the world that Ireland is not finished, we are a proud Nation and we are survivors but there is survival where you come out stronger for your ordeal and then there is survival at sustenance level, which will you choose?
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Mary Short, Eire
22/1/2012 09:56:24 pm
I cried as I watched this video, to live in Ireland right now is one thing but I think that this video brings the reality of our situation into sharp focus. Every day I hear people talking about the misery that they or someone close to them is suffering, it's heartbreaking. We need to do something, our politicians have done too little too late and this "belt tightening" only serves those that we are indebted to not us, I see the elderly people struggling and the young hopeless, no jobs, less chances in education and the only prospect emigration.
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James Flanagan.
23/1/2012 09:17:48 pm
Even if we broke away from the EU now all of our resources have been sold off, Waterford/Wedgewood, Guinness, Jameson and Irish Distillers all the names that mean Ireland. We watched and did nothing and now we are paying the price, but it will not just be our generation but the generations after us that suffer. Will this be our legacy? A legacy of debt?
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Mark Tiernan
24/1/2012 04:55:21 pm
A one day general strike wouldn't be enough, any protest that has happened in Ireland since the 1970's has been labelled a nuisance, the people are led to believe that the only people protesting are the ones who "show up for everything". Well, do ya know what?! It's time we showed up, it's our country.
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Paddy Irishman
25/1/2012 04:19:09 pm
As someone who lived through the last big recession and emigrated to the States, it truly saddens me that we all face the same fate. There's a saying "History repeats itself" well have we not learned by now? Or are we doomed to repeat this history for ourselves and future generations? No matter what we tell ourselves, we are only tolerated in the US, Canada and Oz and that was before this crisis, now they are looking at us and wondering how we $*^&£"ed it up so badly that we have to go knocking on their doors again. Q:When are we Irish ever going to get it right? A: Not until we kick out the assholes in power and bring in someone with brains and who is for the people not his pocket !
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F. Brady
26/1/2012 04:29:21 pm
Never have I seen this country in such a bad state. the health system is in shambles, it hasn't been great since Mary Harney took over but it has lost everything now! My daughter was told the other day by her doctor that she couldn't have here B12 injections anymore because there were NONE in the country!! I know for those that suffer with more severe problems this may seem trivial, but when they can't afford to buy-in these sorts of things it makes you wonder what else they're not buying-in.Are they going to start buying expired medicines from Pakistan next?? God help us!
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T Conaty
29/1/2012 06:43:36 am
We all say people at the top need to be changed with business savey people eg. Micheal o Leary.
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David Chessler
30/1/2012 09:29:52 am
Latif, have you considered reaching out to the infowars.com people? I think they would love to hear from you. Alex Jones has a huge audience and I'm sure he'd jump at the opportunity to interview you.
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Ciara
30/1/2012 04:39:03 pm
I agree with what T Conaty, Colm and Mary have said. I'm in my early 20's and have never been political, but then I never needed to be when we had the good times for most of my teenage years. I used to look at my parents with disdain when they would go into 'in my day' or 'when I was your age' mode, it just seemed so irrelevant. Now I see exactly what they were talking about! My generation had it so good! Designer this and that, lots of cash, holidays three times a year, most of us expected cars for or 16/17/18 birthdays! And we got them too! Now I can't afford to pay the road tax.
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Tara
31/1/2012 07:51:01 pm
I agree with Ciara, Micheal Noonan Minister for something said that emigration was a "lifestyle choice" yeah!! CHOOSE LIFE!!! The Irish government have looked at emigration in a positive way for too long! they seem to think that once we leave we're someone else's problem, so sad...... I used to think that I had a country behind me to support me, no I know that they're just behind me to push me out the door!
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Sinead
1/2/2012 06:01:39 pm
You're right Tara, they just keep pushing us out the door. I saw Micheal Noonan's interview and he said we should all be trained to the highest degree before we head off! I agree that we should all be trained to highest degree but so that we can work to rebuild our country, not to be just of benefit to our host nation. Don't get me wrong I'm grateful to whatever ever country takes us, I just don't understand the logic behind his statement. if we are investing in people that investment should be for the good of the country, not just so we don't look like idiots! They already think we're idiots for blowing 400 Billion!!!
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Marty. S
5/2/2012 05:01:46 pm
It's a sad say when not one person has a solution to the problem or aren't allowed to voice it for that matter. So much for democracy, are we going to find ourselves in debtors prisons? Hang on! We're already in one! Ireland!
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P. McNamara
12/2/2012 05:21:46 pm
Do we even really know WHO we owe the money to? this may sound ridiculous but can they even prove with paperwork that we owe this money?? I heard somewhere for instance that if your bank wants to foreclose on your house unless their lawyer has his/her hand on your mortgage there and then they can't kick you out! Can these guys who we supposedly owe the money to provide us with the paperwork?? Who says we owe them? Prove it!
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N. O'Brien
14/2/2012 05:34:10 pm
In an a war of economies someone always has to get their asses kicked, the Greeks are militant, we just sit here and take the beating. Maybe if we fought back we'd get more respect but then we've been well trained to sit down and shut the fuck up haven't we? If we keep leaving there'll be no one between 18-35 left in the country, that's the majority of the work-force, if we had work that is. Who's going to take care of the young and the elderly our government? Sure they couldn't take care of them when times were good! Rotten bastards they should all be taken out and shot, especially that Mary Harney one, 12 years and she completely demolished the health system, where's she now, in her Villa in Spain spending our money, that's where. Are we going to do anything about it? Nah, we'll just sit here like good children and wait for the next lot to screw us!
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8/8/2013 04:43:35 pm
There are many organizations whose concern is profit alone! But at any point there must never be a public organization in that list! A government is supposed to work for the well being of its people! I appreciate your movements!
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17/1/2018 02:25:54 am
Now a days economic is so poor in all over the world. It will spoil middle class people only. So Government have to take severe attention on it.
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