December 5, 2011  NY Times

Despite Praise for Its Austerity, Ireland and Its People Are Being Battered


By LIZ ALDERMAN 
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DUBLIN — As European leaders scramble to overcome the Continent’s debt crisis 
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/e/european_sovereign_debt_crisis/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier>
 , many are pointing to Ireland 
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  as a model for how to get out of the troubles. 

Having embraced severe belt-tightening to mend its tattered finances, Ireland 
is showing glimmers of a turnaround. A year after it received a €67.5 billion 
bailout, or $90.9 billion at current exchange rates, modest growth has returned 
and the budget deficit is shrinking. 

But the effects of austerity have pummeled Ireland’s fragile economy, leaving 
scars that are likely to take years to heal. Nearly 40,000 Irish have fled the 
country this year alone in search of a brighter future elsewhere; the trend is 
expected to continue. 

“This is still an insolvent economy,” said Constantin Gurdgiev, an economist 
and lecturer at Trinity College in Dublin. “Just because we’re playing a 
good-boy role and not making noises like the Greeks doesn’t mean Ireland is 
healthy.” 

The German chancellor, Angela Merkel, recently praised the Irish prime 
minister, Enda Kenny, for setting an “outstanding example,” while the French 
president, Nicolas Sarkozy, declared that Ireland was already “almost out of 
the crisis.” 

Underneath the surface, however, the grinding reality of Irish life belies 
those glowing commendations. 

Salaries of nurses, professors and other public-sector workers have been cut 
around 20 percent. A range of taxes, including on housing and water, have 
increased. Investment in public works is virtually moribund. 

On Monday and Tuesday, Mr. Kenny’s government is announcing an additional €3.8 
billion in tax increases and spending cuts for 2012 that will hit health care, 
social protections and child benefits. 

Retail sales fell 3.8 percent in October from a year earlier as spending was 
down even on things like school textbooks, shoes and other basic goods. 

At a Spar convenience store in the center of Dublin, Samantha O’Donnell, a 
mother of two, picked up her shopping basket with some necessities, then put a 
few back on the shelf. 

“A lot of people are just trying to get by week to week,” said Mrs. O’Donnell, 
who said her salary as a nursing assistant had been cut. 

To Sean Kay, a professor of politics at Ohio Wesleyan University near Columbus, 
Ohio, and the author of a recent book examining Ireland’s crisis, Mrs. 
O’Donnell’s experience is typical. “The Irish are being praised for doing what 
they were asked to do, which is important for bringing investors back to the 
country,” he said. “But for the Irish people, it’s not paying off.” 

There are signs of improvement. Compared with the previous year, exports are up 
5.4 percent for the first nine months of 2011, fueled by gains from Pfizer, 
Intel, SAP and other multinational companies that were drawn to Ireland in the 
1990s and 2000s by its low taxes, well-educated English-speaking work force and 
access to the European market. New information technology companies like 
LinkedIn and Facebook have recently joined the crowd. 

Prospects for local technology companies are improving, too. Brian Farrell 
founded Tethras with a partner three years ago to develop mobile applications 
for smartphones. He now has 16 employees and hopes to double his work force in 
the next 18 months. 

“Every time you turn the radio on, companies in I.T. are hiring,” Mr. Farrell 
said, referring to information technology. 

Gross domestic product grew 1.2 percent in the second quarter from a year 
earlier, compared to a decline of 0.4 percent for all of 2010 and 7 percent in 
2009. 

The interest rates that Ireland would pay its international creditors if it 
were not on a financial lifeline have also fallen, to 8.7 percent today from 14 
percent in August, in part because investors hope that European policy makers 
will resolve the broader debt crisis. 

But that is still above the level that led Ireland to seek a bailout and too 
high to allow for sustainable finances. 

The budget deficit has fallen to around 10 percent of gross domestic product 
this year from a staggering 32 percent in 2010. But even under the best of 
circumstances, it will not reach the Europe-wide target of 3 percent until 
2015. 

Moreover, the recovery looks to be short-lived, probably putting that goal out 
of reach. The Economic and Social Research Institute, based in Dublin, this 
month cut its 2012 growth forecasts in half, to under 1 percent. It cited an 
expected recession in the wider euro zone, in part because the austerity being 
pressed on much of Europe by Germany and the European Central Bank is seen as 
worsening the prospects for recovery rather than improving them. 

“The present situation contains elements reminiscent of policy during the Great 
Depression 
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 , when a mounting crisis was confronted by an orthodoxy that resulted in great 
poverty that could have been avoided,” the institute wrote in a report. 

Pain is inevitable in any nation overwhelmed by its debts, which in Ireland 
continue to climb rather than fall as a percentage of gross domestic product. 
But the Irish example points to the dangers of simply squeezing ordinary people 
to pay off creditors rather than sharing the burden more broadly. 

Welfare payments have steadily been reduced even as the unemployment rate has 
ticked up to 14.5 percent, and is forecast to remain stuck at high levels at 
least through next year. 

The Irish are not prone to protest, but now more are being organized, inspired 
by the Occupy movement in the United States. 

On a recent frosty night in Dublin, David Johnson, 38, an I.T. consultant, 
stepped outside a makeshift camp set up by the Occupy Dame Street movement in 
front of the Irish Central Bank. 

“This is all new to Ireland,” he said, pointing to tarpaulins and protest signs 
urging the government to boot out the International Monetary Fund and require 
bondholders to share the losses at Irish banks that have largely been assumed 
by taxpayers. “The feeling is that the people who can least afford it are the 
ones shouldering the burden of this crisis,” he said. 

Joblessness would be much higher, economists say, if not for the rising tide of 
Irish people leaving the country for Australia, Britain and Canada as 
opportunities at home stagnate. Thousands of students and construction workers 
left this country of 4.5 million people after the economy slid into recession 
in 2008, most of them expecting to be away only temporarily. 

But now, accountants, engineers, dentists and other high-skilled professionals 
are moving away with their families. And many are not looking back, said Edwina 
Shanahan, a senior manager at VisaFirst, a company that helps set Irish 
citizens up with jobs and visas overseas. 

“The politicians said things would get better,” she said. “But things are 
instead a disaster zone for many.” 

Deirdre Cronin, an accountant in Cork, plans to move in the new year with her 
husband and two young children to Australia, which has become a mecca for tens 
of thousands of Irish seeking a brighter future. 

“We feel we would never be able to give our children an opportunity” in 
Ireland, she said. “We’re going to work hard out there, and earn a decent 
living.” 

The exodus of workers from declining areas to growing ones is one way economies 
rebalance. But it could take years to do so. In the meantime, many Irish 
readily admit that they fear that the hard gains Ireland has eked out could be 
swept away if Europe’s leaders fail in their latest effort to prevent the 
crisis from fracturing the monetary union. 

“The euro zone is entering a very serious slump, and it is not certain the euro 
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/c/currency/euro/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier>
  will survive in its current form,” said Simon Johnson, a professor at the 
Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Sloan School of Management and a former 
chief economist at the I.M.F. “Why Ireland would want to spend its time being a 
model student in the context of the broader European mishandling of the 
situation, I don’t know.” 

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/06/business/global/despite-praise-for-its-austerity-ireland-and-its-people-are-being-battered.html?nl=afternoonupdate
 
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