dodo said:If you keep talking about about a downfall then you increase the chances of one,
unemployment now means nothing in ten years time.
-young population has added to problem due to swelling demand for houses,if prices dive and unemployment rockets then young will be first to leave.
-Population is expanding mainly due to construction and consumer spending related jobs,these people will be first to leave in any recesssion/downturn and that will rapidly reduce demand in economy from them for good services and housing.
-regulatory environment may be good but some commentators have said too lax in financial services, other jurisdictions are becoming more business friendly in regulatory stakes.
-lowest income tax wont help stop anything
-pension fund is for the public service and amounts to very little per person.
-Many eastern european speak english as do all uk and many other competitor countries.
-Debt's maybe a plus but again maybe we're better borrowing more to invest in R&D and sustainable wealth creation for the future.
yes your missing the fact that none of these things will stop manufacturers leaving to lower cost locations,also they wont stop a correction in the massively overvalued and dangerous housing market,they wont make us most competitive innovative or economically sustainable,they wont stop us from not having control over monetary policy and currency levels and they wont stop us from having stagnant exports and booming imports and inflation .
Today 10:12 AM
Berni said:It will play in RealPlayer, you can download it here http://uk.real.com/player/?&src=google_ppc_realmusic_nonuk_player,ZG.uk.rm.rm.hd.def - the free version on the right is all you need
im just saying dont bury your head in the sand ,we have had a great 15 years economically but theres lots of things on the horizon that suggest the next 15+ will not be so great,as george lee said while economy has boomed for last 5 years exports which are the life blood of the economy havent and are close to stagnant lately,i actually believe much of europe will suffer for next 15+ years too so its not just ireland but we are more open than other economies and more intricately tied to america. We arent special in this country and our time in the sun WILL come to an end and i'll be ready and will be prepared to head to foreign shores.the uk could yet again be an attractive option for many irish professionals.Michael said:Bearishbull, how can you sleep at night thinking about the "dangerous housing market". So many people are building up equity its now becoming dangerous, hmmm. Its a much better life enjoying the present boom than finding the bad in the positive factors aswell. There are all kinds of possibilities in 10 years time, but right now we are booming and some of us are enjoying the ride. I suppose it all makes for a healthy debate.
CGorman said:If it is correct... it means Irelands external debt of $1trn is greater than that of Russia, Brazil, China, Mexico and India combined! So 4 million of us paddys have managed to borrow more than 2.9 billion people abroad! A nation gone mad? At least we are not in the U.S.'s unenviable position with almost $9trn external debt....
sonar said:Also when I see media articles talking down shares I suspect it means
some wealthy and influential people have already moved into short positions on the shares. Party on or party ending ?
dodo said:I wonder how many houses George has and when did he sell them all, l the interest rates for the next 18 months are already built into the house prices
That sez a lot about the intelligence of the Tubridy demographic. I'd say half of Podge n Rodges audience woulda known what the ECB rate was.gearoidmm said:On a recent episode of Tubridy tonight, not one single member of the audience knew what the ECB interest rate was when asked.
bearishbull said:cant see how anyone can argue with
-house prices being so far ahead of incomes
-interest rates rising and unlikely to be this low again for many years/decades
-our exports being nearly toatally from multinationals who will move on,exports are relatively stagnant and imports of everything rockets
-construction plays a massive and dangerous role in economy
-debt levels are huge and growing bigger by the day while cost of servicing it grows
-the countries competitiveness is well down the list and getting worse
-new jobs are mainly coming from unproductive areas
-we are higly open/globalised economy meaning we are at mercy of global capital flows and competition from abroad,any international shock will hit us more than most
Neffa said:I really doubt this. Until people actually see falls in price with their own eyes, the mania will continue.
According to Bank of Ireland Private Banking, the Irish have invested €30 billion (equity and borrowings) in commercial property both in Ireland and overseas, in the past 5 years. In contrast, Enterprise Ireland said last year that under its Seed and Venture Capital Programme, €133m had been invested in 75 companies since 2001. An Irish company has not floated on the Nasdaq Stock Exchange since 1999 and we have a handful of existing Nasdaq member firms compared with Israel’s 70 plus tally.
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