1) FF didnt bankrupt the country. The bankers did. FF made mistakes not having strong enough regulation but they didnt force the banks to go on a lending frenzy. They also didnt have control of all the county councils (FG did) that gave out planning permission wholesale for enough houses to meet demand for the next 50 years, or for planning for houses in Ballygobackwards that no one wanted to buy.
FF bankrupted the country when they signed the unlimited bank guarantee on 28th September 2008. If they hadn't signed the guarantee, we wouldn't be in the hands of the international money lenders now.
FF had DIRECT controls of the planning process via Dept Environment and via the political appointees to An Bord Pleanala. Don't try to rewrite history now.
FF bankrupted the country when they signed the unlimited bank guarantee on 28th September 2008. If they hadn't signed the guarantee, we wouldn't be in the hands of the international money lenders now.
That's their legacy.
The bank guarantee pushed us over the edge into the abyss. There was certainly a major issue with cost of providing public services, and the dependance on property taxes to support this. This could have been addressed through normal borrowing over time. It was our exposure to the bank debt that pushed our bond yields to unsustainable levels.True, but would the IMF have come in to bail us out and who would be paying the public sector wage bill right now if they hadn't?
The bank guarantee pushed us over the edge into the abyss. There was certainly a major issue with cost of providing public services, and the dependance on property taxes to support this. This could have been addressed through normal borrowing over time. It was our exposure to the bank debt that pushed our bond yields to unsustainable levels.
Thanks Brian and Brian.
Only got around to watching part 3 of the FF show on TV3 last night.
They really don't get it, do they? John O'Donoghue was victimhood personified, had done nothing wrong in his own eyes. Bertie felt that the Galway Tent hadn't affected how people thought of FF, because it had been cancelled and they still did badly in the General Election, that's the sophisticated level of thinking in our former Taoiseach!
The main thing for me was that none of them seemed to know what FF stood for, they were only now going to think about that. Why were they in a party that they didn't know what it stood for?
It's what did Kerry getMore than €79 million has been provided in capital funding for school building and modernisation projects in Kerry since 2002.
The bank guarantee pushed us over the edge into the abyss. There was certainly a major issue with cost of providing public services, and the dependance on property taxes to support this. This could have been addressed through normal borrowing over time. It was our exposure to the bank debt that pushed our bond yields to unsustainable levels.
Thanks Brian and Brian.
Where did I say anything remotely near that?Are you saying that we just keep borrowing 18-20bn a year indefinately?
Where did I say anything remotely near that?
Where you misunderstand is where you say 'keep borrowing'. I never said 'keep borrowing'. I said that we wouldn't be in the arms of the IMF if it wasn't for the banking debt. We would have been able to borrow through normal processes while we worked out how to address the gap between income and expenditure."This could have been addressed through normal borrowing over time". This is the main bit I am referring to. With the income from property taxes effectively gone you are suggesting that we borrow to meet our budget deficit - this has been between 18-20bn a year for the past 3 years with little sign of decreasing. So we just keep borrowing for this? If I have mis-understood then please clarify.
That's simply not true.Where you misunderstand is where you say 'keep borrowing'. I never said 'keep borrowing'. I said that we wouldn't be in the arms of the IMF if it wasn't for the banking debt. We would have been able to borrow through normal processes while we worked out how to address the gap between income and expenditure.
We would have been able to borrow through normal processes while we worked out how to address the gap between income and expenditure.
Where you misunderstand is where you say 'keep borrowing'. I never said 'keep borrowing'. I said that we wouldn't be in the arms of the IMF if it wasn't for the banking debt. We would have been able to borrow through normal processes while we worked out how to address the gap between income and expenditure.
A headline in today's Sindo show FF at 10% and there were rumours of Eamon O'Cuiv starting a new party on the basis that FF are history. The quality of leadership under Martin seems dubious and he is tainted by past membership of historically probably the worst gov't ever.
His talk of returning to core FF principles rings very hollow indeed as, apart from populism and winning elections, I don't know what he's talking about as core FF values. There are also no obvious leaders in waiting to take FF out of the mire and reinvent it. Yet against all this, the ability of the electorate to to forgive and forget is monumental. Can FF recover or is it time to say "Adios" and for a new centerist party to arise?