Brendan Burgess
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I was thinking about this in the context of the mad spending promised by both parties in the UK General Election and a likely auction in our next General Election.
Séamus Coffey has an article in the Indo.
www.independent.ie
This is the bit which I find most shocking:
It could be said that 1976 was the last time the fiscal stance was appropriate from both the budgetary and economic perspectives at the same time.
And I like this proposal:
A legislative commitment to limit the increases in net policy spending to the medium-term growth rate of the economy, plus inflation, would be far better than an informal target to deliver a particular budget balance in a particular year.
Séamus Coffey has an article in the Indo.
Fiscal fine words no substitute for real action
In a recent speech, Minister for Finance Paschal Donohoe put forward a logical argument in favour of sound economic and budgetary management - but the suggested policies that follow these warnings must go beyond words.

This is the bit which I find most shocking:
It could be said that 1976 was the last time the fiscal stance was appropriate from both the budgetary and economic perspectives at the same time.
And I like this proposal:
A legislative commitment to limit the increases in net policy spending to the medium-term growth rate of the economy, plus inflation, would be far better than an informal target to deliver a particular budget balance in a particular year.