Brendan Burgess
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An excellent article by Dan O'Brien in today's Indo
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The conventional wisdom now is that all our woes stem from that single decision made at a single moment.
The conventional wisdom is wrong.
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While there are many factors and issues around the handling of their respective financial crises, the notion that Iceland's economy has performed better than Ireland's since 2008 is not supported by the facts. Claims frequently heard here in Ireland that our north Atlantic neighbour made some sort of miraculous and rapid recovery because it did not guarantee its banks, are simply false.
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In the discussion of the Irish crisis, it is rarely mentioned that the most rotten of the banks - Anglo Irish - had €19bn in deposits from individuals in September 2008, and €32bn from organisations, including companies, charities, public sector bodies, pension funds and credit unions.
Had it been allowed to collapse, the direct cost to the State would have been reduced to the tune of around €30bn. But the additional direct shock to an economy already reeling from the collapse of the construction industry would have been huge.