RTE News
FAS down holding a jobs fair to promote jobs abroad. Times have certainly changed.
I do agree with that. Every sector of the economy has a drop from time to time. I suppose the big concern is how much the rest of the economy is affected. I think government should continue with currently planned infrastructure projects up to a point as long as it is efficiently spent. Improved roads and such as most important for outside Dublin otherwise jobs will just be concentrated in Dublin.
RTE News
FAS down holding a jobs fair to promote jobs abroad. Times have certainly changed.
Well it was specifically construction jobs. That particular industry is knackered for the forseeable future. Although, disappointingly, construction has made up a disproportionately large part of our economy. We've been artificially building our economy by selling stuff to ourselves instead of building up our exports.
Eurozone inflation is up to 3.7%.
Only a matter of time before ECB rates increase (although the disconnect between central bank rates and true interbank rates as a result of the credit crunch may blunt the impact).
Horizon looks very, very bleak.
As the fella says we are fooked! the boom was a fallacy anyway made up on buying and selling houses to each based on cheap credit -is that a real economy??
As of today i'm officially a figure on the Unemployment ladder!
LESS OF THE BULL NOW!
TO TELL THE TRUTH IS REVOLUTIONARY
The ONLY foot.ie user with a type of logic named after them!
All of this has happened before. All of it will happen again.
Haven't drawn the dole yet, don't know if I can, I haven't got my results from uni yet. Never had to do this before, been working since I was 16.
Your Chairperson,
Gavin
Membership Advisory Board
"Ex Bardus , Vicis"
There's the right way, the wrong way.... and the Max Power way!! :-D
Register up by 19,000 today. 217k overall, 5.7%
Based on those figures, it looks as though we're heading for 300k by Christmas.
19k this month. 54k in the last 12 months.
Revised total of 221k overall. Those queues are getting longer again, folks.
That's an incredible figure for one month. During the 1986 recession the max monthly figure was 16k. Also remember that there would have been workers that lost their jobs but didn't go on the live register and just upped and left the country instead, whether to go back home or seek work elsewhere.
A very worrying situation. This on top of the shortfall in the tax take its been a very bad week. Just on the tax take, the Government has said that the shortfall was €1.5b for six months therefore the expected shortfall for the year is €3b. I'd be very surprised if the shortfall would be only €3b. Its far to simplistic to say that because the shortfall was €1.5b for the first 6 months then it will be €1.5b for the next 6 months. I reckon we're heading to a 4b - 5b shortfall. It looks to me that the economy is fcuked for the foreseeable future.
But still, as FF are saying, let’s talk ourselves out of the recession. Unfortunately its going to take a bit more than that.
Last edited by SMorgan; 05/07/2008 at 7:00 AM.
The argument from the government is that it's not the 80's. Jaysus, must have got a calendar to work that out.Originally Posted by SMorgan
The point is, if we're not careful, that's what we're heading back to. The next figures are released in 4 weeks time. This is a crisis, and the government's response is to deal with and tackle it, of course.
Or rather not. An Irish problem requires an Irish solution. While the queues grow, and figures soar, TD's prepare to take a 11-week break from Thursday.
1) We aren't heading back to the 80's. Whilst unemployment is increasing at a worrying rate, by almost every other metric, we are considerably better off.
2) What would you suggest the Government do? Just like creating the Celtic Tiger, the recession didn't come about overnight and can't be fixed in the short-term. Any decisions the Government take now (e.g. protecting infrastructure spend, increasing tax breaks and grants for job creation) will only bear fruit in the medium term. These decisions should have been taken years ago instead of fuelling the property boom.
In any case, leaving aside the poor decision making of the last few Governments, the credit crunch, oil and food price inflation are a global phenomena outside our control.
Of course there are outside factors, just as there are for the likes of the UK and Germany, but with the possible exception of Spain, no other EU country is experiencing the collapse that Ireland is going through. Throughout the boom years the government gave no recognition to how Ireland was benefiting from global conditions and they steadfastly insisted that the boom was entirely due to their stewardship of the economy. Now that we have a recession its all apparently due to outside factors.
They can't have it both ways.
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