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Introduction I want to thank the Committee for the invitation to come here this afternoon to discuss IrishU.S. commercial linkages and the critical role of U.S. multinationals in the Irish economy. There are nearly 200 nations in the world—many of them larger, wealthier and more populated than Ireland. However, perhaps in no other country in the world are U.S. multinationals as prevalent as they are in Ireland. Ireland is a very important extension of corporate America, among the most favored destinations of U.S. multinationals for a host of reasons, ranging from the pro-business policies of the government, to the availability of skilled, English-speaking labor, to Ireland’s membership in the European Union. The operations of U.S. foreign affiliates in Ireland have been closely linked with higher wages, net employment gains, increased trade flows, the transfer of technology, the upgrading of managerial skills, and access to more global markets. More recently, the presence of U.S. foreign affiliates—and their export capacity—has been a key factor in stabilizing the Irish economy since the Great Global Recession of 2008/09. In the fluid post-crisis global economy of today, much is in flux. Debt-laden developed nations have yet to find a path of sustainable economic growth. Europe’s sovereign debt crisis could precipitate a global recession, or worse, cause a rupture in the eurozone. The rise of China and other key emerging markets remains unrelenting. Against this backdrop, however, IrishU.S. commercial linkages have become stronger not weaker, deeper not shallower, since the financial crisis. Built to last is the best way to characterized Irish-U.S. relations. Why Ireland? American firms compete more through foreign direct investment—by establishing a local presence in various foreign markets—than through arm’s-length trade. To this point, global U.S. foreign affiliate sales (goods and services) are estimated to have totaled $6.4 trillion in 2010, a figure vastly larger than total U.S. exports ($1.8 trillion). Contrary to popular wisdom, it is not cheap labor that motivates U.S. firms to invest overseas. Rather, key motivators are the availability of skilled labor, as well as access to large and wealthy markets, in addition to the ease of doing business and degree of pro-business policies. Ireland ranks among the best in the world on this score—the nation has a Triple A rating among U.S. multinationals. The global information technology revolution, Ireland’s strategic success in attracting other high-valued industries like life sciences and financial services, the nation’s market access to the European Union—thanks to these and other factors U.S. investment stock in Ireland in 2010 ($190 billion) was more than five times greater the level a decade earlier. Over the same period, Ireland’s share of total U.S. investment in Europe rose from 5.2% in 2000 to 8.7% in 2010. Even though U.S. affiliate sales to the local Irish market are large, the figures cannot mask or hide the overwhelming export-propensity of U.S. affiliates firms in Ireland. The nation has long served as a strategic beachhead to the European Union for U.S. multinationals. In any given year, U.S. affiliates export more goods from Ireland than from China. The benefits to Ireland The marriage of smart, pro-business initiatives/policies of the Irish government with the capital and core competencies U.S. multinationals has helped produced an “economic miracle” in Ireland: Ireland’s nominal GDP rose 10-fold between 1980 and 2010; The nation’s per capita GDP increased from $6,200 in 1980, among the lowest in Europe, to over $45,000 in 2010, among the highest in Europe; Ireland’s exports in 2010 where nearly 24 times larger than exports in 1980. Ireland has one of the highest per capita export ratios among the developed nations; Exports as a percentage of GDP surged from 50% of GDP in 1980 to roughly 100% last year; Reflecting the increasing integration of Ireland into the global economy, the nation’s total trade/GDP ratio in 2010 was nearly 200%, almost double the level of 1980. As agents of change, U.S. foreign affiliates have been instrumental in linking Ireland not only the United States but also to the rest of the world. In the process, U.S. affiliates have transferred the prerequisite resources to be globally competitive (capital, technology, managerial skills, access to markets). Affiliates—as overseas arms of some of the most dynamic companies in the world—have also nurtured an entrepreneurial, risk-taking culture in Ireland. Ireland’s key stakeholders—consumers/workers, indigenous firms and government—have benefited significantly from the presence of U.S. multinationals. U.S. firms have been instrumental in helping to create and train a world class labor force; critical in diffusing technology and innovative capabilities across the economy; key in expanding the global breadth of indigenous Irish firms; and at the forefront of upgrading the industrial capabilities and core competencies of Irish firms, large and small. U.S. affiliate activities are a source of trade, employment, higher wages, technological advances, as well as a key source of revenue for the Irish government. Irish stakes in the United States Ireland’s commercial and corporate stakes in the United States are not inconsequential. To the contrary, foreign direct investment from Ireland to the United States topped a record $8 billion in 2010. On a historic cost basis, 2010 was also a record year, with Ireland’s investment stock in the U.S. totaling $30.6 billion. Challenges in the post-crisis world The question is not whether or not Ireland will recovery from the traumatic events of the past few years. Rather, the more pertinent question is how and to what degree Ireland’s deeply rooted commercial ties with the United States will be effected by the post-crisis world unfolding before us. The financial crisis was a game changer—diminishing the global economic clout of the West, while accelerating the economic rise of the so-called Rest, or the developing nations. For Ireland in particular, key questions include the following: how will the nation maintain its global cost competitiveness in the face of the secular rise in world commodity prices? How will Ireland’s skilled, technologically-focused labor force keep pace with the surging technological advancements of China and India? The battle for brains, or the best and brightest, has gone global—will Ireland be able to keep up and continue to attract and/or produce the skilled labor required to support knowledge-intensive industries? As more global R&D shifts to the developing nations, attracting more attention and capital of leading global multinationals, how will Ireland maintain its attractiveness to global ICT and life science leaders? Lastly, how will the global tectonic shifts underway today affect U.S.-Irish commercial linkages tomorrow or in the future? The rise of the Rest is not expected to dramatically recast U.S.-Irish commercial linkages for a host of reasons, including the following: First, the European Union is likely to remain one of the largest economic entities in the world for the foreseeable future—current financial woes notwithstanding. Ireland, in turn, as part of the EU, will remain a strategic gateway for U.S. multinationals desiring access to the massive integrated EU market. A second reason not to expect a sizable shift in U.S.-Irish linkages relates to the quality of investment Ireland receives from the U.S., or the fact that Ireland has been hugely successful in attracting foreign capital from America’s best global corporations, global leaders like Amazon, Facebook, Google, IBM, Pfizer and other companies that are well positioned to grow in the future. The bulk of foreign investors in Ireland are firms poised the Third, Ireland’s strategic focus on developing cutting edge capabilities in such dynamic sectors as nanotechnology, clean energy, global business services, pharmaceuticals and related activities bodes for more, not less, long-term U.S.-Irish commercial linkages. Ireland’s strategic vision to be successful in the sectors/industries of tomorrow aligns nicely with those U.S. multinationals with similar forward-looking vision. Fourth, the country’s proven ability to adept and remain flexible in the face of shifting global tides is yet another reason to think U.S.-Irish commercial linkages will be preserved in the post-crisis world. Long track records matter to firms when investing overseas, and Ireland’s long history of favorable taxes, robust R&D environment, government support for innovation, and other pro-business policies will help sustain strong U.S.-Irish commercial ties in the face of the new world economy that is evolving. So too will Ireland’s success in adjusting to the challenging climate wrought by the financial crisis-cum-global recession. Over the past three years, Ireland has gone a long way in boosting or resetting its global competitiveness through wage concessions, falling real estate prices, public sector cuts, and related measures. Non-wage costs— which at their peak pre-crisis where nearly one-quarter higher than the European average--have declined sharply since 2008. Finally, there is nothing preordained about the emerging markets themselves, notably China, leading the global economy over the 21st century. In other words, China, India, Russia and others confront significant internal hurdles to economic growth, challenges, that if not met, could undermine growth and development in many hyped-up developing nations. The upshot—more, not less, FDI in key developed nations like Ireland. The road ahead Future U.S.-Irish commercial ties are conditioned on Europe staying together, not drifting apart. It is also conditioned on Ireland successfully overcoming the economic hurdles before it. The list runs the gamut, from the nation’s growing level of public debt, to highly indebted households, to stubbornly high levels of unemployment, to an impaired banking sector, and to a weakened domestic economy. The factors just mentioned are not, in general, your typical post-recession challenges but critical burdens that need to reconciled and dealt with in a timely manner in order to put Ireland back on a sustainable growth path. Another challenge to U.S.-Irish relations lies with corporate America itself. U.S. firms remain the most globally minded enterprises in the world. Yet over the medium term, the outward thrust of corporate America could be hampered by declining profits as the global economy slows, political pressure (and incentives) for U.S. firms to investment at home not overseas, and the mounting public backlash against outsourcing, with U.S. corporations increasingly cast as villains for sitting on some $1.5 trillion in capital while hiring and investing slowly at home while expanding abroad. In addition, the future of U.S.-Irish ties will be determined by how well U.S. companies compete against the corporate newcomers from India, China and other emerging markets. Presently, U.S. firms enjoy a competitive advantage in such leading-edge activities as cloud computing, social media, and life sciences. Yet the rest of the world is hardly standing still— the corporate challenge from the developing nations has never been greater and will only intensify in the decades ahead. How U.S. firms adept to these mounting challenges will determined their overall health and survivability, and by extension, their need and wherewithal, to maintain ties with Ireland. A final point to consider: as the commercial bridge to the United States and Europe, Ireland’s future role in linking both sides of the Atlantic together will hinge on America’s and Europe’s willingness to deepen and further integrate the transatlantic economy. The good news is that nothing on the horizons suggests a transatlantic divorce is imminent. These are troubling signs before us, to be sure. Yet while the West—the U.S. and Europe in particular—may be on the cusp of a painful and prolonged period of subpar growth, that hardly spells or suggests the end of the world as we know it. There is nothing on the horizon that suggests the end of globalization, the end of the European Union, the end of multinationals searching for favorable foreign locations to do business, the end of the global business cycle, and the end of the special ties that binds Ireland and the United States together. Built to last is the best way to characterized Irish-U.S. relations. And one of the best examples of this dynamic stems from the 2008/09 global financial crisis-cum-economic recession itself; over the past three years, Irish-U.S. commercial linkages have become stronger not weaker, deeper not shallower. The mutual dependence of Ireland and the United States has grown, not shrunk. That is another way of saying that no matter how turbulent the future, Irish-U.S. relations are expected to remain robust and resilient; as history will ultimately prove, the commercial bonds between Ireland and the United States are built to last. Concluding comments In conclusion, Chairman, I want to thank you and the Committee for the opportunity to make this presentation to you today. I would be happy to answer any questions you have.