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The Irish Economy JUNE 2013 Ireland Greece EU Population 4,588,252 (2011) 9,903,268 (2011) 503,679,730 Area 84,420 km2 131,990 km2 Gross GDP figure €144 billion €227 billion €15,650 billion GDP per capita €35,455 €20,400 €27,475 +1.4% -7.9% (Calendar year 2011) +0.9% -6.9% -0.5% +1.5% D/Finance Forecast -4.3% M/Finance +0.4% (Commission) Unemployment: 14% (March 2013) 27.2% (February 2013) 10.9% Youth unemployment: (15-24) 30.3% (March 2013) 57.6% (February 2013) 23.5% -13.4% -9.4% -8.2% -6.9% -7.5% -4.6 % -5.1% - 3.5% 2014 2014 GDP Growth 2011 2012 2013 (f) General government deficit/GDP 2011 2012 2013 (f) 2014 (f) Primary Surplus Target Origins of the Irish Crisis • Sustainable export-led growth of the Celtic Tiger period gave way to expansion reliant on a property bubble 2002-2006 • Ireland had been running a budget surplus and low debt levels but domestic bubble burst at the same time as the 2007-2008 global financial crisis 2010 • Powerful and sudden impact on our domestic banking system, on employment, and on government deficits and debt, necessitated EU-IMF programme of assistance. 2011- • Now on road back to sustainable growth and balanced finances with a smaller, well-capitalised banking system Ireland Greece EU +1.4% -7.9% 2012 +0.9% -6.9% (Calendar year 2011) -0.5% -4.3% M/Finance +0.4% (Commission) GDP Growth 2011 +1.5% 2013 (f) D/Finance Forecast Unemployment: 14% (March 2013) Youth 30.3% (March unemployment: 2013) (15-24) 27.2% (February 10.9% 2013) 57.6% (February 23.5% 2013) EU/IMF Programme • €85bn [€67.5bn in multilateral and EU IMF Bilateral (UK, Swe, Den) €17.5bn 4.8 €40.2bn Ireland bilateral loans, €17.5bn from Ireland’s own resources] • €22.5bn • 190 individual targets under programme fully achieved Intend to exit the programme and make full return to markets in 2013 Stabilising the Public Finances We are on course to meet our 3% deficit target by 2015 We have implemented measures to yield a budgetary adjustment of €29bn (or about 18% of GDP) since mid-2008 Budget 2013 delivered another €3.5bn of that consolidation Deficit of 7.6% in 2012 Deficit forecast to be reduced below 3% in 2015 Government Deficit Being Brought Down Steadily and On Target Government Primary Balance 1 0.1 -1 -2.2 -3 -4.3 %-5 of GDP -7 -7.4 -7.6 -9 -9.1 -11 -7.4 Department of Finance forecasts -10.7 -11.5 *Excludes costs of bank recapitalisations -13 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 Department of Finance The economy has returned to growth 14 Celtic Tiger Period Domestic Driven Growth Downturn & Recovery GDP Growth % Y-o-Y 9 4 -1 -6 Department of Finance forecasts 2013 to 2016 -11 Department of Finance General Government Debt Will Peak This Year and then Decrease 140 120 100 % of GDP 80 60 40 20 0 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 Department of Finance forecasts Department of Finance 2016 Exports Have Supported Growth Exports Now Above Pre-Crisis Levels €m •Up over 5% in 2011 and 5.5% in 2012 at current prices •Agri-food Exports Up 28% in last 3 years Department of Finance •Multinational Sector Critical incl. Pharma, MedTech, ICT, Financial Services •Balance of Payments in Surplus for third year in a row after 10 years in deficit Consolidation is being implemented in the least growth damaging way possible, with the majority of the adjustment on the spending side Budget 2013 includes just under €2 billion in spending cuts and over €1.4 billion in tax increases. Expenditure cuts in 2013 include - reduction of €10 a month in the rate of child benefit -the reduction of the duration of job seekers benefit - further reform of public service conditions Tax measures include - introduction of a property tax - increases in capital gains and capital acquisitions tax - increase in excise duty on alcohol and cigarettes - increase on motor and vehicle taxes 12.5% Rate of Corporation Tax will remain as a key element supporting inward investment and export-led growth Restoring the Banks to Health Recapitalised on Time and Below Expected Costs €64bn, ca. 41% of 2011 GDP Consolidated, Deleveraged, Reduced in Size Pillar Bank Strategy in place with 2 main banks, AIB and BoI to focus on domestic economy. Over €40bn in deleveraging achieved Action at European Level As other EU Member States face similar challenges, Europe is working on new ways to break the link between sovereigns and banks Continuing Challenges Jobs added in 2012 but unemployment unacceptably high Household Debt Elevated Impact of expiring patents in pharmaceutical sector on export growth International Economic Conditions Our Strengths Flexible, Adaptable Economy Pro-Business Environment • 1st in the world for the flexibility and adaptability of our people • 2nd most globalised country in the world • 1st in the world for investment incentives • In top 10 easiest countries in the world to start a business High Levels of Education • In Top 10 most educated countries in world • 1st in the world for availability of skilled labour Favourable Demographics Youngest population in Europe Sources: World Bank, OECD, IMD Competitiveness Yearbook 2012, Eurostat, E&Y, Economist Intelligence Unit 2nd highest trade surplus in Europe 1st in the world for highest average value from investment In global top 20 for quality of scientific research 1st in the Eurozone for ease of doing business 2012 saw highest net job creation in Ireland from Foreign Direct Investment in a decade