Jump to content

Bailing out the Irish Republic


Guest Dark Sotonic Mills

Recommended Posts

Guest Dark Sotonic Mills

Do you agree that it is morally and financially wrong to be handing over £7b to Ireland after the crisis over there?

 

The State lost £11b Euros in providing unmanageable tax breaks for various corporations. It caused a loss of tens of thousands of British jobs when major companies relocated (eBay and Hertz just two off the top of my head but there are many more).

 

We are having to tighten our belts all round and we face savage cuts in spending yet Osborne sees nothing wrong in frittering away a huge sum of money on a country which has done us untold fiscal damage in the last few years.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I think the counter-argument is two-fold.

 

Firstly, it's reported that Ireland is the biggest recipient of exports from the UK. So if the Irish economy were to fail, it would impact on our economy.

 

Secondly, one (or more?) of the Irish banks has been propped up by RBS and that's owned by the UK taxpayer. So if that bank/s fails, we lose out.

 

I understand the root cause of the problem (ridiculous over-exposure to risk by property owners and banks) but what I don't understand is why the Irish decision to try to reduce the deficit in a short time and by harsh measures hasn't worked. Isn't that what's being tried in the UK?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I think the counter-argument is two-fold.

 

Firstly, it's reported that Ireland is the biggest recipient of exports from the UK. So if the Irish economy were to fail, it would impact on our economy.

 

Secondly, one (or more?) of the Irish banks has been propped up by RBS and that's owned by the UK taxpayer. So if that bank/s fails, we lose out.

 

I understand the root cause of the problem (ridiculous over-exposure to risk by property owners and banks) but what I don't understand is why the Irish decision to try to reduce the deficit in a short time and by harsh measures hasn't worked. Isn't that what's being tried in the UK?

 

The problem is they get (got) a very large proportion of their tax income from property taxes. These collapsed with the recession so even with their cuts there was still a large difference between income and outgoings. Plus a lot of their growth has been in property where the market collapsed a lot more than here leaving the banks there with a proportionally larger amount of bad debt. On top of that they encouraged foreign companies to set up european offices in ireland with the low level or corporation tax and they run the risk of driving these companies away if they raise this (though they may be forced to as part of any deal as its an issue that the rest of europe are not happy about so would expect something in return for the bailout).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

7bil divided by the 7 mil population of this country is 10mil per head.

 

Rediculous.

 

We make 6 bil worth of cuts to help reduce our debt and now have eclipsed that by another billion.

 

Umm, I think we are talking American billions these days so its 1000 per head.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I think the long, short and simple of it is that we would stand to lose more by not helping them and seeing their banking sector go to the wall, then the expenditure we are using to help them.

 

We probably owe it to them anyway for all those potatoes.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Our banks have €140bn(£100bn ish) worth of loans and assets tied up with the Irish system. If they go bust, we're ****ed. It's beyond the question of is it morally correct, it is essential for us to survive ourselves.

 

Edit: Can I just add to people who seem to think we are totally bankrupt and bust, you are wrong... we still have plenty left in the pot to help us along the road. Our economy is huge and can take the hits it has taken as long as they don't become a consistant habit. We are not a Greece, an Ireland or an Iceland.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Our banks have €140bn(£100bn ish) worth of loans and assets tied up with the Irish system. If they go bust, we're ****ed. It's beyond the question of is it morally correct, it is essential for us to survive ourselves..

 

Would these be "our" banks that are handing out billions in bonuses.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

As andy says, this is not about christian charity, this is about looking after number one - the Uk. I am willing to bet we don't make the same offer when Portugal lines up for a loan.

 

We should offer them nothing. Portugal going down the pan wouldn't affect us as much and therfeore it's the completely the Eurozones problem.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Would these be "our" banks that are handing out billions in bonuses.

 

I don't like extortionate bonuses from the privatised banks as much as the next person, but if they make the profits... well, it's up to the company what they want to do with them. Bankers bonuses are entirely irrelevant to this issue.

Edited by Saintandy666
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Would these be "our" banks that are handing out billions in bonuses.

 

Give over. The bonuses may not be palateable but we're living in a globalised world. If we start getting petty over bonuses which are a drop in the ocean in the scheme of things we'll cut off our noses to spite our faces. Shanghai would love to replace London and we cannot allow that to happen.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Our banks have €140bn(£100bn ish) worth of loans and assets tied up with the Irish system. If they go bust, we're ****ed. It's beyond the question of is it morally correct, it is essential for us to survive ourselves.

 

Edit: Can I just add to people who seem to think we are totally bankrupt and bust, you are wrong... we still have plenty left in the pot to help us along the road. Our economy is huge and can take the hits it has taken as long as they don't become a consistant habit. We are not a Greece, an Ireland or an Iceland.

another example of the bankers messing up the world economy and being bailed out by the taxpayer again,while we have to suffer cuts.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Ridiculous, waste of money to prop up a stupid economic concept that was fatally flawed. It is basically a last gaps attempt to cover all the EMU ERM & Euro luvvies dating back to Maggie & Norman Lament (sic)

 

It also won't work. People make big bucks out of speculating and the portugese will be next.

 

And as for your tax money going to bail out banks who employed greedy stupid arrogant idiots doing greedy stupid deals for ridiculous bonus cheques, well that is just plain wrong.

 

It ain't gonna get any better.

 

Bet the Commies never thought they'd win the Cold War this way

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Give over. The bonuses may not be palateable but we're living in a globalised world. If we start getting petty over bonuses which are a drop in the ocean in the scheme of things we'll cut off our noses to spite our faces. Shanghai would love to replace London and we cannot allow that to happen.

 

It's not the bonuses themselves that is the gripe (although I think it was 5-6 billion handed out this year which is no drop in the ocean) but the fact that the banks are handing these amounts cash out amongst themselves shows how much profit the banks must be making.

 

If the banks are making such huge profits why are we worried about the effect Ireland being broke will have on them?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It's not the bonuses themselves that is the gripe (although I think it was 5-6 billion handed out this year which is no drop in the ocean) but the fact that the banks are handing these amounts cash out amongst themselves shows how much profit the banks must be making.

 

If the banks are making such huge profits why are we worried about the effect Ireland being broke will have on them?

 

RBS is the bank that's most in danger, and RBS is weak and vulnerable. Oh and we own it.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

We should offer them nothing. Portugal going down the pan wouldn't affect us as much and therfeore it's the completely the Eurozones problem.

 

Dune, I always got the idea you were fond of history as you like to quote Winstone a lot. Have

you therefore forgotten that Portugal is the UK's oldest ally. They were immence help against the

dastardly Spanish and French hundreds of years ago. Save Portugal !!! :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Dune, I always got the idea you were fond of history as you like to quote Winstone a lot. Have

you therefore forgotten that Portugal is the UK's oldest ally. They were immence help against the

dastardly Spanish and French hundreds of years ago. Save Portugal !!! :)

 

And they were also helpful in allowing Rhodesia use of the port of Beira in Mozambique, but alas times have moved on. They are the problem of the Eurozone because it's the Euro that has put them in the impossible position they find themselves. They needed to devalue but they couldn't.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

sorry Dune, but if this had been Labour making the decision to help Ireland you would have slagged them off. We have had months of "we all need to tighten our belts" and "cuts here / cuts there" and all of a sudden we have a spare *few million!! Make your minds up CONDEM

 

*edit...few billion

Link to comment
Share on other sites

They are the problem of the Eurozone because it's the Euro that has put them in the impossible position they find themselves. They needed to devalue but they couldn't.

 

scotty in "agrees with dune" shocker :scared:

 

 

 

...only partly tho. The Irish put themselves in the impossible position by voting to join the eurozone, nobody held a gun to their heads, did they? (no jokes, tia)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

they did vote NO once...but that was not good enough

 

Did they actually vote against the single currency? I thought it was the Nice treaty, and another european treaty that would have given other countries the same "advantages" which Ireland had enjoyed that they voted against. I was under the impression that the Irish public were in favour of adopting the euro.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Robert Peston painted is very well just now. Ireland will be paying back this loan not us. It won't(if all goes to plan) cost us a penny in instalment payments and so on because they will pay it for us with interest going to the U.K as well. Basically, their credit rating is **** so we are borrowing the money for them. Don't see the issue with this one considering Ireland's close relationship with us.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Ridiculous, waste of money to prop up a stupid economic concept that was fatally flawed. It is basically a last gaps attempt to cover all the EMU ERM & Euro luvvies dating back to Maggie & Norman Lament (sic)

 

It also won't work. People make big bucks out of speculating and the portugese will be next.

 

And as for your tax money going to bail out banks who employed greedy stupid arrogant idiots doing greedy stupid deals for ridiculous bonus cheques, well that is just plain wrong.

 

It ain't gonna get any better.

 

Bet the Commies never thought they'd win the Cold War this way

 

I'll just pop in to say this -

 

One, it's a loan. With Interest.

 

Two, you're in no position to lecture. Dubai's indebtedness is 140% of GDP, which is actually MUCH worse than Ireland and Greece - and you, unlike Ireland or Greece, actually defaulted a year ago.

 

Three, just like Ireland, Dubai has lost its autonomy (to Abu Dhabi in your case) through it's hopeless, bubble-headed expansion built on nothing but sand, slave labour, complacency and the kind of herd mentality that gave ex-pats an even worse name than usual.

Edited by Verbal
Link to comment
Share on other sites

all joking aside, i heard today that the bank that has the contract for running our new pensioner's cash card system is not even an english one! i ain't no racist BUT even i think this is a tad silly at best.

 

i think we should join forces against the banks and any good stuff comes out of the cutbacks, let's us reap the rewards, offer ireland the pound.

 

bloody swiss bankers, trying to take over the world. ;-)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'll just pop in to say this -

 

One, it's a loan. With Interest.

 

Two, you're in no position to lecture. Dubai's indebtedness is 140% of GDP, which is actually MUCH worse than Ireland and Greece - and you, unlike Ireland or Greece, actually defaulted a year ago.

 

Three, just like Ireland, Dubai has lost its autonomy (to Abu Dhabi in your case) through it's hopeless, bubble-headed expansion built on nothing but sand, slave labour, complacency and the kind of herd mentality that gave ex-pats an even worse name than usual.

 

And four

 

What is the Security for the Irish loan?

 

Because it is needed to help stabilize the Euro and stop contagion spreading, what happens IF as is highly likely the contagion spreads?

 

The Euro is still a project built upon unsound foundations. Conceptually and for people like us gooing on business trips or holidays into Europe it is a great help, but the initial start up was flawed (Ambrose Evans-Pritchard explains it better than me every week in the Torygraph).

 

So the contagion can and likely will still spread. Ireland is using it to shore up their banking system because THEY admitted the full extent of the losses by their banks - yet UK, Portugal, Spain & Greece have still kept that quiet. Helping out a friend in need is a good idea, BUT the Euro could still blow apart in the next months and some countries could be forced to leave and devalue.

 

What happens to that loan with interest then? Ireland devalues by 20 or 30% which is what some commentators believe is the only solution, UK PLC (ie the taxpayer) just lost 2 or 3 billion which SHOULD have been spent on NHS or Defence.....

 

 

Also, don't confuse long term ex pats with the Bling based trash that the Daily Mail forced onto this City with their "If you haven't bought Buy to Let property in Dubai you are not Middle Class" rubbish that they printed every week up until the crash.

 

Dubai's indebteness is also nearly double the headline figures, everyone quotes what it owes to International Lenders. It forgets that it hasn't paid any contractors for the work done to date. A great deal of those loans were p1ssed away in marketing and other "corrupt" scams. Ex pats ripped off as much as the locals. And finally, the term expat is NOT limited to Brits abroad. Most of those charged with corruption down here ARE expats - from Jordan, Lebanon, Palestine, India, Egypt etc, as well as the locals.

 

The reaason I comment is that the picture is far worse than is being painted in the press. Dubai 140% of GDP? think again, probably nearer 200% when the contractors are added to that. Autonomy loss? mate far more than that is still at risk.

 

The ship is holed below the water line, the answer is to keep bailing out faster and HOPE that it calms the markets....

 

I still haven't read a single ALTERNATIVE strategy.

 

We have a term for hope down here, it is called insh'allah.

 

Not really happy that global leaders are putting the future of my kids, my friends who are being laid off at age 52 in the UK and my savings for some kind of retirement down to The Will of God

Edited by dubai_phil
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Dune, I always got the idea you were fond of history as you like to quote Winstone a lot. Have

you therefore forgotten that Portugal is the UK's oldest ally. They were immence help against the

dastardly Spanish and French hundreds of years ago. Save Portugal !!! :)

 

Exactly. What else woud we drink with our stilton?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

View Terms of service (Terms of Use) and Privacy Policy (Privacy Policy) and Forum Guidelines ({Guidelines})