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Irish GDP set to contract for the first time in over a decade, ESRI says

The ESRI report states that this is the first episode of negative GDP growth since 2012.

IRELAND’S GROSS DOMESTIC Product is expected to contract this year – the first episode of negative GDP growth since 2012.

A new report by the Economic and Social Research Institute (ESRI), published today, states that the domestic economy is set to continue to grow this year and into next year, 

However, it states that GDP is expected to decline by 1.6% this year due to “the disproportionate impact of the multinational sector on headline economic data”.

Speaking to The Journal, Professor Kevin McQuinn, who co-authored the report, said GDP, export and investment figures can be “distorted from time-to-time due by multinational-related transactions”. 

“They don’t give you the underlying picture as to how the economy is performing. Typically what tends to happen over the last 10 years is that they tend to overstate how strongly the economy has been performing, most spectacularly in 2015 when the official figure said the Irish economy has grown by 25%,” he said.

“What you’re now seeing is the opposite, in the sense of modified domestic demand, which is our estimate of underlying growth in the economy. That is going to be positive for the year, but the headline GDP figure is going to be negative.”

Modified domestic demand (MDD), which captures consumption and modified investment, is set to increase by 1.8% this year.

McQuinn said that growth and consumption, strong tax returns and the 4% rate of unemployment seen over the last year all strongly point towards the underlying economy growing this year. 

“But there are certainly issues around some of the export figures and the investment figures which are tied in with some of the multinational-related considerations, and that’s causing GDP overall to actually contract or decline for the year.”

Asked what is causing a slowdown in multinational activity, McQuinn pointed to the pharmaceutical sector, which he said has been “a real dynamic dynamism for the Irish economy over the last three or four years”. 

“In the last period of time, there’s some evidence that export growth tied in with pharmaceuticals are slowing down quite a bit and that’s almost inevitable. You couldn’t have the kind of pace of growth continuing that we that we had seen particularly after the pandemic.”

He also said the “rapid” global interest rate increases in the EU, US and the Bank of England have “inevitably” had a negative impact on demand for exported goods and services associated with the Irish economy.

Inflation

Meanwhile, inflation is still having a negative impact on the Irish outlook. According to the report, while the pace of price increases has been declining on a persistent basis to its present rate, the ESRI still expect the Consumer Price Index (CPI) to increase by 6% this year and 3.2% next year.

McQuinn said the institute believed the rate of inflation would have fallen by more. He pointed to areas like food and a resurgence in oil prices as the cause of this, along with increasing housing costs. 

“There’s a number of areas where you are continuing to see a persistence in inflation. But overall, we think the inflation rate will continue to fall over the next year, but it’s just not falling quite as quickly as what we thought it would previously.”

The report states that the domestic Irish economy is presently operating at capacity, “in particular in relation to employment intensive sectors like construction”.

It states that in this environment, additional domestic pressures are likely to feed through to prices in the short term.

“However, targeting expenditure towards addressing infrastructure bottlenecks and improving the productive capacity of the economy can alleviate capacity constraints in the medium term.”

Dr Conor O’Toole, who co-authored the report, said: “As energy prices have eased, inflation has dropped relative to last year. However, these declines have stalled in recent months as the domestic economy continues to grow. This is going to present challenges to policymakers attempting to contain cost of living pressures.”

McQuinn said that while the Budget is usually framed in exceptional circumstances, “it is quite exceptional at the present”. 

“The economy is growing very strongly still. The unemployment rate is very low. That does give rise to what we call capacity constraints in the sense that we have to be careful that we don’t overheat the economy, otherwise, you’re going to see a real doubling down if you like on the inflationary pressures as a result,” he said.

“But equally the government has committed to spend in certain areas. There are certain infrastructural bottlenecks that need to be addressed, particularly in areas such as housing, and other infrastructural issues.”

He said the Government has to spend in those areas in order to get some of the costs associated with those areas down. “If you think about it, more government spending should result in average housing costs coming down because it will increase supply over the medium-term.”

“On the one hand, the Government has to do that, but on the other hand, it has to make sure it doesn’t overheat the economy and fuel the inflationary pressures, and that’s really where some tricky decisions have to be made in relation to budgetary policy.”

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    Mute Mark Fields
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    May 15th 2019, 9:03 AM

    I’ve never in my life dropped chewed gum on the sidewalk, nor fastened it the underside of a table which is disgusting also. I’m surprised there was no question about plastic straws. Every time I’ve used a disposable cup and straw I put it in a bin. I carry all sorts of small items like used tickets, receipts and wrappers in my pocket and they go into a recycle bin.

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    Mute tooler doogan
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    May 15th 2019, 9:14 AM

    @Mark Fields sidewalk??

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    Mute Mark Fields
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    May 15th 2019, 10:00 AM

    @tooler doogan: at sidewalk and further afield and beaches as was suggested in the article. There was a clever photograph depicting a show about to step onto a freshly dropped wad of gum. How about a photograph of a sidewalk or paved area showing the hundreds of pieces of gum, or a shoe sole with gum already stuck to it?

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    Mute Mark Fields
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    May 15th 2019, 10:03 AM

    @tooler doogan: ahh… I should have written footpath.

    34
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    Mute tooler doogan
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    May 15th 2019, 12:02 PM

    @Mark Fields: ah fair play

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    Mute Charles Coughlan
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    May 15th 2019, 7:01 AM

    I’d dispose if food like chips for birds to eat, you could have included cigarette buts in the survey, unnatural to see the zombies throwing them on the ground just outside the Mercy Hospital in Cork where i am at the moment.

    180
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    Mute Renton Burke
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    May 15th 2019, 9:08 AM

    @Charles Coughlan: or out of cars because they don’t want to sorry the ashtray. Disgusting, but apparently zero interest from gardai in this easily identifiable act.

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    Mute Peter
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    May 15th 2019, 11:34 AM

    @Renton Burke: How is that apparent?

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    Mute Roy Dowling
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    May 15th 2019, 6:16 PM

    @Renton Burke: no ashtrays in cars anymore

    5
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    Mute Karl Charlie
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    May 15th 2019, 6:19 PM

    @Roy Dowling: there is of you pay for the smoking package

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    Mute Elaynehb
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    May 15th 2019, 8:18 AM

    Jesus Christ what kind of savages just drops litter.. have they no pockets to shove a wrapper or train ticket in !? At a push the only thing I’d leave is something biodegradable like a banana skin or Apple core in the undergrowth..not on a footpath!

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    Mute Mirabelle Stonegate
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    May 15th 2019, 8:53 AM

    Do they think everyone owns a dog? I have no intention of ever picking up dog droppings.. which is why I will never own a dog..

    74
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    Mute Peter
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    May 15th 2019, 11:36 AM

    @Mirabelle Stonegate: Do they think everyone chews gum?

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    Mute Jack
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    May 15th 2019, 9:39 AM

    Growing up in 80s I’ve actually had to readjust to putting litter in bins..5th year school tour in Germany couldn’t believe how clean the country was and I took that life lesson home..I never threw a paper on the ground again..

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    Mute Sean Ryan
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    May 15th 2019, 5:27 PM

    @Jack: growing up in the 80s too and if I’d of littered my parents would have clattered me

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    Mute Patricia Ellis Dunne
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    May 15th 2019, 7:47 PM

    @Jack: i was a teenager in the 70s and 80s and never littered

    35
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    Mute SmidgenDublin
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    May 15th 2019, 10:59 AM

    No-one is going to admit to delicately littering! I live near a school and every lunch time students leave a tail of sandwich wrappers, papers bags and boxes from wedges in stages from the local Mace to a few metres from the school gates. There’s a bin right outside the school gate. I have on occasion picked up all this rubbish and brought it to the schools office. Always full of apologies but never say what they’re going to do about. These kids do what they see from family.

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    Mute SmidgenDublin
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    May 15th 2019, 11:00 AM

    @SmidgenDublin: *deliberately.

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    Mute Peter
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    May 15th 2019, 11:37 AM

    @SmidgenDublin: But this is anonymous

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    Mute Peter Byrne
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    May 15th 2019, 2:10 PM

    Have to say Irish are very dirty in general. Just walked into work and picked up six plastic bottles just discarded
    On the vast home last night from a run , picked up at least 10 bottles and cans.
    People seem to use Farmleigh Lane as a dumping area

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    Mute Anthony Clark
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    May 15th 2019, 2:49 PM

    @Peter Byrne: yes – Joggers round our area think they are doing marathons the way they can just drink from and discard the energy drink bottles on the road – or leave them stuck on the railings.

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    Mute Fiona Fitzgerald
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    May 15th 2019, 6:15 PM

    To be fair, they seem to pick up a lot of used gum, using their soles. Although I don’t think anyone means to.

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    Mute Anthony Clark
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    May 15th 2019, 2:47 PM

    Orange peels and bananna skins are not going to bio-degrade anytime soon.
    They can be there littering the place for months or more, especially in upland areas, until someone picks them up for you.

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    Mute Fiona Fitzgerald
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    May 15th 2019, 6:17 PM

    Wouldn’t peels only attract vermin? How come there are no apps to use to locate the nearest bin?

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    Mute OpenLitterMap
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    May 15th 2019, 6:57 PM

    Join us and share data on litter anywhere @ OpenLitterMap.com – it’s like Pokémon Go for Tidy towns!

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    Mute DERMOT
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    May 15th 2019, 2:08 PM

    Absolutely read this the wrong way

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    Mute Jeannine McGuirl-Khumnariang
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    May 16th 2019, 5:30 AM

    On holiday in Asia at the moment and the amount of plastic people go through daily is insane!!
    And for anyone who throws ‘biodegradable’ banana skins in the undergrowth, they take a lot longer to degrade than you would think, there are hiking trails that have banned bananas because of it

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    Mute Deirdre Gosson
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    May 16th 2019, 9:22 AM

    Disgusting stuff , never use it

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