The Celtic Ostrich
The Irish government has made it abundantly clear that they are intent on stealing as much money as possible from you to give to their accomplices in the banks.
If like me your fed up with having the Gov. behave unconstitutionally, stealing money out of your pockets to give to the private banks to pay off their gambling losses, and wish to do something about it then this site is for you.
If on the other hand your content with the Gov. taxing and cutting you into a penurious oblivion, for fear of dropping the illusion your desperately clinging to, that everything will be just fine, the Gov. has everything in hand, and face the rather bleak reality that your being stitched up like a kipper, well this site is also for you, ye big sap.
If like me your fed up with having the Gov. behave unconstitutionally, stealing money out of your pockets to give to the private banks to pay off their gambling losses, and wish to do something about it then this site is for you.
If on the other hand your content with the Gov. taxing and cutting you into a penurious oblivion, for fear of dropping the illusion your desperately clinging to, that everything will be just fine, the Gov. has everything in hand, and face the rather bleak reality that your being stitched up like a kipper, well this site is also for you, ye big sap.
Thursday, April 5, 2012
A Question.
I've been thinking about house prices, and in particular exorbitant house prices, and it occurred to me that to afford high house prices one has to have high wages, therein lies the problem, high wages are uncompetitive. Surely a significant key to having a competitive economy is competitive wages. So one has to ask the question, is this statement of fact beyond the knowledge of our politicians, bureaucrats, bankers, and media.
Wednesday, March 14, 2012
RTE keeping you in the dark.
More from Iceland http://www.icenews.is/index.php/2012/03/11/old-landsbanki-to-sue-pricewaterhousecoopers-for-deliberate-auditing-errors/ and once again complete failure by RTE and other Irish media outlets to cover this story. Am I being paranoid in thinking that perhaps they don't want us to know how Iceland are dealing with their banking heist, heaven forbid.
Monday, March 5, 2012
Answers in a Brown Unmarked Envelope.
I don't know about you but I would have thought the trial of Iceland's ex-Prime Minister for his part in their banking crisis was certainly newsworthy, not so it appears in Ireland. Try as I might I could only find one article (if you call 20 lines an article) in any of the Irish papers. RTE briefly mentioned it on the 7am news, but come lunchtime and the main news, not a dickey bird, the story vanished like a fart in the wind.
What could it possibly be about this story of a small nation who refused to bail out criminal banks, who instead prosecuted robber bankers, and their political accomplices, that the mainstream Irish media doesn't find newsworthy. Come to think of it, we don't really hear a lot about Iceland, why is that?
What could it possibly be about this story of a small nation who refused to bail out criminal banks, who instead prosecuted robber bankers, and their political accomplices, that the mainstream Irish media doesn't find newsworthy. Come to think of it, we don't really hear a lot about Iceland, why is that?
Monday, February 27, 2012
Wednesday, February 1, 2012
Same oul RTE takin' the piss.
What is it about RTE and the hacks they drag in to give economic advise. This morning on Morning Ireland we had some mouthpiece on from Bloxham stockbrokers prattling on about the economy. Now this wouldn't be so bad were it not for the fact that had you followed Bloxham's stock recommendations for 2011, you would on average be down a whacking 15%, and as much as 25% on certain stocks, and yet RTE see it fit have these people on air, why, please explain, what am I missing.
Tuesday, January 31, 2012
Why does the RTE & mainstream Irish media persist with this poppycock.
I keep hearing on RTE and other mainstream Irish outlets that we're going to export our way out of this 600 billion euro banking crisis. Now that seemed to me like quite some undertaking after all we're only a small economy caught up in a global depression.
So I thought I'd look into the matter a little. The research material that I came across failed to reveal any cases where this had happened. In fact what I found was the complete opposite.
The research covered in great detail banking crisis from the 19th & 20th centuries, but stretched all the way back over 800yrs. Through all that time, which saw many boom times, never has a country managed to export their way out of a banking crisis. Now here we are being ask to deal with a monstrous banking debt during the largest financial crisis the world has ever experienced. Know I know we Irish are deadly an' all, but don't ye think that just maybe we may be slightly over-reaching on this one, in fact save for discovering a time machine I would hazard that it is nigh fuckin' impossible. So, I thought I'd clear up this "confusion", and get it straight from the horses flute.
I wrote to Fine Gael on the matter, what follows next is the resulting correspondence:
Hello, I'm an economics student and I have a query. Time and again I have heard our Taoiseach and other ministers from your party make the claim that our recovery will be export driven, in effect we will export our way out of this banking crisis. I would be very grateful if you could direct me towards the data supporting these claims as to date I am having great difficulty locating supporting documentation. Yours sincerely
The reply: The Central Statistics Office mid year released figures showing that Ireland's exports increased by 10% in August. Exports in August were up 10% on July, according to seasonally adjusted figure while Ireland’s trade surplus rose 15% compared with July, to €3.7bn. The figures also show that exports in August 2011 were up 5% compared with August 2010, according to unadjusted figures. The figures for the first nine months of 2011 compared with the same period of 2010 show Exports increased by 4% to €69,425m. Exports of Medical and pharmaceutical products increased by 11% or €1,936m, Organic chemicals by 10% or €1,342m and Petroleum by 51% or €325m. Exports of Computer equipment fell by 9% or €287m. Goods to the USA increased by 4% or €682m, to France by 14% or €470m and to Switzerland by 13% or €318m.
I wrote: Thank you very much for your quick reply. The figures you gave me clearly demonstrate that exports have gone up in 2011. However, I must have been unclear when formulating my question. What I wanted to know: are there any examples in history of a country overcoming a banking crisis by strong exports? Could you point me towards the theoretical economic approach that explains how a country can export their way out of a banking crisis?
They wrote: I understand that the point the Taoiseach was making was that Ireland is a uniquely open economy with a high dependence on exports, it is in a better position than most to gain from export growth. Economic growth is crucial to the economy's ability when faced with such debt to survive. In no sense did he mean that Ireland would overcome the banking crisis by strong exports, simply that strong export growth would enable the economy to work its way through the crisis by generating wealth in the economy. The government behind the scenes is working on arrangements to lower the cost of the bank bailout to more sustainable levels. Obviously in the midst of negotiations the details cannot be made public. A restructured debt plus economic growth from exports could ease some of the pressures on Ireland. In no way however is it on its own the solution. The potential for export growth in Ireland is greater in Ireland than in some of the other so-called PIIGS countries, so it gives us greater potential to survive the crisis. Other PIIGs countries have far less potential. None of that is to minimise the banking crisis in any way - the issue is being able to survive it. I hope that clarifies things.
It certainly did, perhaps that unique position that he mentions is that one which involves bending over and sticking one's head right up their arse.
So there ye have our gov. is embarked on a course of action, founded on nothing. And the press regurgitates this unquestionably, and RTE regurgitates it as if it's gospel, and you swallow it all up hook, line, and sinker. Not only that you pay for the lies. You buy these shitty newspapers and pay a TV license, tut, tut, tut.
By the way I sent the same questions to the Labour party, who have yet to reply, and to the Dept. of Finance, but their all f**kwits, so I won't be expecting much there. I mean these are the people who when asked how much does the use of the euro cost the Irish gov. were unaware that we paid of it's use, but that's another story for another day.
So I thought I'd look into the matter a little. The research material that I came across failed to reveal any cases where this had happened. In fact what I found was the complete opposite.
The research covered in great detail banking crisis from the 19th & 20th centuries, but stretched all the way back over 800yrs. Through all that time, which saw many boom times, never has a country managed to export their way out of a banking crisis. Now here we are being ask to deal with a monstrous banking debt during the largest financial crisis the world has ever experienced. Know I know we Irish are deadly an' all, but don't ye think that just maybe we may be slightly over-reaching on this one, in fact save for discovering a time machine I would hazard that it is nigh fuckin' impossible. So, I thought I'd clear up this "confusion", and get it straight from the horses flute.
I wrote to Fine Gael on the matter, what follows next is the resulting correspondence:
Hello, I'm an economics student and I have a query. Time and again I have heard our Taoiseach and other ministers from your party make the claim that our recovery will be export driven, in effect we will export our way out of this banking crisis. I would be very grateful if you could direct me towards the data supporting these claims as to date I am having great difficulty locating supporting documentation. Yours sincerely
The reply: The Central Statistics Office mid year released figures showing that Ireland's exports increased by 10% in August. Exports in August were up 10% on July, according to seasonally adjusted figure while Ireland’s trade surplus rose 15% compared with July, to €3.7bn. The figures also show that exports in August 2011 were up 5% compared with August 2010, according to unadjusted figures. The figures for the first nine months of 2011 compared with the same period of 2010 show Exports increased by 4% to €69,425m. Exports of Medical and pharmaceutical products increased by 11% or €1,936m, Organic chemicals by 10% or €1,342m and Petroleum by 51% or €325m. Exports of Computer equipment fell by 9% or €287m. Goods to the USA increased by 4% or €682m, to France by 14% or €470m and to Switzerland by 13% or €318m.
I wrote: Thank you very much for your quick reply. The figures you gave me clearly demonstrate that exports have gone up in 2011. However, I must have been unclear when formulating my question. What I wanted to know: are there any examples in history of a country overcoming a banking crisis by strong exports? Could you point me towards the theoretical economic approach that explains how a country can export their way out of a banking crisis?
They wrote: I understand that the point the Taoiseach was making was that Ireland is a uniquely open economy with a high dependence on exports, it is in a better position than most to gain from export growth. Economic growth is crucial to the economy's ability when faced with such debt to survive. In no sense did he mean that Ireland would overcome the banking crisis by strong exports, simply that strong export growth would enable the economy to work its way through the crisis by generating wealth in the economy. The government behind the scenes is working on arrangements to lower the cost of the bank bailout to more sustainable levels. Obviously in the midst of negotiations the details cannot be made public. A restructured debt plus economic growth from exports could ease some of the pressures on Ireland. In no way however is it on its own the solution. The potential for export growth in Ireland is greater in Ireland than in some of the other so-called PIIGS countries, so it gives us greater potential to survive the crisis. Other PIIGs countries have far less potential. None of that is to minimise the banking crisis in any way - the issue is being able to survive it. I hope that clarifies things.
It certainly did, perhaps that unique position that he mentions is that one which involves bending over and sticking one's head right up their arse.
So there ye have our gov. is embarked on a course of action, founded on nothing. And the press regurgitates this unquestionably, and RTE regurgitates it as if it's gospel, and you swallow it all up hook, line, and sinker. Not only that you pay for the lies. You buy these shitty newspapers and pay a TV license, tut, tut, tut.
By the way I sent the same questions to the Labour party, who have yet to reply, and to the Dept. of Finance, but their all f**kwits, so I won't be expecting much there. I mean these are the people who when asked how much does the use of the euro cost the Irish gov. were unaware that we paid of it's use, but that's another story for another day.
Thursday, January 26, 2012
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