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Irish Post
24-07-2025
- Business
- Irish Post
IFAC criticises Ireland's budget plans
IRELAND'S budget plans have drawn criticism from the Irish Fiscal Advisory Council (IFAC), which says the government is risking economic instability by ignoring basic principles of sound fiscal policy. In its assessment of the newly released Summer Economic Statement (SES), the independent watchdog warned that the government's intention to reduce the size of the 2026 budget package if global trade conditions deteriorate is a serious misstep. IFAC argues this approach runs counter to standard economic advice, which calls for countercyclical policy: increasing support when the economy is weak and scaling back when it is strong. 'This is exactly the opposite of standard economic advice,' the Council said, warning that the government's strategy could leave the public finances dangerously exposed. The criticism has been echoed by Barra Roantree, assistant professor of economics at Trinity College Dublin, who compared the current strategy to the fiscally reckless policies of the early 2000s. 'Committing to ramp up current expenditure if the good times continue, but row back if things get worse, is precisely the sort of pro-cyclical policy that the current minister for finance has himself said we should avoid,' he said. Roantree warned that this policy risks stoking inflation and could leave Ireland vulnerable to sudden declines in corporation tax receipts. If that happens, the government may be forced to abandon capital investment projects, even if they are already promised. Originally, the government planned to increase spending by €3bn in 2025. That figure has now been revised up by €3.3bn, bringing total expenditure to €108.7bn. But IFAC says that even this may underestimate how much the state will actually spend. Based on spending patterns from the first half of the year, the Council believes current expenditure could end up around €1bn higher than reported. The Council also warned that this year's overspending is likely to spill into 2026. 'This all points to poor planning and budgeting,' it said. Finance Minister Paschal Donohoe has also announced a €1.5bn tax package for the upcoming budget, including a controversial proposal to cut the VAT rate for the hospitality sector from 13.5% to 9%. Roantree described the cut as 'an expensive and economically illiterate policy' that will limit the government's flexibility going forward. Despite a strong economy, the government is forecasting a deficit of nearly €11bn next year, which equates to 3.2% of Gross National Income (GNI) once windfall corporation tax revenues are taken out. IFAC has repeatedly criticised the lack of a long-term fiscal framework and says the government still hasn't defined a sustainable pace of net spending growth. One of the few areas where the Council was more positive was the National Development Plan, which it said has 'ambitious targets' that, if executed properly, could help address Ireland's infrastructure deficits. Of the 88 large-scale projects originally scheduled for completion between 2020 and 2025, just 77 are now expected to finish on time. See More: Economy, IFAC, Infrastructure, NDP, SES


Irish Independent
16-06-2025
- Business
- Irish Independent
The week ahead in business: preparing for the Budget, a report on the digital news sector, and a potentially turbulent IAG annual general meeting
The theme of today's event, which begins at 10am, is how to draw up a medium-term budgetary plan when the global backdrop keeps changing so rapidly. The dialogue is being chaired by Professor Carol Newman, and after speeches by the Taoiseach, Tánaiste and Finance Minister, there will be contributions from the likes of Barra Roantree and Eleanor Denny from Trinity College, Conor O'Toole from the ESRI, and Michelle Norris from UCD. Tomorrow, the media regulator Coimisiún na Meán will launch the annual Digital News Report for Ireland at an event in PorterShed a Dó on Market Street in Galway city. Carried out by the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism at the University of Oxford, this is an in-depth look at what sort of news you have been reading, and on what platforms. The announcement that Mediahuis Ireland, publisher of the Irish Independent, has reached the milestone of 100,000 digital subscribers will have come too late for it. Expect turbulence at the annual general meeting of IAG on Thursday. The owner of Aer Lingus, as well as British Airways and Iberia, is facing a shareholder revolt over pay awards to its top executives. ISS, an influential proxy adviser, has urged shareholders to vote against the remuneration policy, which includes a one-off share award for Luis Gallego, the chief executive. The Central Bank will publish its second Quarterly Bulletin of 2025 on Thursday, in which it discusses the domestic economic outlook. In the last bulletin in March, the bank reduced its forecast for economic growth due to all the tariff and trade policy uncertainty. Staying with that theme, the Central Statistics Office will have data tomorrow on goods exports and imports from April, the month that started with US president Donald Trump's so-called Liberation Day. On Thursday, the CSO will release figures on residential property prices, and on foreign direct investment into Ireland in 2023, long before all that uncertainty slowed everything down.