Synopses & Reviews
Ireland's economic performance over the last decade has been spectacular. National Income expanded in the ten years from 1987 at more than double the rates achieved by the US, the UK or the EU. Job creation figures are equally impressive. These essays by a group of leading Irish economists analyze the factors behind this dramatic growth. Among the issues explored are the long-term consequences of fiscal stabilization, the increasing educational attainment of the workforce, and the wage moderation and peaceful labor relations that characterized the period.
Synopsis
This book explores the long-term consequences of fiscal stabilization, the contribution of FDI inflows and European Structural Funds, the increasing educational attainment of the workforce, and the wage moderation that characterized the period of Ireland's dramatic economic growth.
About the Author
Frank Barry is Senior Lecturer in Economics at University College, Dublin.
Table of Contents
Introduction * The Real Convergence of the Irish Economy and the Sectoral Distribution of Employment Growth--Frank Barry, Aoife Hannan & Eric A. Strobl * Recent Irish Growth in Historical and Theoretical Perspective--Frank Barry * Indigenous and Foreign Industry: Characteristics and Performance--Frank Barry, John Bradley & Eoin O'Malley * Fiscal Adjustment and Disinflation in Ireland: Setting the Macro Basis of Economic Recovery and Expansion--Patrick Honohan * The European Dimension: The Single Market and the Structural Funds--Frank Barry, John Bradley & Aoife Hannan * Education and Growth in the Irish Economy--Joseph Durkan, Doireann Fitz Gerald & Colm Harmon * Wage Formation and the Labor Market--John Fitz Gerald * Income Inequality in Ireland in the 1980s and 1990s--Tim Callan & Brian Nolan * The Persistence of High Unemployment in a Small Open Labor Market: The Irish Case--Brendan Walsh * Index