THE ECONOMY technically emerged from recession in the third quarter,
according to new data from the Central Statistics Office (CSO). But
the 0.3 per cent growth in Gross Domestic Product (GDP) from July to
September was due to higher profits at multinational companies.
Stripped of this effect, national income or Gross National Product
(GNP), fell 1.4 per cent, indicating that difficult conditions
persisted in the third quarter. The CSO’s assistant director
general Bill Keating refused to call an end to the recession, pointing
to the impact of multinational profits. Whether Ireland was out of
recession or not was “a matter of semantics”, Mr Keating said. A recession is usually defined as two consecutive quarters of falling GDP. On this basis, Ireland has now exited recession. However,
Tánaiste and Minister for Enterprise Mary Coughlan said the Government
was “very cautious” about the significance of the GDP growth in the
CSO’s data. “We are very cautious about this because we still
have a lot of difficulties to deal with. I think it’s good to see we
are progressing slowly which is perhaps a better way to progress,” she
said. “I would certainly say that the policy that is being used,
the industrial policy, the economic policy, in this country is strident
and progressive and is moving towards getting us out of the economic
difficulty that we presently have.” On an annual basis, GDP has fallen 7.4 per cent, while GNP has plunged 11.3 over the past year. Fine
Gael deputy leader Richard Bruton said Ireland was still “mired in
recession” at a time that the euro zone economy was “powering ahead”.
The CSO figures made Minister for Finance Brian Lenihan’s Budget claim
that the economy had “turned a corner” look “pretty rash”, he said. “The upswing in GDP is also little comfort to the 423,000 people still languishing on the dole,” he added. Labour
Party deputy leader Joan Burton said the idea that the economy had
turned a corner was “more hope than reality” and that consumer
confidence was “on the floor”. Consumer spending has fallen 7.3 per
cent in the third quarter, compared to the same period last year, the
CSO said. Although the decline in GNP is easing, economists were hesitant to say Ireland’s woes were over. KBC’s
chief economist Austin Hughes rejected the idea the recession was over
saying the quarterly GDP increase does not reflect the reality of the
drop in incomes and employment experienced in Ireland over the past
year. “It is more accurate to suggest the recession eased rather than
ended in the third quarter,” he said. GDP is an international
method of calculating growth and decline but in Ireland’s case, the
Economic and Social Research Institute (ESRI) and other forecasters
prefer to focus on GNP because it excludes multinational profits. Ulster
Bank said the data “sent mixed signals about the recent performance of
the Irish economy” and that it was clear that there was a “two-speed
economy” in place. Previously released figures suggest it is the
multinational-dominated pharmaceuticals, chemicals and ICT sectors that
are shoring up exports, while traditional manufacturing has suffered,
the bank’s economic research team noted. This meant the boost to GDP
had a “relatively narrow source”. According to the CSO, profits
declared here by foreign-owned enterprises rose by over €1 billion in
the year to the end of October. Alan McQuaid, economist at
stockbroking firm Bloxham, said given that international commentators
put so much emphasis on quarterly changes in GDP, we should not
downplay the third quarter increase. He said we should take some
consolation that on this basis, Ireland came out of recession ahead of
the UK. “Overall, we continue to believe that the Irish economy
is making progress and is heading in the right direction,” said Mr
McQuaid.
Source: www.irishtimes.com
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