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The Fall of the Celtic Tiger: Ireland and the Euro Debt Crisis by Donal Donovan

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Specificaties

Objectstaat
Nieuw: Een nieuw, ongelezen en ongebruikt boek in perfecte staat waarin geen bladzijden ontbreken of ...
Book Title
The Fall of the Celtic Tiger: Ireland and the Euro Debt Crisis
Publication Date
2013-06-06
ISBN
9780199663958
Subject Area
Business & Economics
Publication Name
Fall of the Celtic Tiger : Ireland and the Euro Debt Crisis
Item Length
9.3 in
Publisher
Oxford University Press, Incorporated
Subject
Public Finance, Economic Conditions, Economics / General
Publication Year
2013
Type
Textbook
Format
Hardcover
Language
English
Item Height
1 in
Author
Donal Donovan, Antoin E. Murphy
Item Width
6.4 in
Item Weight
23.8 Oz
Number of Pages
340 Pages

Over dit product

Product Information

By 2000, Ireland had achieved a remarkable macroeconomic performance producing 10% economic growth, a budget surplus, and a very low debt to GDP ratio. Emigration had disappeared and there was significant immigration from Eastern Europe. By November 2010, economic growth was significantly negative, the budget deficit was out of control and the debt to GDP ratio had risen to over 100%. In an unprecedented development, Ireland was forced to apply for an emergency bail-out package from the Troika (European Commission, European Central Bank, and the International Monetary Fund). This book examines how the Celtic Tiger, a high growth performing economy, fell into a macroeconomic abyss. It is a story that shows how the Irish economy moved from a property market crisis to a banking crisis and fiscal crisis, and how these three crises produced a fourth crisis, the massive financial crisis of 2010. Against the backdrop of the newly created Eurozone, the book demonstrates the way in which a housing boom was transformed into a property market bubble through excessive credit creation. Accompanying the property market bubble buoyant property related taxes enabled a profligate government to over spend and under tax. Few, both in Ireland or Europe, recognised the danger signals because the prevailing economic ideology suggested that financial markets could self-regulate. The book analyses the roles of banks, builders, developers, regulators (the EU, the ECB, the Central Bank of Ireland, and the Irish Financial Regulator), economists, the media, and a property driven populace during the various unfolding stages of the downfall of the Celtic Tiger. It pays particular attention to the decisions to provide a highly controversial comprehensive guarantee for the covered Irish banks and the events that left the government with no alternative but to request a bail out. It considers throughout two questions: who or what was responsible for what happened and in what sense? Could actions have been taken at various stages to prevent the final recourse to the bail out? Finally, the book addresses the future of the Celtic Tiger and discusses the impact of measures to help resolve the current Euro debt crisis as well as the underlying lessons to be learned from this traumatic period in Ireland's economic and financial history.

Product Identifiers

Publisher
Oxford University Press, Incorporated
ISBN-10
0199663955
ISBN-13
9780199663958
eBay Product ID (ePID)
159936605

Product Key Features

Author
Donal Donovan, Antoin E. Murphy
Publication Name
Fall of the Celtic Tiger : Ireland and the Euro Debt Crisis
Format
Hardcover
Language
English
Subject
Public Finance, Economic Conditions, Economics / General
Publication Year
2013
Type
Textbook
Subject Area
Business & Economics
Number of Pages
340 Pages

Dimensions

Item Length
9.3 in
Item Height
1 in
Item Width
6.4 in
Item Weight
23.8 Oz

Additional Product Features

Intended Audience
Scholarly & Professional
Lc Classification Number
Hc260.5
Reviews
"An excellent guide to the demise of the Celtic Tiger."--The Financial Times "A fascinating book...an accessible, balanced and independent analysis."--Sunday Business Post "Required reading."--Irish Independent "Donovan and Murphy represent the strength and breadth of contemporary Irish economics. Donovan is an experienced technocrat, a veteran IMF staffer with scars from many financial crises to prove it. Murphy is a distinguished economic historian, as well as one of the world's leading authorities on the history of monetary thought. The great virtue of their book is that it does not flinch from asking the question that has been uppermost in the general public's mind from the start but that has proved mysteriously elusive inmost official discussion: who or what, at root, was responsible for the crisis? It is in addressing this crucial question that Donovan and Murphy make their most valuable contribution. The answer to what caused the Irish crisis, they argue, is to be found not at the level of vested interests but at the level of ideas."--The New Statesman, An important new book ... Donovan and Murphy represent the strength and breadth of contemporary Irish economics ... Drawing on financial history, Donovan and Murphy show that Ireland is hardly the first society to get caught up in the idea that innovation and endlessly inflating asset prices are sure signs of success ... This analysis of what was ultimately responsible for the Irish crisis is of major significance because it urges a different cure from the ones that are usuallyoffered., "An excellent guide to the demise of the Celtic Tiger." --The Financial Times "A fascinating book...an accessible, balanced and independent analysis." --Sunday Business Post "Required reading." --Irish Independent "Donovan and Murphy represent the strength and breadth of contemporary Irish economics. Donovan is an experienced technocrat, a veteran IMF staffer with scars from many financial crises to prove it. Murphy is a distinguished economic historian, as well as one of the world's leading authorities on the history of monetary thought. The great virtue of their book is that it does not flinch from asking the question that has been uppermost in the general public's mind from the start but that has proved mysteriously elusive inmost official discussion: who or what, at root, was responsible for the crisis? It is in addressing this crucial question that Donovan and Murphy make their most valuable contribution. The answer to what caused the Irish crisis, they argue, is to be found not at the level of vested interests but at the level of ideas." --The New Statesman "...this book is the best so far on the Irish financial crisis of 2008." --Foreign Affairs
Table of Content
PrefaceIntroductionPart I: Background1. The Rise of the Celtic TigerPart II: The Lure of Free Markets2. Ideology and Financial Innovation3. Asset Bubbles and Financial CrisesPart III: The Build up to the Irish Crisis4. The Banks and the Property Bubble5. The Failure of Irish and European Regulation6. The Makings of the Fiscal Crisis7. The Climate of Public Opinion: Politicians, Economists, and the MediaPart IV: The Crash8. The Storm Clouds Gather9. The Bank Guarantee of End: September 200810. From the Guarantee to the Bail OutPart V: After the Crash11. What of the Future?12. Conclusions
Copyright Date
2013
Dewey Decimal
330.9417/083
Dewey Edition
23
Illustrated
Yes

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