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Dublin: 11 °C Saturday 25 May, 2013

Second report predicts 1 per cent growth in Ireland’s economy

Two days after a similar IBEC projection, now Bank of Ireland believes the Irish economy will grow by 1 per cent this year.

Image: Shawn Pogatchnik/AP

A SECOND PROJECTION within three days has suggested that Ireland’s economy will grow by 1 per cent overall this year.

Bank of Ireland’s quarterly economic outlook, published this morning, follows Tuesday’s report from employers group IBEC in predicting the 1 per cent increase, which is ahead of projections from both the Irish government and the EU-IMF Troika.

BoI’s chief economist Dan McLaughlin, who wrote the forecast, said the growth would be fuelled by the continuing success of Ireland’s export sector.

“Exports had their best performance in the first quarter for fifteen months and grew by over 6 per cent on an annual basis, supported by double digit growth in service exports,” he said.

This was attributed to improvement in Irish competitiveness, which meant exports were performing strongly even while the global economy continued to slow down and spending elsewhere in the eurozone had fallen.

The decline in the euro, which makes products priced in euro more affordable to British and US consumers, had also contributed to the strength of Irish exports.

“Overall, we now expect GDP to rise by 1 per cent this year, an upward revision from our previous 0.6 per cent – despite the 1.1 per cent decline in the first quarter,” he said.

McLaughlin further opined that the Irish economy was “now paying its way in the world and running a balance of payments surplus”, which was unlike many other peripheral European economies.

“The public sector deficit is now been offset by strong surpluses in both the household and corporate sectors,” he said.

The Department of Finance revised its projections for growth in April, cutting it from 1.3 per cent to 0.7 per cent, while the EU-IMF’s most recent projections only expect growth of 0.5 per cent.

Read: Ireland’s economy to grow thanks to weak euro – IBEC

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Comments (6 Comments)

  • Next week they will have different numbers, and will swear that they are reality.. Mystic Meg would be just about as accurate.

    Reply
    • What I find even more laughable is when the numbers are revised and re-revised after the event has already happened.
      Economists aren’t even sure what last year figures are so how are they meant to a prediction with any level of certainty.

      Reply
  • The real problem we have is with GNP which picks up the disastrous performance of the indigenous economy. This underscores the value of multinational Corporations in Ireland and the need for protectionist strategies in terms of their needs. It also appears that regardless of the supports given to homegrown Companies that we are either wasting our money or not giving them the right assistance. This should be a matter for concern since this is the sector that provides the bulk of those receiving unemployment benefits. So we spend massive sums on supports to the sectors that result in unemployment with no improvement in outcome data? Oops.

    Reply
  • I love the ‘Ireland’s economy..’..like it had some connection to my economy..Why don’t they just cut to the chase and call it Ibec’s economy?Or the American Chamber’s economy?Ireland’s economy is half a million people(many educated by the taxpayer)left idle so these numerologists can keep their jobs by spinning the right figures to justify financial growth for the already rich. We need to look at Scandanavian models of economics, and drop the inherited Anglo-American polarising model that requires wells of impoverished disemployment to drive down general prosperity so the ‘players’ can get more financially obese.

    Reply
  • says it all on the sign ,,,,way out

    Reply

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