The current economic crisis – the ‘great recession’ – raises numerous questions about neoliberal ideas and practice, not the least of which is whether (and if so, how) neoliberalism can survive it. Our paper takes on these issues using the case of Ireland. This is the first proper neoliberal crisis in Ireland. From the early 1990s to 2008, Ireland was held up by many neoliberal champions as a place that gained from deregulation, openness to inward investment, and low corporation tax rates. But the build-up of contradictions in Ireland exploded rapidly in 2008, when its property bubble burst and private banks and government finances collapsed. Rather than examining what caused Ireland’s crisis, we look at what has happened between 200...
Abstract. In this paper we provide an account of the property-led boom and bust which has brought Ir...
The recent economic crisis has demonstrated the extent to which households are exposed to the finan...
?Simon Wren-Lewis?s chapter in this volume outlines a general theory of austerity. Underpinning it i...
The current economic crisis – the ‘great recession’ – raises numerous questions about neoliberal id...
In this paper we provide an account of the property-led boom and bust which has brought Ireland to ...
This paper seeks to explore the logic of actually existing austerity and its effects on the developm...
This paper argues that the global economic recession provides an instructive point to reconsider rec...
In this paper, we explore successive waves of neoliberalization in Ireland. We contend that neolibe...
The paper examines the relationship between neoliberal policies and the Great Recession with a focu...
What is clear is that in Ireland it has been a good crisis for economists, in the sense that the sta...
Since 2008, Ireland has experienced a profound multi-faceted crisis, stemming from the collapse of t...
The current hold of austerity on Irish public policy provokes a comparison with addiction. Postliber...
The Irish economy enjoyed a long period of sustained growth from roughly 1994 onward, with a corres...
peer-reviewedWhile the human consequences of Ireland’s economic crash have been well documented and ...
The reassertion of neoliberal public policy in the wake of the 2008 global financial crisis was achi...
Abstract. In this paper we provide an account of the property-led boom and bust which has brought Ir...
The recent economic crisis has demonstrated the extent to which households are exposed to the finan...
?Simon Wren-Lewis?s chapter in this volume outlines a general theory of austerity. Underpinning it i...
The current economic crisis – the ‘great recession’ – raises numerous questions about neoliberal id...
In this paper we provide an account of the property-led boom and bust which has brought Ireland to ...
This paper seeks to explore the logic of actually existing austerity and its effects on the developm...
This paper argues that the global economic recession provides an instructive point to reconsider rec...
In this paper, we explore successive waves of neoliberalization in Ireland. We contend that neolibe...
The paper examines the relationship between neoliberal policies and the Great Recession with a focu...
What is clear is that in Ireland it has been a good crisis for economists, in the sense that the sta...
Since 2008, Ireland has experienced a profound multi-faceted crisis, stemming from the collapse of t...
The current hold of austerity on Irish public policy provokes a comparison with addiction. Postliber...
The Irish economy enjoyed a long period of sustained growth from roughly 1994 onward, with a corres...
peer-reviewedWhile the human consequences of Ireland’s economic crash have been well documented and ...
The reassertion of neoliberal public policy in the wake of the 2008 global financial crisis was achi...
Abstract. In this paper we provide an account of the property-led boom and bust which has brought Ir...
The recent economic crisis has demonstrated the extent to which households are exposed to the finan...
?Simon Wren-Lewis?s chapter in this volume outlines a general theory of austerity. Underpinning it i...