The 2011 Irish election must be placed in the context of both the economic and the political crisis that preceded the vote in order to examine its results and consider Ireland’s future in Europe. After years of economic growth during the ‘Celtic Tiger’ boom, Ireland fell into economic decline as a result of its financial crisis in 2008. Ireland’s fall can best be understood as home-made, fuelled by speculation and lax regulation of the financial sector. In the context of this economic and financial crisis, Ireland then suffered a political crisis in which the Fianna Fáil (FF) government coalition lost legitimacy, prompting an early election on 25 February 2011. Unsurprisingly perhaps, a new coalition government comprised of Fine Gael (FG...
The international economic crisis hit Ireland hard from 2007 on. Ireland’s membership of the Euro ha...
This article studies the impact of the 2008 economic crisis on the Irish development model. ...
Despite Ireland’s status as the first EU country to receive a bailout, Ireland appears to be bouncin...
The international financial crisis manifests itself in Ireland not only as a crisis of the banking s...
The three-party coalition government formed in 2007 between Fianna Fail, the Green Party and the Pro...
Ireland’s banking crisis was described by the IMF in early 2009 as matching ‘episodes of the most se...
The growth of the Irish economy in the years 1995-2007 was dramatic and unparalleled by Western econ...
The Irish economy enjoyed a long period of sustained growth from roughly 1994 onward, with a corres...
We examine the three interlinked Irish crises : the competitiveness, fiscal and banking crises, show...
The paper explores a question raised by the 2011 Irish election, which saw an almost unprecedented d...
One of the first countries to be seriously affected by the Eurozone crisis, after six years, Ireland...
This paper first considers the origins of the Irish economic crisis. It discusses where the policy f...
Given its impressive economic performance over the past two decades, Ireland earned the title, the ‘...
Prior to 2007, Ireland evolved from one of the poorest countries in Western Europe to one of the mos...
The ejection of one of Europe’s most successful political parties from power is a vivid illustration...
The international economic crisis hit Ireland hard from 2007 on. Ireland’s membership of the Euro ha...
This article studies the impact of the 2008 economic crisis on the Irish development model. ...
Despite Ireland’s status as the first EU country to receive a bailout, Ireland appears to be bouncin...
The international financial crisis manifests itself in Ireland not only as a crisis of the banking s...
The three-party coalition government formed in 2007 between Fianna Fail, the Green Party and the Pro...
Ireland’s banking crisis was described by the IMF in early 2009 as matching ‘episodes of the most se...
The growth of the Irish economy in the years 1995-2007 was dramatic and unparalleled by Western econ...
The Irish economy enjoyed a long period of sustained growth from roughly 1994 onward, with a corres...
We examine the three interlinked Irish crises : the competitiveness, fiscal and banking crises, show...
The paper explores a question raised by the 2011 Irish election, which saw an almost unprecedented d...
One of the first countries to be seriously affected by the Eurozone crisis, after six years, Ireland...
This paper first considers the origins of the Irish economic crisis. It discusses where the policy f...
Given its impressive economic performance over the past two decades, Ireland earned the title, the ‘...
Prior to 2007, Ireland evolved from one of the poorest countries in Western Europe to one of the mos...
The ejection of one of Europe’s most successful political parties from power is a vivid illustration...
The international economic crisis hit Ireland hard from 2007 on. Ireland’s membership of the Euro ha...
This article studies the impact of the 2008 economic crisis on the Irish development model. ...
Despite Ireland’s status as the first EU country to receive a bailout, Ireland appears to be bouncin...