Given its impressive economic performance over the past two decades, Ireland earned the title, the ‘Celtic Tiger’. However, as the contagion from the subprime-induced global financial crisis spread, Ireland\u27s boom went bust. In short order, Ireland (like Greece before it), had to seek financial assistance from the EU and the IMF to stave off sovereign default and national humiliation. How did Dublin and the eurozone respond to the crisis and what lessons can be learned from Ireland\u27s experience? While Ireland grapples with its huge public debt, the EU needs to instill confidence in the markets before the current rolling debt crisis becomes a systemic threat to the eurozone
The 2011 Irish election must be placed in the context of both the economic and the political crisis ...
The 2008 financial crisis hit few places harder than the European periphery, where five states, Port...
The economy of the Republic of Ireland has experienced continuously high growth rates in the 1990’s,...
Given its impressive economic performance over the past two decades, Ireland earned the title, the ‘...
Despite Ireland’s status as the first EU country to receive a bailout, Ireland appears to be bouncin...
The growth of the Irish economy in the years 1995-2007 was dramatic and unparalleled by Western econ...
We examine the three interlinked Irish crises : the competitiveness, fiscal and banking crises, show...
This article narrates Ireland's recent odyssey from the pride and envy of Europe to kneeling supplic...
Ireland’s banking crisis was described by the IMF in early 2009 as matching ‘episodes of the most se...
How did a small island nation on the periphery of Europe go from the pauper of the European Union, t...
During the Eurozone crisis, Ireland would come to be regarded widely as a ‘poster child’ for the rem...
A popular narrative amongst European policymakers is that Eurozone members facing problems in the b...
Prior to 2007, Ireland evolved from one of the poorest countries in Western Europe to one of the mos...
This article studies the impact of the 2008 economic crisis on the Irish development model. ...
With its fiscal, competitiveness and banking crisis, Ireland is among the most severely affected cou...
The 2011 Irish election must be placed in the context of both the economic and the political crisis ...
The 2008 financial crisis hit few places harder than the European periphery, where five states, Port...
The economy of the Republic of Ireland has experienced continuously high growth rates in the 1990’s,...
Given its impressive economic performance over the past two decades, Ireland earned the title, the ‘...
Despite Ireland’s status as the first EU country to receive a bailout, Ireland appears to be bouncin...
The growth of the Irish economy in the years 1995-2007 was dramatic and unparalleled by Western econ...
We examine the three interlinked Irish crises : the competitiveness, fiscal and banking crises, show...
This article narrates Ireland's recent odyssey from the pride and envy of Europe to kneeling supplic...
Ireland’s banking crisis was described by the IMF in early 2009 as matching ‘episodes of the most se...
How did a small island nation on the periphery of Europe go from the pauper of the European Union, t...
During the Eurozone crisis, Ireland would come to be regarded widely as a ‘poster child’ for the rem...
A popular narrative amongst European policymakers is that Eurozone members facing problems in the b...
Prior to 2007, Ireland evolved from one of the poorest countries in Western Europe to one of the mos...
This article studies the impact of the 2008 economic crisis on the Irish development model. ...
With its fiscal, competitiveness and banking crisis, Ireland is among the most severely affected cou...
The 2011 Irish election must be placed in the context of both the economic and the political crisis ...
The 2008 financial crisis hit few places harder than the European periphery, where five states, Port...
The economy of the Republic of Ireland has experienced continuously high growth rates in the 1990’s,...