Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-v9fdk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-08T20:35:03.353Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Europe and the Transformation of the Irish Economy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 May 2023

John FitzGerald
Affiliation:
Trinity College Dublin
Patrick Honohan
Affiliation:
Peterson Institute for International Economics

Summary

Having stagnated for decades in the shadow of the UK, the Irish economy's performance improved after it joined the European Union (EEC) in 1973. This Element shows how the challenge of EU membership gave focus and direction to Irish economic policy. No longer dependent on low value-added agricultural exports to Britain, within the EU Ireland became a hub for multinational corporations in IT and pharmaceutical products. This export success required and facilitated a strengthening of education and social policy infrastructures, and underpinned the achievement of high average living standards. EU membership has also brought challenges, and several severe setbacks have resulted from Irish policy mistakes. But the European flavour of Ireland's structural policies (leavened with exposure to US experience) has helped it navigate the hazards of hyper-globalization with fewer political tensions than seen elsewhere.
Get access
Type
Element
Information
Online ISBN: 9781009306102
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication: 15 June 2023

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Alesina, Alberto, Blanchard, Olivier, Galí, Jordi, Giavazzi, Francesco and Uhlig, Harald. 2001. Defining a Macroeconomic Framework for the Euro Area (London: Centre for Economic Policy Research).Google Scholar
Barrett, Alan, FitzGerald, John and Nolan, Brian. 2002. ‘Earnings Inequality, Returns to Education and Immigration into Ireland’. Labour Economics 9: 665–80.Google Scholar
Barrett, Alan and Goggin, Jean. 2010. ‘Returning to the Question of a Wage Premium for Returning Migrants’. National Institute Economic Review 213(1): R4351.Google Scholar
Barrett, Alan, Kearney, Íde and Yvonne, McCarthy. 2007. Quarterly Economic Commentary, Spring 2007 (Dublin: The Economic and Social Research Institute), pp. 135.Google Scholar
Barry, Frank. 2003. ‘Economic Integration and Convergence Processes in the EU Cohesion Countries’. Journal of Common Market Studies 41(5): 897921.Google Scholar
Barry, Frank. 2007. ‘Third-Level Education, Foreign Direct Investment and Economic Boom in Ireland’. International Journal of Technology Management 38(3): 198219.Google Scholar
Barry, Frank. 2011. ‘Foreign Investment and the Politics of Export Profits Tax Relief 1956’. Irish Economic and Social History 38: 5473.Google Scholar
Barry, Frank and Bergin, Adele. 2019. ‘Export Structure, FDI and the Rapidity of Ireland’s Recovery from Crisis’. The Economic and Social Review 50(4): 707–24.Google Scholar
Barry, Frank, Bradley, John and Hannan, Aoife. 1999. ‘The European Dimension: The Single Market and the Structural Funds’. In Barry, Frank (ed.), Understanding Ireland’s Economic Growth (London: Macmillan), pp. 99118.Google Scholar
Andy, Bielenberg and Ryan, Raymond. 2016. An Economic History of Ireland since Independence (London: Routledge).Google Scholar
Blackwell, John and O’Malley, Eoin. 1984. ‘The Impact of EEC Membership on Irish Industry’. In Drudy, Patrick J. and McAleese, Dermot (eds.), Ireland and the European Community (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press), pp. 107–44.Google Scholar
Bradley, John, FitzGerald, John and Danny, McCoy. 1991. Medium-Term Review: 1991–1996 (Dublin: The Economic and Social Research Institute).Google Scholar
Bradley, John, Morgenroth, Edgar and Untiedt, Gerhart. 2003. ‘Macro-regional Evaluation of the Structural Funds Using the HERMIN Modelling Framework’. Italian Journal of Regional Science 3(3): 528.Google Scholar
Brazys, Sam and Regan, Aidan. 2021. ‘Small States in Global Markets: The Political Economy of FDI-led Growth in Ireland’. In Farrell, David and Hardiman, Niamh (eds.), Oxford Handbook of Irish Politics (Oxford: Oxford University Press), pp. 405–22 .Google Scholar
Buckley, Peter J. and Ruane, Frances. 2006. ‘Foreign Direct Investment in Ireland: Policy Implications for Emerging Economies’. The World Economy 29(11): 1611–28.Google Scholar
Byrne, Elaine A. 2012. Political Corruption in Ireland (Manchester: Manchester University Press).Google Scholar
Cahill, Edward. 1997. Corporate Financial Crisis in Ireland (Dublin: Gill and Macmillan).Google Scholar
Campos, Nauro F., Coricelli, Fabrizio and Moretti, Luigi. 2019. ‘Institutional Integration and Economic Growth in Europe’. Journal of Monetary Economics 103: 88104.Google Scholar
Casey, Ciarán. 2022. The History of the Department of Finance 1959–1999 (Dublin: Government Publications).Google Scholar
Crafts, Nicholas. 2014. ‘Ireland’s Medium-Term Growth Prospects: A Phoenix Rising?The Economic and Social Review 45(1): 87112.Google Scholar
Daly, Mary E. 2016. Sixties Ireland (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Davies, Ronald B., Siedschlag, Iulia and Studnicka, Zuzanna. 2021. ‘The Impact of Taxes on the Extensive and Intensive Margins of FDI’. International Journal of Public Finance 28(2): 434–64.Google Scholar
Dellepiane-Avellaneda, Sebastian, Hardiman, Niamh and Heras, Jon Las. 2021. ‘Financial Resource Curse in the Eurozone Periphery’. Review of International Political Economy 29(4): 1287–313.Google Scholar
Department of Education. 1965. Investment in Education (Dublin: Stationery Office).Google Scholar
David, Duffy, FitzGerald, John and Kearney, Ide. 2005. ‘Rising House Prices in an Open Labour Market’. The Economic and Social Review 36(3): 251–72.Google Scholar
Durkan, Joe, Fitzgerald, Doireann and Harmon, Colm. 1999. ‘Education and Growth in the Irish Economy’. In Barry, Frank (ed.), Understanding Irish Economic Growth (London: Macmillan), pp. 119–35.Google Scholar
Everett, Mary M. 2015. ‘Blowing the Bubble: The Global Funding of the Irish Credit Boom’. The Economic and Social Review 46(3): 339–65.Google Scholar
Fahey, Tony, FitzGerald, John and Bertrand, Maître. 1998. ‘The Economic and Social Implications of Population Change’. Journal of the Statistical and Social Inquiry Society of Ireland 27(5): 185222.Google Scholar
Fanning, Ronan. 1978. The Irish Department of Finance 1922–58 (Dublin: Institute of Public Administration).Google Scholar
FitzGerald, John. 1998. ‘An Irish Perspective on the Structural Funds’. European Planning Studies 6(6): 677–94.Google Scholar
FitzGerald, John. 1999. ‘Wage Formation and the Labour Market’, In Barry, Frank (ed.), Understanding Ireland’s Economic Growth (London: Macmillan), pp. 137165.Google Scholar
FitzGerald, John. 2006. ‘Lessons from 20 Years of Cohesion’. In Mundschenk, Susanne, Stierle, Michael, Schutz, Ulrike Stierle-von and Traistaru, Iulia (eds.), Competitiveness and Growth in Europe: Lessons and Policy Implications for the Lisbon Strategy (Cheltenham: Edward Elgar), pp. 6599.Google Scholar
FitzGerald, John. 2012a. ‘To Convergence and Beyond? Human Capital, Economic Adjustment and a Return to Growth’. ESRI Working Paper 419.Google Scholar
FitzGerald, John. 2012b. ‘Restoring Credibility in Policy Making in Ireland’. Public Money and Management 32(1): 2734.Google Scholar
FitzGerald, John. 2022a. ‘National Accounts for a Global Economy: The Case of Ireland’. In Ahmad, Nadim, Moulton, Brent, Richardson, J. David and van de Ven, Peter (eds.), The Challenges of Globalization in the Measurement of National Accounts (Chicago: University of Chicago Press).Google Scholar
FitzGerald, John. 2022b. ‘One Island, Two Labour Markets’. Irish Studies in International Affairs 33(2): 315–71.Google Scholar
FitzGerald, John, Kearney, Íde, Morgenroth, Edgar and Smyth, Diarmaid. 1999. National Investment Priorities for the Period 2000–2006 (Dublin: The Economic and Social Research Institute).Google Scholar
FitzGerald, John and Kenny, Seán. 2018. ‘Managing a Century of Debt’. Journal of the Statistical and Social Inquiry Society of Ireland 48: 140.Google Scholar
FitzGerald, John, McCarthy, Colm, Morgenroth, Edgar and Philip O’Connell. 2003. The Mid-Term Evaluation of the National Development Plan and Community Support Framework for Ireland 2000–2006 (Dublin: The Economic and Social Research Institute).Google Scholar
FitzGerald, John and Edgar, L. W. Morgenroth. 2020. ‘The Northern Ireland Economy: Problems and Prospects’.Journal of the Statistical and Social Inquiry Society of Ireland 49: 6484.Google Scholar
Fuchs-Schundeln, Nicola. 2019. ‘Hours Worked Across the World: Facts and Driving Forces’. National Institute Economic Review 247(1): R318.Google Scholar
Garvin, Tom. 2005. Preventing the Future: Why Was Ireland So Poor for So Long? (Dublin: Gill).Google Scholar
Görg, Holger. 2000. ‘Irish Direct Investment in the US: Evidence and Further Issues’. Journal of the Statistical and Social Inquiry Society of Ireland 30: 3352.Google Scholar
Görg, Holger and Ruane, Frances. 1999. ‘US Investment in EU Member Countries: The Internal Market and Sectoral Specialisation’. Journal of Common Market Studies 37(2): 333–48.Google Scholar
Gropp, Reint and Kostial, Kristina. 2000. ‘The Disappearing Tax Base: Is FDI Eroding Corporate Income Taxes?’ IMF Working Paper 00/173.Google Scholar
Holton, Niamh and O’Neill, Donal. 2017. ‘The Changing Nature of Irish Wage Inequality from Boom to Bust’. Economic and Social Review 48(1): 126.Google Scholar
Honohan, Patrick. 1992. ‘The Link between Irish and UK Unemployment’. ESRI Quarterly Economic Commentary Spring: 3344.Google Scholar
Honohan, Patrick (ed.). 1997. EU Structural Funds in Ireland: A Mid-term Evaluation of the CSF 1994–99 (Dublin: The Economic and Social Research Institute).Google Scholar
Honohan, Patrick. 1999. ‘Fiscal Adjustment and Disinflation in Ireland: Setting the Basis for Economic Recovery and Expansion’. In Barry, Frank (ed.), Understanding Ireland’s Economic Growth (London: Macmillan), pp. 7598.Google Scholar
Honohan, Patrick. 2019. Currency, Credit and Crisis: Central Banking in Ireland and Europe (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Honohan, Patrick. 2021. ‘Is Ireland Really the Most Prosperous Country in Europe?Economic Letter 2021/1 (Dublin: Central Bank of Ireland).Google Scholar
Honohan, Patrick and Lane, Philip R.. 2003. ‘Divergent Inflation Rates in EMU’. Economic Policy 18(37): 357–94.Google Scholar
Honohan, Patrick and Murphy, Gavin. 2010. ‘Breaking the Sterling Link: Ireland’s Decision to Enter the EMS’. Institute of International Integration Studies IIIS Trinity College Dublin Discussion Paper 317.Google Scholar
Honohan, Patrick and Walsh, Brendan M.. 2002. ‘Catching-Up with the Leaders: The Irish Hare’. Brookings Papers on Economic Activity 1: 179.Google Scholar
Jacobson, David. 1977. ‘The Political Economy of Industrial Location: The Ford Motor Company at Cork, 1912–26’. Irish Economic and Social History 4: 3655.Google Scholar
Jacobson, David and Andreosso, Bernadette. 1990. ‘Ireland as a Location for Multinational Investment’. In Mulreany, Michael (ed.), The Single European Market and the Irish Economy (Dublin: Institute of Public Administration), pp. 307–34.Google Scholar
Kearney, Ide. 2012. ‘Measuring Fiscal Stance’. ESRI Quarterly Economic Commentary Autumn: 6788.Google Scholar
Kearney, Ide, McCoy, Danny, Duffy, David, McMahon, Michael and Smyth, Diarmaid. 2000. ‘Assessing the Stance of Irish Fiscal Policy’. In Barrett, Alan (ed.), Budget Perspectives (Dublin: The Economic and Social Research Institute), pp. 137.Google Scholar
Laffan, Brigid. 2021. ‘Ireland in a European Context’. In Farrell, David and Hardiman, Niamh (eds.), Oxford Handbook of Irish Politics (Oxford: Oxford University Press), pp. 127–44.Google Scholar
Laffan, Brigid and Jane O’Mahony. 2008. Ireland and the European Union (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan).Google Scholar
Lane, Philip R. 2015. ‘The Funding of the Irish Domestic Banking System During the Boom’. Journal of the Statistical and Social Inquiry Society of Ireland 44: 4065.Google Scholar
Lawless, Martina. 2019. ‘Firms and Trade on the Island of Ireland’. Journal of the Statistical and Social Inquiry Society of Ireland 48: 211–21.Google Scholar
Lawless, Martina, J. Peter Neary and Studnicka, Zuzanna. 1999. ‘South-North Trade in Ireland: Gravity and Firms from the Good Friday Agreement to Brexit’. The Economic and Social Review 50(4): 751–66.Google Scholar
Lee, Joseph. 1989. Ireland 1912–85 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
MacCarthaigh, Muiris and Hardiman, Niamh. 2020. ‘Exploiting Conditionality: EU and International Actors and Post-NPM Reform in Ireland’. Public Policy and Administration 35(2): 179200.Google Scholar
MacSharry, Ray and White, Padraic A.. 2000. The Making of the Celtic Tiger: The Insider Story of Ireland’s Boom Economy (Dublin: Mercier Press).Google Scholar
Madden, David. 2014. ‘Winners and Losers on the Roller-Coaster: Ireland, 2003–2011’. The Economic and Social Review 45(3): 405–21.Google Scholar
McAleese, Dermot. 1971. Effective Tariffs and the Structure of Industrial Production in Ireland (Dublin: The Economic and Social Research Institute).Google Scholar
McCoy, Danny. 1991. ‘Macroeconomic Impact of Environmental Policy on Acid Rain’. In Bradley, John, FitzGerald, John and McCoy, Danny (eds.), Medium-Term Review: 1991–1996 (Dublin: The Economic and Social Research Institute), pp. 91101.Google Scholar
Mitchell, Tara and Francis O’Toole. 2021. ‘Regulatory Policy’. In O’Hagan, John, O’Toole, Francis and Whelan, Ciara (eds.), The Economy of Ireland (London: Red Globe Press), pp. 109–35.Google Scholar
Murphy, Mary P. 2015. ‘Forty Years of EU Influencing Social Policy in Ireland: A Glass Half Full?Administration 62: 6986.Google Scholar
Neary, J. Peter and Gráda, Cormac Ó. 1991. ‘Protection, Economic War and Structural Change: The 1930s in Ireland’. Irish Historical Studies 27(107): 250–66.Google Scholar
Newbery, David, Siebert, Horst and Vickers, John. 1990. ‘Acid Rain’. Economic Policy 5(11): 297346.Google Scholar
Nolan, Brian and Bertrand, Maître. 2000. ‘Income Inequality’. In Nolan, Brian, O’Connell, Philip J. and Whelan, Christopher T. (eds.), Bust to Boom: The Irish Experience of Growth and Inequality (Dublin: Institute of Public Administration), pp. 147–62.Google Scholar
Cinnéide, Ó, Seamus. 2010. ‘From Poverty to Social Inclusion: The EU and Ireland’. In O’Connor, Philip and Visser, Anna (eds.), Ireland and the European Social Inclusion Strategy: Lessons Learned and the Road Ahead (Dublin: European Anti Poverty Network Ireland), pp. 1836.Google Scholar
O’Donoghue, Cathal. 2022. ‘A Century of Agriculture: A Policy-Driven Sector’. Journal of the Statistical and Social Inquiry Society of Ireland forthcoming.Google Scholar
Gráda, Ó, Cormac. 1997. A Rocky Road: The Irish Economy since the 1920s (Manchester: Manchester University Press).Google Scholar
Gráda, Ó, Cormac. 2002. ‘Is the Celtic Tiger a Paper Tiger?ESRI Quarterly Economic Commentary Spring: 5162.Google Scholar
Ó Gráda, Cormac and Hjortshøj, Kevin O’Rourke, . 2022. ‘The Irish Economy During the Century after Partition’. The Economic History Review 75(2): 336–70.Google Scholar
Oireachtas. 2016. Report of the Joint Committee of Inquiry into the Banking Crisis (Dublin: Stationery Office). https://inquiries.oireachtas.ie/banking.Google Scholar
O’Leary, Eoin. 2015. Irish Economic Development: High-Performing EU State or Serial Underachiever (London: Routledge).Google Scholar
O’Malley, Eoin. 1989. Industry and Economic Development (Dublin: Gill and Macmillan).Google Scholar
O’Rourke, Kevin and Williamson, Jeffrey. 1999. Globalization and History (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press).Google Scholar
Kevin Hjortshøj, O’Rourke. 2017. ‘Independent Ireland in Comparative Perspective’. Irish Economic and Social History 44(1): 1945.Google Scholar
O’Toole, Fintan. 2021. We Don’t Know Ourselves (London: Head of Zeus).Google Scholar
Oxford University Centre for Business Taxation. 2017. CBT Tax Database. https://oxfordtax.sbs.ox.ac.uk/cbt-tax-database (consulted 16 July 2022).Google Scholar
Perotti, Roberto. 2013. ‘The “Austerity Myth”: Gain without Pain?’ In Alesina, Alberto and Giavazzi, Francesco (eds.), Fiscal Policy after the Financial Crisis (Chicago: University of Chicago Press), pp. 307–54.Google Scholar
Roantree, Barra, Maître, Bertrand, McTague, Alyvia and Privalko, Ivan. 2021. Poverty, Income Inequality and Living Standards in Ireland (Dublin: The Economic and Social Research Institute).Google Scholar
Romalis, John. 2007. ‘Capital Taxes, Trade Costs and the Irish Miracle’. Journal of the European Economic Association 5(2–3): 459–69.Google Scholar
Ruane, Frances and Holger, Görg. 1996. ‘Aspects of Foreign Direct Investment in Irish Manufacturing since 1973: Policy and Performance’. Journal of the Statistical and Social Inquiry Society of Ireland 27: 3793.Google Scholar
Ruane, Frances and Holger, Görg. 1997. ‘The Impact of Foreign Direct Investment on Sectoral Adjustment in the Irish Economy’. National Institute Economic Review 160(1): 7686.Google Scholar
Ruane, Frances and Holger, Görg. 2000. ‘European Integration and Peripherality: Lessons from the Irish Experience’. The World Economy 23(3): 405–21.Google Scholar
Ruane, Frances, Siedschlag, Iulia and Murphy, Gavin. 2014. ‘Globalization and Ireland’s Export Performance’. In Brennan, Louis (ed.), Enacting Globalization (London: Palgrave Macmillan), pp. 205–18. https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137361943_19.Google Scholar
Ruane, Frances and Sutherland, Julie. 2005. ‘Export Performance and Destination Characteristics of Irish Manufacturing Industry’. Review of World Economics 141: 442–59.Google Scholar
Ruane, Frances and Ali, Uğur. 2010. ‘Foreign Direct Investment and Productivity Spillovers in Irish Manufacturing Industry: Evidence from Plant Level Panel Data’. International Journal of the Economics of Business 12(1): 5366.Google Scholar
Ryan, W. J. Louden. 1949. ‘The Nature and Effect of Protective Policy in Ireland’. PhD Thesis. University of Dublin.Google Scholar
Siedschlag, Iulia, Ubaldo, Mattia Di and Koecklin, Manuel Tong, 2017. Comparative Performance of Indigenous and Multinational Firms Operating in Ireland (Dublin: The Economic and Social Research Institute).Google Scholar
Siedschlag, Iulia and Koecklin, Manual Tong. 2019. The Impact of the UK’s EU Exit on the Attractiveness of Northern Ireland to FDI and Associated Job Creation Effects (Belfast: Northern Ireland Department for the Economy).Google Scholar
Siedschlag, Iulia, Zhang, Xiaoheng and Smith, Donal. 2013. ‘What Determines the Location Choice of Multinational Firms in the Information and Communication Technologies Sector?Economics of Innovation and New Technology 22(6): 581600.Google Scholar
Tørsløv, Thomas, Wier, Ludvig and Zucman, Gabriel. 2022. ‘The Missing Profits of Nations’. The Review of Economic Studies forthcoming.Google Scholar
Voitchovsky, Sarah, Maître, Bertrand and Nolan, Brian. 2012. ‘Wage Inequality in Ireland’s “Celtic Tiger” Boom’. The Economic and Social Review 43(1): 99133.Google Scholar
Walsh, Brendan M. 1974. ‘Expectations, Information, and Human Migration: Specifying an Econometric Model of Irish Migration to Britain’. Journal of Regional Science 14(1): 107–21.Google Scholar

Save element to Kindle

To save this element to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Europe and the Transformation of the Irish Economy
Available formats
×

Save element to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Europe and the Transformation of the Irish Economy
Available formats
×

Save element to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Europe and the Transformation of the Irish Economy
Available formats
×