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"This policy brief analyses Ireland's economic recovery and concludes that the narrative about fiscal austerity and internal devaluation producing an Irish growth miracle is simplistic and misleading. The author proves that the Irish economy's strong growth performance since mid-2014 can be attributed to a confluence of internal and external factors that have cumulatively added strong tailwinds to growth."

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13.01.4-65454

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"Unemployment rates in the EU rose after the economic crisis of 2008, passing 10% in 2012, but with big variations between countries. The worst afflicted had been subject to so-called policies of internal devaluation, aimed at curing unemployment by reducing wage costs. This book provides a comparative study of countries that to varying degrees followed that road (Greece, Spain, Portugal, Ireland) set against others that did not (Germany, UK, Poland).



The analysis points to three main conclusions. The first is that unemployment was not caused by excessive wages. There were issues of competitiveness in some countries but they related to the absence of high-quality export sectors. The second is that internal devaluation did reduce balance of payments current account deficits, but overwhelmingly by reducing living standards and hence imports. It did not trigger higher exports, although in several countries they increased for completely different reasons. The third is that internal devaluation has led to more rather than less unemployment and to less rather than more growth. The book points the way to alternative, and more effective, solutions based on improved competitiveness and more employment following spending and investment in infrastructure, education and research, areas that have suffered in the interests of internal devaluation policies."
"Unemployment rates in the EU rose after the economic crisis of 2008, passing 10% in 2012, but with big variations between countries. The worst afflicted had been subject to so-called policies of internal devaluation, aimed at curing unemployment by reducing wage costs. This book provides a comparative study of countries that to varying degrees followed that road (Greece, Spain, Portugal, Ireland) set against others that did not (Germany, UK, ...

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Globalizations - vol. 13 n° 1 -

Globalizations

"This article draws on the experience of the imposition of radical austerity measures in the Baltic states. It challenges the myth that austerity can be achieved in a socially and economically ‘costless' manner. Baltic-style austerity has now become a template of ‘successful adjustment' and a recipe for recovery of the Eurozone. The authors argue contra such ‘myth-making' that austerity is compromising the longer run sustainability of societies that follow this path, while simultaneously ending prospects of the adhesion of a European ‘Social Model' in the post-communist periphery. The article is a contribution to an emerging debate in academic and policy circles concerning the viability and future of Europe's ‘Social Model' in an age of austerity."
"This article draws on the experience of the imposition of radical austerity measures in the Baltic states. It challenges the myth that austerity can be achieved in a socially and economically ‘costless' manner. Baltic-style austerity has now become a template of ‘successful adjustment' and a recipe for recovery of the Eurozone. The authors argue contra such ‘myth-making' that austerity is compromising the longer run sustainability of societies ...

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