Ship of Fools (28 page)

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Authors: Fintan O'Toole

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It is, under these conditions, perfectly possible to create a society in which life for the majority is actually better and more secure than it was during the height of the boom. If resources in the health system are not split between subsidised private medicine and underdeveloped public facilities, the same money can go a lot further. A very good public pension system could be created from the amount of money currently spent on the state pension plus the €3 billion annual subsidies to private pensions. The extravagant wastefulness of the property boom, in which huge resources were squandered on the creation of houses, hotels and offices that no one really wanted, can be turned to the provision of decent homes for everyone. Even in straitened times, a political system which gives priority to the meeting of basic needs (health, education, childcare, housing, pensions) and cuts out the swaggering, the pet projects and the pampering of an elite, can deliver real improvements for the majority of citizens. That in turn can replace the boomtime delusions of grandeur with a real sense of pride.
It is worth remembering, too, that in Ireland, as in all other developed societies, there was, beyond a certain point, no real relationship between money and happiness. Surveys showed that while GDP was doubling, the proportion of people declaring themselves ‘very happy with the life you lead' actually declined steadily from a peak in 1997. This does not mean that there should be nostalgia for mass unemployment, emigration and poverty. But it does suggest that there is, for the Irish as for most human beings, a point at which basic needs are satisfied, a reasonable degree of security has been achieved and powerful but intangible feelings like belonging to a society in which one can feel some pride become possible.
That point is contained in one word that the Celtic Tiger did not have in its lexicon: ‘enough'. Ireland cannot, and should not, seek to return to the hysterical hyper-capitalist growth of the period between 2002 and 2008. But if it keeps its eyes fixed on that point where enough is enough, it can, not just survive, but thrive. Its people have enough energy, enough talent, enough resourcefulness, enough imagination. The question is whether they have enough constructive anger to kick away a system that has failed them and make a new one for themselves.
Index
Abrahamson, Lenny
agriculture
Ahern, Bertie: adaptability/ opportunism; fundraising; Irish economy and; personal finances; political values of; proposed salary rise; public image; relationship with Charles Haughey; speech by
Ahern, Cecelia
Ahern, Georgina
Allied Irish Bank (AIB)
Americas Society
Andrews, David
Anglo Irish Bank
Ansbacher scam
Ardagh, Seàn
Asgard II
Bacall, Lauren
Bailey, Mick
Bailey, Tom
Bank of Ireland
banking regulation ;
see also
Central Bank, IFSRA
Barry, Sebastian
Benson, Mary
Bradshaw, Lar
Bruton, John
Burke, Ray
Byrne, Adrian
Byrne, Nicky
Carr, Marina
Catholic Church; sexuality/reproductio n and
Cato Institute
Cayman Islands
celebrity culture
Celtic Tiger; creation of; decline of; economic growth and; legacy of
Celtic Tiger, The
(dance show)
Central Bank: as regulator of banking system
Christina O
(yacht)
Clarke, Michael
Colley, George
Commitments, The
(film)
Common Agricultural Policy
Conlon, Jerry
construction industry
Corruption Assets Bureau
Coughlan, Mary
Cowen, Brian
Cromien, Seán
cronyism
Culliton, Jim
debt, levels of: personal public
Delors, Jacques
Depfa (Deutsche Pfandbriefanstalt)
depopulation
deprivation, cycles of
Desmond, Dermot
DIRT (Deposit Interest Retention Tax)
Doherty, Pat
Donovan, Terry
Douglas, Roy
Drumm, David
Dubai
Dunlop, Frank
Dunne, Ben
Dunne, Sean: plan to develop Ballsbridge, Dublin
economic competitiveness
economic forecasts
economic growth
economic miracle
education
Eircom
El Tigre Celta: Modelo Irlandes de Desarrollo
emigration
English, Barry
Enright, Anne
enterprise, encouraging
EU (European Union)
Eurofood;
see also
Parmalat
European Commission
exports
Fahy, Michael
false economy
Farrell, Pat
female sexuality, controlling
feminism
Fianna Fáil ; power of; sexuality/reproductio n and
Financial Times
Fine Gael
Finnegan, John
Fitzgerald, Niall
Fitzgerald, Scott
Fitzpatrick, Seán
Flatley, Michael
Flood tribunal
foreign investment: US; Netherlands
Fox News
Free market ideology
Friel, Brian
FSI (Financial Services Ireland)
Gallagher, Paul
GE Capital Real Estate
global ideology, Irish habits and
globalisation
Gogarty, James
Good Friday agreements (1998)
Gramm, Phil
Gross Domestic Product (GDP); decline of; EU level of
Gross National Product (GNP)
Guardian
Guinness and Mahon (G&M) Bank
Hanafin, Des
Haran, Paul
Harney, Mary
Harris, Pino
Haughey, Charles
Hello
Hely-Hutchinson, Mark
Heraty, Anne
Heritage Foundation; Irish model and
Honduran National Business Council
Houldsworth, John
Hurley, John
Iceland
IDA (Industrial Development Agency)
IFSC (International Financial Services Centre)
IFSRA (Irish Financial Services Regulatory Authority)
ILP (Irish Life and Permanent)
IMF (International Monetary Fund)
immigration
income taxes, cutting
infrastructural developments
Intel
Irish Bankers Federation
Irish economy; collapse of; growth of
Irish habits, global ideology and
Irish Life and Permanent
Irish model; enthusiasm for
Irish Nationwide
Irish Independent
Irish Times
IT projects
James Hardie
Katona, Kerry
Keane, John B.
Kelly, Anto
Kelly, Christine
Kelly, Kevin
Kelly, Morgan
Kelly, Paddy
Kenny report (
Report of the Committee on the Price of Building Land
)
Kerrigan, Gene
Keynes, John Maynard
Kilroy, Thomas
land prices
Latvia First
Latvia's Way
Lawlor, Liam
Le Monde
, on Ireland
Leahy, Pat
Lee, Joe: on national income
Lenihan, Brian
Lithuania in the World
Lobo Sosa, Porfirio
Lowry, Michael
McAteer, Willie
McCain, John
McCann Fitzgerald
McCaughey, Gerry
McCracken tribunal
McCreevy, Charlie ; credo of; tax cuts and
McDowell, Michael
McFadden, Brian
McGann, Gary
McGonigal
McKeown, Hugh
McKillen, Paddy
McManus, J. P.
McNamara, Bernard
Magnier, John
Mahon tribunal
Mansergh, Martin
manufacturing jobs; decline of; as engine of growth
Martin, Micheál
Mitchell, Daniel
Morgan Stanley Real Estate
Moriarty tribunal
Mulryan, Sean
Murphy, Tom
Murray, Charles
NAMA (National Asset Management Agency)
National Competitiveness Council
national income
National Irish Bank
National Spatial Strategy
Neary, Pat
neo-liberals
New York Times
non-residents, tax avoidance by,
see
DIRT
O'Brien, Denis
O'Brien, Eugene
O'Brien, Henry
O'Brien, Justin
O'Callaghan, Owen
O'Connell, Maurice
O'Connor, Pádraic
O'Dea, Willie
O'Dolan, John
O'Donoghue, John
O'Faoláin, Seán
O'Farrell, Brian
O Grada, Cormac
O'Grady-Walshe, Timothy
O'Halloran, Mark
Ó hEithir, Breandán
O'Leary, Michael
O'Reilly, Joe
O'Reilly, Liam
O'Reilly, Tony
O'Reilly-Hyland, Ken
O'Rourke, Kevin
Obama, Barack
Orwell, George
Parlon, Tom
Parmalat
Pfizer
political ideas
political power
population growth
populist politics
poverty; levels of consistent
Powell, Benjamin
production
Progressive Democrats
property boom;
see also
construction industry
Public Accounts Committee (PAC)
public services
public spending, cuts in
Quinlan, Derek
Quinn, Ruairi
Quinn, Seán
Recks, Declan
Redmond, George
Reddy, Tony
Richardson, Des
Riverdance
Robinson, Mary
Ronan, Johnny
Ross, Seamus
Salmond, Alex
Scanlan, Gerry
Slattery, William
Smurfit, Michael
social ambition, poverty of
social democracy
social goals
social partnership
social services
Spollen, Tony
sports stadium
Stephenson, Sam
Stewart, Jim
Sunday Independent
Sunday Tribune
Sutherland, Peter
Swift, Jonathan
tax avoidance/evasion;
see also
DIRT
tax cuts
tax incentives
Teahon, Paddy
TNCs (transnational corporations)
Tóibín, Colm
transport policies
Traynor, Des
Trinidad government, seminar by
Ulster Bank
unemployment
US News and World Report
US/Uruguay chamber of commerce
van der Kamp, Henk
Wall Street Journal, The
: Irish economy and
Wall Street Journal
/Heritage Foundation Index of Economic Freedom, The
Washington Speakers Bureau
Westlife
William Fry
Women's liberation movement
About the Author
FINTAN O'TOOLE is an acclaimed historian, biographer and critic. As a columnist with the
Irish Times
, he is Ireland's most respected and controversial political commentator, whose name was almost a term of abuse among the politicians who presided over the economic debacle of recent years. His books include
White Savage
and
A Traitor's Kiss
.
PublicAffairs is a publishing house founded in 1997. It is a tribute to the standards, values, and flair of three persons who have served as mentors to countless reporters, writers, editors, and book people of all kinds, including me.
 
I. F. STONE, proprietor of
I. F. Stone's Weekly
, combined a commitment to the First Amendment with entrepreneurial zeal and reporting skill and became one of the great independent journalists in American history. At the age of eighty, Izzy published
The Trial of Socrates,
which was a national bestseller. He wrote the book after he taught himself ancient Greek.
 
BENJAMIN C. BRADLEE was for nearly thirty years the charismatic editorial leader of
The Washington Post.
It was Ben who gave the
Post
the range and courage to pursue such historic issues as Watergate. He supported his reporters with a tenacity that made them fearless and it is no accident that so many became authors of influential, best-selling books.

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