Things here in Ireland are at rock-bottom

By Leon Moss, your no fax cash advance news source

Dublin

Ha´ Penny Bridge at nightI was in Dublin for a meeting about 2 years ago and it was absolutely booming. New projects and new construction were everywhere, the streets were full of people and you couldn’t squeeze into a bar. Even though my trip was paid for, I had taken extra money that I got with a No Fax Cash Advance from the Personal Money Store in case I wanted to do some shopping for the wife and kids.

Irish downturn is hitting man and beast

Now the recession in Ireland has reached every corner of the economy. The sudden collapse of the Irish Republic’s economy has hit hard – both for its people and some of its animals. At a sanctuary outside Dublin, the staff has seen a surge in abandoned horses. Squire is safe now but some racehorses have not survived the downturn. Squire, a pure-bred draught horse, is lucky. He was found half-starved on scrubland. Now he may find a new home.

Racehorses

It is a sad story for the racehorses which were bought in the good times by wealthy businessmen as a passport to social status. They are now being dumped. Being too wild to keep, they have to be shot. The Dublin Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals say they have seen four times as many rejected racehorses this year as last, and they estimate altogether there are 20,000 horses in the country that nobody wants.

A spokesman said, “When people don’t have spare cash, the horse is the first thing to suffer; they’ll either be abandoned or driven into someone else’s field.”

The docklands

What a far cry from the heady days when all along Dublin’s docklands were signs of growth. Today rows of cranes and empty office buildings are all that is left of a building boom which fueled the much admired “Celtic Tiger” economy. The collapse in credit and confidence has left Ireland in a perilous state.

One of the major problems was the toxic brew of a construction industry too close to government, and regulators captured at the gate. The poster child for failure is the Anglo Irish Bank. The Irish government nationalized Anglo Irish in January amid fears it would collapse.

An angry public

Public anger is being directed at the government, which presided over the uncontrolled boom. It is deeply unpopular and the opposition is putting ministers under fire for not seeing the storm coming.

In Dublin’s famous O’Connell Street the long line of cabs is a visible sign of the shrinking economy. The drivers complain there are too many cabs – more than in New York, they say – and they have to wait more than an hour for a fare.

The problem is caused by lack of regulation, a rising tide of jobless seeking to earn a living as a cabbie and fewer customers. It is a situation which looks set to get worse.

The huge deficit

Bailing out the banks, along with plummeting tax revenues, now means the government faces a ballooning budget deficit, which reached $3.4 billion in the first quarter of this year.

As a member of the Eurozone it is under pressure from the European Central Bank to bring the deficit under control, so is expected to announce tough public spending in its emergency budget.

We wish you the luck of the Irish!

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Discussion of Things here in Ireland are at rock-bottom

This post has one comment

  1. Peter Stone says:

    Things are really bad there. They have already eclipsed double digit unemployment and a lot of people are out in protests of government bailouts to large businesses that don’t hire their workers back. (Reminds of somewhere…) It’s little consolation that the Irish rugby team won their first Grand Slam in the Six Nations for the first time in almost fifty years, I suppose.

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