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Irish economy surges at fastest rate in Europe

12 March 2015, 18:04 CET
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(DUBLIN) - Ireland's economy grew at the fastest rate in the European Union last year, data showed Thursday as the eurozone nation added it would repay more IMF bailout loans early.

Output soared 4.8 percent in 2014, boosted by both domestic demand and strong exports, after Ireland emerged from an international bailout in late 2013, the Central Statistics Office (CSO) said.

That was far higher than the EU average of 1.3 percent and the eurozone average of just 0.9 percent.

It represents the strongest Irish growth rate since 2007, the year before Ireland's then-booming economy collapsed.

The economy had expanded by just 0.2 percent in 2013, which was unchanged from the prior estimate.

Ireland enjoyed strong growth after it became the first of the financially-rescued eurozone countries to exit its bailout programme following deep cuts in state spending, hefty tax rises, structural reforms and the sale of state assets.

"Economic growth is now more broadly balanced, exports are contributing due to competitiveness gains while the domestic economy is now also contributing positively too," said finance minister Michael Noonan.

"All sectors of the economy grew last year. We will now build on this recovery by continuing to introduce measures that drive growth and create jobs."

Ireland was rescued by the European Union and the International Monetary Fund with an 85-billion-euro bailout in November 2010.

The country's economy crashed in 2008 after a decade of almost double-digit growth fuelled by a cheap credit and a booming construction and property sector in what became known as the "Celtic Tiger".

-Domestic demand-

There were other positive indicators at a domestic level, with consumer expenditure growing 1.1 percent last year.

"That's a really big deal," said Stephen Kinsella, senior lecturer in economics at the University of Limerick.

"A large amount of the built-up demand that's been there over the last number of years is being released and that's a sign of confidence," he told AFP.

On a more downbeat note, the CSO also revealed Thursday that the Irish economy experienced a sharp slowdown in the final three months of 2014.

The economy expanded by just 0.2 percent in the fourth quarter of last year, after 0.4-percent growth in the previous three months.

The European Commission also forecasts Ireland's economy will be the fastest growing in the EU again this year with growth of 3.5 percent.

The Dublin government's official 2015 growth forecast stands at 3.9 percent but this figure will be updated next month, Noonan said.

Economist Alan McQuaid of Merrion Stockbrokers said Ireland will benefit from growing economies in its two largest trading partners, the UK and the US.

"The sharp fall in the euro will be a huge plus for Ireland too. Taking all the relevant factors into consideration, it now looks like growth will be 4.0 percent plus again this year," he said.

- IMF loans -

Noonan also confirmed Thursday that Dublin will proceed with repaying a further 5.5 billion euros ($5.84 billion) to the IMF several years early, as Dublin replaces expensive bailout debt with more favourable debt.

Dublin will now have paid over 18 billion euros of the 22.5 billion euros borrowed from the IMF at a cheaper cost than planned.

"This early repayment of the majority of IMF loans will deliver savings of over 1.5 billion euros over the lifetime of the loans," Noonan added.

Earlier Thursday, Ireland raised one billion euros of debt with a maturity of 30 years at a yield of 1.31 percent.

Dublin is selling the economic recovery as its key message ahead of next year's general election but many people have yet to benefit, with unemployment still above 10 percent.

A number of large anti-austerity protests last year coincided with a drop in support for the government parties in opinion polls.


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