Meath Tourism

Meath Tourism
Meath Tourism Historical Sites

Monday, November 1, 2010

Hospitals close as Government Ministers take home Hundreds of Thousands....

As Government Ministers continue to live in luxury with inflated salaries and over-weight expense accounts, the working people of Ireland are to be persecuted in yet another Budget for the corrupt and the criminal in this country. The wives of criminal bankers, Fianna Fail politicians and property speculators will get to keep their fur coats while children will remain starving and homeless. It is this political obesity that has left Ireland bankrupt for at least two generations, even the Government's intellectual-mouth-pieces are warning the Government that they are doing more and more damage each time they set out to protect the wealthy, greedy and corrupt.
The Government risks strangling the economy by imposing the bulk of €15bn spending cuts in the upcoming Budget, business leaders warned today.
Ibec said it was critical savings are spread out over the next four years and not excessively ’front-loaded’ in the budgetary plan to be revealed in December.
Last week, Finance Brian Lenihan insisted a significant amount of the pain will be taken upfront, while Taoiseach Brian Cowen agreed the move was necessary to please international money markets.
But in its latest forecast Ibec, which represents Irish business, said a balanced approach was crucial.
“It is also important, however, that the upcoming Budget does not deliver an excessive frontloading of the fiscal adjustment to such a degree that it strangles the fledgling economic recovery,” it stated.
Ibec chief economist Fergal O’Brien said the economy will grow next year despite the scale of austerity measures being imposed. “Although we have pared back our forecasts somewhat to reflect the impact of a series of more difficult than expected Budgets, we still see the economy growing by over 2% in 2011,” he said.
Mr O’Brien said the economy performed better than expected this year.
Economic recovery in trading partners like Germany along with a reduction in the cost of living in Ireland had boosted export business, he said.
Mr O’Brien added while it was necessary to cut the national deficit over the coming four years, it was also important to balance the cutbacks with stimulating growth.
“The over-riding priority is that we preserve the country’s credit worthiness and retain control over our economic affairs,” he said.