Notes on the Front

Commentary on Irish Political Economy by Michael Taft, researcher for SIPTU

July 16th Afternoon: The Recession Diaries

Recession 21 Here’s a thought courtesy of Cllr. Eric Byrne – a suggestion so common-sensical its’ frightening.  Immediately after Bernard McNamara did a runner on the PPPs in Dublin city, Cllr. Byrne proposed that the City Council scrap all such ‘partnership’ proposals and do the following:

Dublin City Council already owns the sites in question. The Council should now proceed with the regeneration projects proposed, setting aside one-third for social housing and one-third for affordable housing, with the remaining third to be sold to owner-occupiers on the open market. The sale of one third of the units on the open market would allow the Council to recoup much of the cost entailed. In order to finance the up-front expenditure, the National Pension Reserve Fund could make available the capital funding. This would be repaid in full, plus interest, over an extended period of time. This would mean that funding would not need to come from the Exchequer. All the Government would have to do is make the necessary legislative changes.

Well, why not?  This solves a lot of problems at one stroke – construction workers are put back on site, slowing unemployment; some of the 100,000 people on housing waiting lists get a home; people who can’t afford one on the open market get an opportunity to buy; and the open housing market gets a boost.  In addition, the cost of providing social and affordable homes is considerably reduced, offset against the profits of the open market houses.



Here’s another consideration: quality.  Local authorities, having learned their lessons from those past disasters such as the Ballymun towers or Fatima, now plan and build houses that far surpass those in the private sector.  If you don’t believe me, go down to the south inner city and have a look at Robert Emmet Close and go across the street and inspect the the boxes that pass for private apartments.  A new city council development just down the road from me is even having solar panels installed.


And what a boon to the Exchequer it would be.  Here’s a back-of-the-envelope calculation.  An average skilled operative earns about €920 a week.  S/he will pay the Exchequer nearly €185 per week in income tax.  This doesn’t count PRSI, nor does it count VAT/excise, nor does it count the multiplier effect (the income that other people earn from this skilled operative’s spending – shops, restaurants, airlines, etc.).  But it costs the state €197 when that person is unemployed.  The loss to the state, therefore, is €382 per week when a working builder is laid off.  Actually its much more given all the items I didn’t include.  But let’s stay with this figure.


Putting 3,000 builders back to work via Cllr. Byrne’s plan (spread throughout the country) would earn the state over €1 million a week – and when all the multiplier effects are calculated, much more.


So cut government expenditure by cutting unemployment.  Of course, this is not a silver bullet, this is not the platform for future sustainable growth.  But it can lessen the impact of negative growth.  And in this case, keep some people at work and give people a home to live in.


That’s called thinking your way out of a recession.

3 responses to “July 16th Afternoon: The Recession Diaries”

  1. Comrade-C Avatar
    Comrade-C

    Instead of having a private agency take a cut of privatisation, lets privatise it direct, and make some of that surplus value for the national pension fund instead. Really, are things that constrained ideologically?
    It’s common sense capitalism, I suppose. Just like the SFA’s approach to the recession is common sense capitalism.
    I gather that Eric is on the “left” of labour these days. What a disgrace!

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  2. Michael Taft Avatar

    Comrade-C, I’m not sure I know what private agency and privatisation you’re referring to. As to common sense capitalism, you might want to have a read of a recent post on Ceder Lounge Revolution (http://cedarlounge.wordpress.com/2008/07/17/fit-for-purpose-or-big-and-failing-the-us-economy-takes-a-hit-and-then-another-and-then-another/).
    It appears that the leading capitalists are pleading for a little less capitalism.

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  3. Paul D Avatar

    I was thrilled to read this post. I was familiar with Cllr Byrnes proposals, but this article draws the implications of the proposal out for all to see.
    The left needs to fight the government’s cutbacks policy on two fronts. By pointing out the social damage of cuts and by pointing out the economic costs of cuts. In this regard, this article points the ways forward for an investment in housing infrastructure. Labour leader Eamon Gilmore called for a similar policy at the recent Labour Youth summer school in Galway.

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Commentary on Irish Political Economy by Michael Taft, researcher for SIPTU