Notes on the Front

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

July 30th Morning: The Recession Diaries

Recession 33 It was only a matter of time before the business sector opened up another front in the recession wars.  Hamburger king Pat McDonagh of Supermac has accused the Government of ‘strangling entrepreneurship’ and ‘criminalising business’.  And just how is the vile Government doing this?


‘Bureaucracy, legislation and regulation’.



But Mr. McDonagh is just getting started.


McDonagh said that entrepreneurs were being denied the time to run and expand their companies because of the volume of ‘‘nonsense paperwork and bizarre red tape”. . .‘The country is going into a recession and the government has businesspeople spending needless time and energy filling out forms just so the civil service can justify their jobs.”


This is Number 37 in the facile-argument-file.  The idea that regulation is strangling, garroting or otherwise asphyxiating business in this country is so laughable I’m having trouble keeping my fingers on the keyboard.  Mr. McDonagh goes on to say that




‘ . . . the level of bureaucracy did not seem to be the same in other jurisdictions such as the US, France or even the North.’



Oh, is that right, Mr. McDonagh?  Then why does Forfas – a very pro-business agency – state that:


‘ . . . the overall level of regulation in Ireland is among the lowest in the OECD’.


We have one of the most liberalised environments when it comes to product regulation, and lower levels of labour regulation than most other EU-15 countries.  When it comes to the financial cost and number of procedures it take to start up a business – we are one of the least inhibitive. 


In the World Economic Foundation’s Global Competitiveness Report, Ireland ranks low on the scale of regulatory ‘burdens’ – only Denmark and Finland in the EU-15 rank lower. With specific regard to product market regulation, Ireland ranks 2nd least restrictive, behind the UK, while measured under labour market regulations Ireland ranks well below the EU-15 average. 


Have you read the World Bank’s Doing Business Report, Mr. McDonagh?  Ireland ranks 3rd for the overall ease of doing business among the EU-15 (for you types who can’t get enough of rankings – Ireland stands 10th out of 175 nations in the world and 8th in the OECD rankings).


Davy Stockbrokers, the Central Bank and just about any comparative analysis of regulation regimes in the EU all conclude the same thing:  Ireland has a ‘light regulatory regime’.


Given that there are 3,000 people employed in Supermacs, you’d think that Mr. McDonagh must have to employ a huge percentage of his workforce, a whole department, merely to fill out forms. So how many?  100?  200?  Mr. McDonagh tells us:


‘I have two people employed full-time filling out forms.’



Two people!  Two people out of 3,000?  Is Mr. McDonagh really telling us that the difference between liberating business and enslaving it is a mere few hours a day out of a 3,000 staff business? 


If I were Mr. McDonagh, I’d be more concerned with an economy where there is less money and less people employed.  Because that means fewer people spending less money on his wholesome and nutritional products. 


And if he thinks Ireland is over-regulated, he really should get out more.

13 responses to “July 30th Morning: The Recession Diaries”

  1. Aidan OSullivan Avatar
    Aidan OSullivan

    The fact he believes selling burgers is entrepreneurship, tells you how deep our economic problems are!!!

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  2. tipster Avatar
    tipster

    This column has become required daily reading since I discovered it a fortnight ago.

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  3. Pavement Trauma Avatar
    Pavement Trauma

    The real problem isn’t where a 3000-employee business has to employ 2 people for the form filling, it is where 50-employee businesses have to.
    Overall and compared to a lot of countries we do have a relatively light regulatory touch – but not in all sectors. You might have some trouble convincing the providers of scheduled bus services in Dublin how easy it is to do business here.

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  4. Pavement Trauma Avatar
    Pavement Trauma

    And Aidan, why should selling burgers not be considered entrepreneurship? This is just pure snobbery, no?

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  5. Tomaltach Avatar

    Well said Michael.
    Pavement – in the case you are referring to, the private companyls trouble was not excess government regulation, but arguably the lack of it. Certainly they weren’t killed off by red tape, but by predidatory behaviour on a particular route. Not the same phenomenon as Michael is talking about.

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  6. Aidan OSullivan Avatar
    Aidan OSullivan

    Pavement – the question is what type of entrepreneurship do we want to develop?
    Betting shops, lance-dancing clubs, 24-hr fast-food outlets could all be called enterprises.
    But do we really want that type of low-end, low-paid, transistory economic activity, which has questionable social value?
    Real high-end entrepreneurship means R&D, innovation, high-quality jobs in the manufacturing, agricultural or services sectors.
    We need to get away from the idea of economic growth no matter what, but look at the quality and sustainability of our economic growth.
    Rgds.

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  7. Michael Taft Avatar

    Thanks for your comment, Tipster. I really appreciate it.
    Good point, Pavement Trauma. Unfortunately, there is little research in Ireland on the regulatory burden. The Report of the Small Business Forum relied on data from the UK. It showed that the amount of time a business employing between 20-49 people spends on regulation compliance amounts to 41 hours per month. While no doubt there is room for reform, so as to limit the regulator burden, I would suggest that 41 hours per month is not onerous.
    This comes from Table 3.1 at http://www.smallbusinessforum.ie/webopt/sbf060516_full_report_webopt.pdf

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  8. Pavement Trauma Avatar
    Pavement Trauma

    Tomaltach, the case I had in mind has an important regulatory aspect – a firm that applied for a license to provide an entirely new route and whose case was not processed by the Dept of Transport for two years. Shortly afterwards they launched the route, Dublin Bus started on the route without a license, applied for one and it was granted within a couple of months.

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  9. Pavement Trauma Avatar
    Pavement Trauma

    Betting shops, lance-dancing clubs, 24-hr fast-food outlets could all be called enterprises.
    Would this be because they are actually enterprises? Albeit ones not approved of by you?
    But do we really want that type of low-end, low-paid, transistory economic activity, which has questionable social value?
    Well, yes. Yes we do want that economic activity. How do we know that? Because a) they have not been made illegal and b) they have got lots of customers – so somebody wants that activity to occur. And as for their ‘social value’, you have every right to avoid them yourself but you have no right to make other people avoid them.
    Do we exclusively want this type of economic activity? Of course not, who is saying we do? 3000 people working in Supermacs is evidentally not as beneficialy to the country as 3000 working in Intel but it is significantly more beneficial than 3000 people not working at all.

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  10. Aidan OSullivan Avatar
    Aidan OSullivan

    Pavement, so you would like Ireland to turn into a rainy version of Los Angeles? That seems to be the type of society you like.

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  11. Pavement Trauma Avatar
    Pavement Trauma

    As distinct from what, Aidan, a rainy version of Havana or Pyongyang?

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  12. Aidan OSullivan Avatar
    Aidan OSullivan

    I was thinking more Copenhagen, Munich, Toulouse, Vienna…

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  13. Pavement Trauma Avatar
    Pavement Trauma

    And guess what? All of those cities have lots and lots of McDonalds.

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