Ireland’s austerity ‘success’ is no model for Greece
There is a dark side to Ireland’s ‘success’ that requires discussion about the most effective responses to financial and fiscal crises.
The eight austerity budgets between 2008 and 2014 involved €18.5bn in public-spending cuts and €12bn in tax-raising (revenue) measures. Key public services, in particular health and housing, have been weakened as a result.





