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politics

Making sure we never have a Knowledge Economy

As many readers of this blog will know I work for a research group in Waterford. I also have a gallery, have trained as a mediator and do a spot of IT consultancy in my spare time. I pay all my taxes and work a ridiculous amount of time during the week. I guess that, whatever philosophising I’ve done to the contrary, I’ve officially joined the rat race with the reasonable goal of wealth generation.
As part of my day job I help to create wealth for Ireland Inc by creating joint ventures between Irish industry and academia. Generally this involves getting software developed to a high standard such that the companies can help find new business opportunities, create wealth and employment. We do a good job and employ many people who have previously worked in a range of industry roles. We’ve organically created over 200 high-tech jobs in the South East. That is without a doubt a major success story and something I’m incredibly proud to have participated in.
My co-workers are demonstrably not passengers. Not so-called “public sector parasites” and all work well in excess of their expected weekly hours because they like their job, they NEED their job and they’re commited to what we do. We have NO baseline funding so anything we get is gained through competitive funding process against academics and professional research groups from every country in Europe. I have heard several ministers refer to our work as a pillar of the knowledge economy.
Our pay is not wild and we don’t get things like bonuses, share options or other private sector perks. Private sector workers have conveniently forgotten about these former benefits over the past few months. We regularly travel on the weekend. We don’t get overtime. We don’t have a “grade” and we’re not entitled to guaranteed grade increments on top of inflation. If this doesn’t seem like the public sector many of you love to hate then I’m sorry. Perhaps you should look for bogeymen elsewhere. We had one ace which was the entitlement to a defined benefit pension. However, even that was a bit odd as the ultimate aim of many of us is to setup a campus company.
Today the Taoiseach succinctly made the point to us that rather than punishing malfeasance by bankers. Rather than ending section 23 tax relief schemes. Rather than any other measure that might actually improve the economic situation he’d decided that all public sector workers, us included, were to be forced to pay an additional and substantial new income tax under another name. The second time in a few months a member of the government has invented a new term for taxation. It makes the late nights all worthwhile! Some of us have tried in the past to opt-out of the pensions scheme as we thought we’d reasonably manage our own over a long career. Ultimately, there’s little point if you plan to leave the public sector anyway. Yet, it’s nigh on impossible to opt out of the state pension scheme as my friend jonathan brazil will attest.
The Irish economy is a complete mess. All this measure will do is appease private sector employees who have taken pay cuts or are about to be let go. I sympathise with them but the obsession with blaming the public sector is unhealthy. The major public sector pay increases came at a time of seeming prosperity in the country where inflation had run rampant and pushed the price of an average Dublin semi to the same cost as a nice chateau in France. Thanks to the Irish Times we got a new comparison every week to make us feel bad. Private sector workers were happy with their bonuses then and they contributed to the lunatic property bubble that’s now tearing Irish society apart.
During recessions people always look for someone to blame. Foreigners, a cartel, a profession, a religion.. the list is endless & the targets are easy. Ireland has the public sector. It’s an easy target as there are endemic problems which need addressing such as the need for performance related pay and the disparity in terms between some fixed term and permanent public sector employees. These have been well covered elsewhere but the first step to recovery is admitting there’s a problem.
In typical Irish fashion the angry private sector mob can now look on and be comforted that someone else is getting screwed too. Is that not the history of this sorry sod? The ultimate result will be less spending, less consumption, less indirect tax revenue, higher personal taxes and lengthening dole queues as most of the retailers in the country go broke. This is not alarmist. It’s happening as I type. The only message that the present government have clearly sent to world leaders is “We don’t know what we’re doing, god/IMF help us”.
The message to the people is one of arrogant indifference. As I said in a previous post it’s about time that change came to Ireland. Economists like McWilliams, Hobbs & Aherne have pointed out that the government risks turning a recession into a depression by acting incorrectly and destroying public confidence. Mission accomplished!
Did it ever occur to BIFFOT that many younger public sector employees would actually be happy to opt out of a defined benefit pension scheme. How long can such a scheme continue? The main reason the defined benefit pension looked so friggin great is that the government SINGULARLY FAILED to implement an EU directive requiring them to safeguard employers pensions. This has recently been discussed in the wake of the Waterford Crystal collapse.
A good if pessimistic solution to surviving the current economic crisis has come from Eddie Hobbs. When asked what the youth of today should do he advised them to get the hell out of Ireland.
In a time of hardship the people of any country look to their leaders for statements of principle and solutions. Something to keep them going. Cowen is describing income tax increases as a “fightback by the economy”. He has no rational economic basis for describing it so. It won’t fix most operational problems of the public sector while hastening economic contraction. We need some real ideas for creating growth and stimulating the economy. Our banks may fail ANYWAY if consumer confidence is destroyed. Some of them are little more than financial rubbish bins at this stage.
Our most skilled knowledge economy workers will be the first to leave the sinking ship. Who should blame them? Look at what we’ve seen over the past few years. The never ending tribunals costing hundreds of millions to the tax payers to investigate corruption in public office. How we wish we had that 400+ million back now? A financial regulator with the lightest of touches. A cartel controlled Dublin property market. The price of houses soared and degraded the quality of life. All the while, we were told we’ve never had it so good. The celtic tiger was veneer through and through.
Sure there were real achievements. We shouldn’t overlook the excellent work we’ve done in getting FDI from foreign multinationals and building some decent indigenous industry. We got these on merit. Revisionism may suggest it was all tax but that’s not the case. The Irish are thought of as an inventive and dedicated bunch. At least we were until the recent financial scandals. Yet much of Irish business is now being exposed as the trading of phoney wealth amongst ourselves. This is not sustainable. Eddie Hobbs was just raising a valid point for Irish youth. Perhaps the real opportunities are elsewhere?
Not for the first time in Irish history a generation may leave because of the incompetence and corruption of their leaders…
It goes without saying that the views expressed here are my own and do not reflect the views of my employer any commercial entity I’m associated with. They do reflect a personal despair for the values of modern Irish life and those we have elected to legislate & manage our country.

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politics

Leadership

I’ve culled this from a recent post I made to the highly entertaining David McWilliams site. It’s perhaps misanthropic but an accurate reflection of my increasing frustration with Ireland.
The worldwide financial crisis merely reflects what we are rather than what we aspire to be. People are fundamentally limited in our viewpoints which leads to selfish and socially unwise behavior. We have some perspective but on the bell curve of social conscience I’m willing to believe that the middle bulge generally assume that if everyone looks after themselves then it’ll all work out. They believe in the equilibrium of an non-cooperative game without understanding that the timeframe for reaching a comfortable equilibrium could be long and the path arduous. Quick fix and laissez faire are not compatible.
In many respects all this talk of supermen is highly relevant. We don’t need someone with average intelligence or social conscience to help inspire the Irish people to be better than they really are. All the major religions come from powerful and charismatic figures who had markedly uncommon wisdom and presence. There are good and bad points to this, as lampooned in the LIfe of Brian. Holy gourd of jehovah anyone?
In seriousness the US are lucky. They’ve gotten a leader of formidable intelligence and powerful charisma who appears to have a genuine social conscience as evidenced by his decisions since graduating magna cum laude from Harvard Law school. Every top firm wanted the first black president of the Harvard Law Review as they recognised an innate brilliance as a litigator. He could have joined a major law firm but instead became a community organiser and civil rights lawyer. Does this sound like ANY of the people we’ve elected to run this country?
Largely we’ve elected mammon. Many Irish don’t want to be represnted by those who are smarter or better than themselves. Direct empathy with our problems is more important than solutions.
It’s difficult to point towards a single inspirational character in the dail. Eamonn Gilmore comes closest and he’s no Obama. As a nation we’ve only recent emerged from a haze of dogma induced superstition. That dogma took the form of civil war allegiances and religious beliefs but the narrowness of the argument and differences between ideologies only underlined how stagnant this country is. How entrenched in the politics of colonialism.
My experience of doing business in Ireland over the past few years is that if underhanded dealings and collusion were olympic sports we’d beat all comers. We conduct our dealings based on refutable conversations and handshakes. Self interest is put before decency, yet we’re shocked when our illusions are shattered. If you don’t believe so then look at the Flood and Morris tribunals. We elected a “Handshaker in Chief” in Bertie. There’s a tacit acceptance throughout Irish society of skull duggery and roguery that is holding us back. Irish society has more respect for cunning regardless of it’s underlying morality than it does for humanitarian concern or creative intelligence. The knowledge economy won’t be founded on ruthless cunning, although it has its place.
We need a hell of a leader to come along to lift us out of this mess. He/she has to overcome the desire for a quick economic fix. He must make an election about national rather than parishional issues and he must encourage the Irish people to adopt a more sophisticated altruistic view irrespective of colour, creed, etc.
All this in the confines of one of the most conservative and shallow political genepools in Europe.
With this mountain to climb to rule a boithrin of a country, If Obama had been born in Ireland I’m not sure he’d have gone into politics at all.

Categories
politics

Episode Nov IV – A New Hope

Now that Obama has been elected I can breathe easily again. The Republicans have been kicked out of the white house. They’ve lost the senate and the forces of darkness have been repelled. Just in case this blog is being read mistakenly by someone who wanted to put McCain or even worse Palin in power they should have a good look at the company they keep. Of course, they probably agree with some of this horseshit.
The hatred of the fascistic right for Obama is mind-blowing. He must be really on to something. Professional hate-monger Ann Coulter described an Obama victory by saying..

“I feel like we’re talking to the Germans after Hitler came to power.”

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Wow, it beggars belief.

Categories
politics

The Good Fianna Failer

Pardon the headline, he was with Fianna Fail but upon realising his goodness and moral standing he had the good sense to resign. Wicklow TD Joe Behan who has resigned from the party following the recent abolishment of the automatic entitlement to a medical card for the over 70s. The Greens (read ingratiating taxation apologists) are currently on the Right Hook suggesting that this seemed a reasonable way to reform an abused scheme. Who was doing the abusing? Well, both FF and the Greens are suggesting it was the doctors who used it as “easy money” with ever higher expenses being claimed so it obvously made sense to penalise the elderly. It’s like locking up homeowners when their houses are burgled. It’s tackling the wrong side of the problem.
The Greens are also saying the scheme has “now been shown to be unfair” and so needs a rethink. Do any of them own a friggin calculator? What kind of a lame-brained load of toss of an excuse is that? The unfairness of this scheme was obvious when it was announced yet the cabinet saw fit to vote for it. So FF hate the middle classes and the Greens just hate people, those pesky polluting organisms. As I pointed out in my last post there will be less people to worry about with fuel price increases and the withdrawal of tens of thousands of medical cards. If only this scheme could be implemented worldwide? Think of the reduction of carbon emissions!
If you can put up with 70 years of crap governance then a medical card is a small benefit and should be considered an automatic right. The “rich” don’t need to use a medical card as they have private health care in their old age. Michael O’ Leary pointed this out in his usual entertaining sytle on NewsTalk earlier today. Their health care costs rise however, I wonder why that is. Perhaps the problem is actually that age leads to a deterioration of health. Wow, I think I’m on to something here. We need to abolish old age instead.
I hope Noel Dempsey takes note (still clueless) who blathered on about the medical card reform targetting “the rich”. Do FF not know that their property developer and builder friends are the real rich as opposed to the embattled middle and upper middle classes they screwed over so comprehensively at the last budget.
As I’m listening the Minister for Hardship, Brian Lenihan, is now talking about “taking decisions for the good of the country. For the good of the country could they suspend ludicrous infrastructure projects like the Metro in Dublin? What economic growth will be produced by this? It’s only required because of a complete failure to implement decentralisation over a 15+ year period. How about a further tax increase for those earning over 250k/year? Just a percent but there are many such high earners and they can arguably afford it. Unless they fell for the same Ponzi-scheme property scam as the rest of us…
How about any incentive for creating jobs, like personal tax relief for shareholder/directors of companies which create new high-skills jobs in IT, biochem, pharma, financial services etc. I’ll suggest it again: remove employers PRSI. It’s a disincentive to hire. Apart from the R&D tax relief increase the budget was a tale of woe for industry, retail and most PAYE employees. Quite an achievement really.