Rss Feed Tweeter button Facebook button Delicious button

Skip to content

Wednesday, May 23rd 2012


Investing in Another, Better Future

What if we bought a modern telecommunications system, bringing Next Generation Broadband to every household and business in the country?

- What if we purchased a state-of-the-art waste and water system to secure an increasingly scarce resource?
- What if we provided one-on-one intensive tutorials for all those with literacy and numeracy problems that keep them from entering the workforce?
- What if we retrofitted every building with conservation deficiencies (some 800,000 or so) to reduce our reliance on fossil-fuel imports?
- What if we established a strategic investment bank to focus on specialist business and infrastructural investments?
- What if we established a public enterprise company that would oversee directly or through partnerships the exploitation of our natural resources in the public and environmental interest – especially the potentially rich ocean-floor deposits?
- What if we rolled out a national early childhood education and childcare network as a public service?

What if we implemented Fianna Fail’s Primary Care Strategy – 500 community medical centres throughout the country, one for every 10,000 people, providing free GP and related out-patient services (this strategy has been hanging around for a decade)?

You’d probably say – gee, that would be great. And you’d be right. These would increase our productivity, reduce inefficient spending (e.g. band-aiding 100-year water pipes), improve people’s work-skills, health and education, create thousands of jobs, promote enterprise start-ups and expansions; most of all, it would prepare us for a highly competitive future marketplace.

But the next thing you would say – how in the world could we afford all that? Well, we can. In fact, we can’t afford not to pursue these investments. Here’s how (and this is only one outline - there can be others and better ones).
We can access more than €100 billion for investment purposes (give or take a few billion) in combined public and private savings to purchase (invest in) the above assets. Of course, we wouldn’t need, nor would it be desirable to use all that money. A 5-year investment programme of between €15 and €20 billion would make up a relatively small proportion of the amount available to us. So what is that €100 billion made up of?

Public savings and cash stand at €20.3 billion in 2011 and is estimated to be €14.6 billion by 2015. This is made up of the discretionary portfolio of the National Pension Reserve Fund (that is, money not tied up in bank recapitalisation) along with Exchequer cash balances and other liquid assets.

There is the potential of an additional €3 billion available owing to reduced interest rates under the EU-IMF deal. If the Government has confidence in its own budgetary projections, this money will not be needed for deficit reduction purposes.

And then there’s the vast amount of private savings – in pension and insurance funds.

Daniel Gross of the Centre of European Policy Studies has found that Irish pension and insurance funds own approximately €100 billion in foreign assets – 25 percent in non-Irish Government debt (e.g. German Bunds, US Treasuries, etc.) with the remainder in foreign equities. A small proportion of this could be redirected into Irish infrastructural and enterprise investment.

Gross proposes that pension/insurance funds ‘should somehow be induced’ to invest in the Irish economy. This is a euphemism for ‘directed’ investment or financial repression. But given that pension funds have already been expressed interest in directing money into Irish investment, we would be pushing at an open door.

We could go further, as suggested here, and abolish the pension level and substitute a mandatory bond purchase from the pension/insurance funds on a long-term basis with interest rates tied to German or bail-out interest levels. For the funds, this would mean that they would have an asset on the book (whereas the current pension levy represents a drain on income) while earning interest each year.

For the contributors into the funds, it would be a bit of a boon. Pension funds especially seem to have a tough time earning returns. Over the last 10 years they have only managed an annual 1.1 percent return. But when you factor in inflation, the real returns have been negative. One can only guess how the latest dive on the equity markets will affect returns.

By investing into the Irish economy, the pension funds would be getting a much better return – from 2.5 percent (German levels) to 4 percent (bail-out levels). That would be a better performance than Conor McCabe’s ‘coked-up futures dealers on Wall Street’.

So a multi-billion, multi-annual investment programme is more than do-able. With half coming from public savings, we wouldn’t incur any extra borrowing costs on this (this is money we already have). The other half would make up less than 10 percent of what pension/insurance funds already invest in foreign assets.

In addition, much of this investment could come from via private sources. For instance, IBEC claims a Next Generation Broadband network would cost about €2.2 billion. A public enterprise company could be set up to roll this out but private investors, looking for a potentially positive long-term return, could also buy into the company with minority stakes. Ditto for specialist investment banks. There are other, strictly commercial, areas where we could get private investor buy-in.

The math looks good. The increase in our interest payments, depending on the amount of pension fund involvement, would amount to about €300 million a year. But each €1 billion in capital investment increases tax revenue by nearly €400 million in the first year alone, increase the GDP, and lowers public spending (though lower unemployment costs). The return would greatly exceed interest payments. Investment, therefore, not only increases growth, productivity and employment - it is a tool to repair public finances.

We need this investment to increase our competitiveness, to drive down unemployment, to repair our public finances.

Now what we need is the Government to grasp this opportunity. With austerity pulling us down a fiscal cul-de-sac, this programme can get us back on the high road of recovery.

Discussion

We welcome and encourage lively discussion from the public about articles on Irish Left Review. You can leave a comment using the form at the bottom of the page. Please read through the existing comments before posting your own.

  1. Comment by: Fergus Doherty

    Aug 9th 2011 at 14:08

    Michael,
    Far too sensible, so we can be sure the government of the RoI won’t do it! I’m sure everyone will have somthing to add to your list, but how about renewable energy? As well as supplying the RoI the UK would be gagging to buy “green” elelctricity from Ireland linked via a Eurogrid to meet its carbon output reduction promises.

    From the (pathetic) pundits in the media we now hear that the marvellous markets are both scared of government debt and of poor growth due to cuts in public spending! They don’t know what they want but we are getting the faint glimmers of realisation that swingeing cuts in public expenditure actually might not be a good thing. Will they learn in time?

Leave a Comment

(required)

(required, will not be published)

Sins of the Father

Sins of the Father:

Tracing the Decisions

That Shaped the Irish Economy,

by Conor McCabe

from The History Press

Now Available as an e-Book.

Subscribe by Email

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner



Irish Left Review on Facebook

Best of the Web

  • Enough wrong turns – opt for growth that will lead to quality jobs

    From the European Trade Union Confederation, responding to the informal summit on growth and austerity in Brussels today.

    Bernadette Ségol, ETUC general secretary, stated:

    “We are delighted with the recent interest in growth shown by European leaders. It is now obvious to all that austerity has been a failure. Let us be wary about this reversal in trend, however. Whereas everyone is talking about growth, proposals on how to stimulate growth are conflicting. The new advocates of growth are calling for growth through structural reforms. These reforms are just another word for more deregulation, more flexibility, fewer public services and in short, more insecurity. The growth we recommend is completely different. We want a recovery through investment, through wage rises. The European Central Bank must guarantee the common currency to restore growth and confidence. Finally, new sources of financing must be given serious consideration (tax on financial transactions, Eurobonds). Moreover the May 23rd summit must concentrate on creating sustainable employment. One of the ways to do so would be to approve an ambitious directive on energy efficiency with binding targets at the national and European levels.”

    No comments »
  • 97% Owned | Documentary on Money

    This looks good…

    When money drives almost all activity on the planet, it’s essential that we understand it. Yet simple questions often get overlooked - questions like:

    • where does money come from?
    • Who creates it?
    • Who decides how it gets used?
    • And what does that mean for the millions of ordinary people who suffer when money and finance breaks down?

    97% Owned is a new documentary that reveals how money is at the root of our current social and economic crisis. Featuring frank interviews and commentary from economists, campaigners and former bankers, it exposes the privatised, debt-based monetary system that gives banks the power to create money, shape the economy, cause crises and push house prices out of reach.

    Fact-based and clearly explained, in just 60 minutes it shows how the power to create money is the piece of the puzzle that economists were missing when they failed to predict the crisis.

    Produced by Queuepolitely and featuring Ben Dyson of Positive Money, Josh Ryan-Collins of The New Economics Foundation, Ann Pettifor, the “HBOS Whistleblower” Paul Moore, Simon Dixon of Bank to the Future and Sargon Nissan and Nick Dearden from the Jubliee Debt Campaign, this is the first documentary to tackle this issue from a UK-perspective, and can be watched online now.

    No comments »
  • Greek leftist brings message to Europe - “Let’s talk”

    “The first reason we are taking this trip is because we want the governments of these important European Union countries, France and Germany, to see what we stand for: what is being transmitted in Europe about us is not what we represent and want,” Tsipras told Reuters at the office of his SYRIZA party.

    He will not be meeting government officials, but will see fellow leftists in France and Germany, including former French presidential candidate Jean-Luc Melenchon and Klaus Ernst and Gregor Gysi of Germany’s The Left. He will hold news conferences in both capitals to get his message to a wider audience.

    “We are not at all an anti-European force. We are fighting to save social cohesion in Europe. We are maybe the most pro-European force in Europe, because its dominant powers will lead the union into instability and the euro zone to collapse if they insist on austerity,” he said.

    While he repeated his assertion that the terms of a 130 billion bailout agreement Greece signed with international lenders in March are now a “dead letter”, he said that if he comes to power he will seek a new policy mix to keep Greece in the euro.

    “Yes, we do want Europe’s support and funding, but we don’t want the money of European taxpayers to be wasted. Two bailouts in a row went into the dustbin, into a bottomless barrel. If this continues we would need a third package in six months. Europeans and their leaders must realise this,” he said.

    No comments »
  • Damien Dempsey calls for a No vote in the 31st of May Fiscal Compact Treaty Referendum

    No comments »
  • Mandate: Vote No to the Austerity Treaty

    No comments »
  • Étienne Balibar: ‘Ejecting Greece from the eurozone would be a moral failure for Europe’ - video

    French Marxist philosopher Étienne Balibar discusses European identity amid the financial crisis. Using ideas explored in his 2002 book Politics and the Other Scene, he argues that the continent still has some way to go to rid itself of xenophobia.

    Guardian Comment is Free Video Interview

    No comments »
  • Greece: when the lights go out

    Ireland is not Greece, Michael Noonan has said. The two countries are so far apart that the only thing that reaches us is feta for our fancy salads. Yet, Phil Hogan is planning to use details from electricity bills to go after those who haven’t paid their household charge, just like they tried in Greece. Let’s see how that goes…

    The desperate cunning scheme to get Greeks to pay property taxes by bundling them with electricity bills didn’t last long. You guessed it, people stopped paying their electricity bills and now it looks like the power company - which had to be bailed out last month - has stopped even trying to collect the levy.

    No comments »
  • Greece: heading for the exit? | Michael Roberts

    There is a way out of this. But it’s not on the basis of the pro-banking, pro-capitalist policies of the Euro leaders. Greek state finances would be fine if the richest Greeks paid taxes and did not spirit their money offshore to buy property in Kensington, London or Monaco, with the connivance of Greek banks and politicians granting their wealthy friends and multinationals all kinds of tax advantages and favours that have diluted tax revenues to the point where there is not enough in the kitty to maintain public services.  According to the Tax Justice Network, over a trillion dollars lie in offshore banks and companies in tax havens (not all Greek money of course).  Recover this money and governments could not only reduce their debts but pave the way for a lowering of taxes across the board to encourage investment and growth and increase spending power for the majority.

    Capital controls, public ownership of the banks and major corporate sectors to organise a plan for investment and growth: this is not just an alternative programme for Greece but for all of Europe.

    No comments »
  • On ABC Radio National, PM program: ‘Stupendously idiotic’ policies for Greece can’t work.

    Good answers….

    MARK COLVIN: Well it’s being imposed effectively from Germany, isn’t it? What are the chances that Germany is going to have any patience with a Greece which has failed to form a coalition, which is going into uncharted territories, as you say, with a new election?

    YANIS VAROUFAKIS: It’s like asking the question, what kind of patience am I going to have with gravity? It doesn’t matter.

    (sound of Mark Colvin laughing)

    Gravity is a law of nature and I cannot do anything about it. Similarly, Germany at some point, and I think that that point has already come, Germany will realise that it is absolutely impossible to, for a country like Greece, or for Spain for the matter, to exit this debt deflationary spiral, through cutting. This cannot be done even if every single Greek and Spaniard and Italian wants to do it.

    Even if God, his angels and, you know, every good man and woman on this planet wanted to implement this German prescription on the European periphery, it cannot be done for the same reasons why I can’t fly without an aeroplane.

    MARK COLVIN: So what’s the alternative? Where’s the money going to come from for pump priming?

    YANIS VAROUFAKIS: Well, I don’t think we should have pump priming. What I think we should have in Europe is a little modicum, tiny whiff of rationality.

    No comments »
  • Video: David Graeber and David Harvey in Conversation

    David Graeber and David Harvey discuss their new books, Debt: The First 5000 Years, and Rebel Cities, respectively.

    25 April 2012 at The CUNY Graduate Center

    No comments »

Link Archives »

Authors