In this issue:
O’Connor calls for unity in relation to Croke Park proposals
SIPTU President expresses regret at death of Hugo Chavez
SIPTU members in Bus Éireann vote overwhelmingly to reject LRC proposals
BCD Travel employees working with Kerry Group vote for strike action
SIPTU members meet management over planned closure of MSD plant in Wicklow
SIPTU national officers to take pay cuts in line with LRC proposals
Youth workers in Dublin begin campaign to defend jobs and services
“Communities First” Campaign to Defend Jobs and Services
Rally for X case legalisation
Old Darnley Lodge sit-in to end on Friday
Galway school bus drivers’ dispute settled
SIPTU representatives support Cork and Wexford members protesting outside pharmacies
SIPTU Joint Labour Committee Submission
Public service achieves the 3% jobs target for people with disabilities for the first time
MANDATE Trade Union
Revised Croke Park proposals huge challenge to trade union movement
Why is there a sudden need for an additional one billion cut in Irish public sector pay?
Minister Creighton quizzed on UK Sterling Competitive Devaluation and Need for Eurobonds
Social Inclusion Forum 2013
Right to Work and Michigan Labour
A Site of Struggle: Organised Labour and Domestic Worker Organising in Mozambique
New abusive measure against one of the Cuban Five
Labour Women
International Women's Day
Fuel Poverty Conference
SIPTU Solidarity with Cuba Forum
The James Plunkett Short Story Award
Larkin Credit Union
Supporting Quality Campaign
SIPTU Basic English Scheme
No Mum Should Be Alone on Mother's Day
Travel Insurance
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Why is there a sudden need for an additional one billion cut in Irish public sector pay?
By Roland Erne

While nominal labour unit costs in Germany rose by 5.9 %, and 8.1 % in the UK during the last three years, Irish labour unit costs fell by 12.2 % during the same period due to the imposition of wage cuts (especially in the public sector) and a significant increase of the productivity of Irish employees. Compared to the Irish, across the entire EU only Latvian workers faced a bigger labour unit cost losses (-15 %) according to official EU statistics (European Commission 2012: 24).      

The Irish government implemented all austerity cutback demands set by the EU/ECB/IMF Troika without hesitation. In turn, Commission President Barroso (2013) celebrated Ireland at a recent conference of the Irish Business and Employers Confederation (IBEC) because the Irish case apparently “shows that the [Troika] programmes can work.” In recognition of these efforts – we were told by the Government a few weeks ago – the EU and the ECB accepted a restructuring of the Anglo Irish Bank debt which reduced Ireland’s short term liabilities by one billion euro.

So where is the sudden demand for an additional one billion euro cut of Irish public sector pay bill coming from? Why is the Government determined to break the Croke Park I agreement that was supposed to run until June 2014 and to take an additional billion out of the economy? The answer to this question is surprisingly simple. The Government and Troika underestimated the negative impact that austerity cutbacks have on the growth rate of the economy:

According to Olivier Blanchard, the fund’s [IMF’s] top economist, the impact of fiscal consolidation is “large, negative, and significant”. The size of this effect is bigger than the fund previously thought. “Fiscal multipliers”—the change in GDP growth that results from a change in the government’s structural budget deficit—were thought until recently to be 0.5. New IMF research now suggests a multiplier effect of 0.9-1.7 is more likely. So deficit reduction of one percentage point could knock up to 1.7 percentage points off growth (The Economist 2012).

Roland Erne is a SIPTU staff representative and Lecturer in International and Comparative Employment Relations at University College Dublin

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