Showing posts with label IMF Report on Ireland 2025. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IMF Report on Ireland 2025. Show all posts

IMF Report on Public Expenditure in Ireland 2025:

Economic Performance & Outlook

Ireland entered 2025 in a strong position, with Modified Gross National Income (GNI*) growing by 4% in 2024.

Growth supported by robust consumption and net exports, largely from foreign multinational enterprises (MNEs).

Inflation has fallen to around 1.3% in 2024, with core inflation stable near 2%.

The labour market is tight, but easing slightly; unemployment remains low (4.3%).


Risks & Vulnerabilities

High exposure to external trade and tax policy shocks due to reliance on a few large MNEs.

Geoeconomic fragmentation and global uncertainty pose significant downside risks.

Domestic bottlenecks include housing shortages and infrastructure gaps.


Fiscal Policy Recommendations

A broadly neutral fiscal stance with increased capital investment is recommended.

Suggested use of windfall corporate income tax (CIT) receipts (e.g., €14bn from CJEU Apple case) for non-recurring capital investment.

Tax base should be broadened to reduce reliance on volatile CIT revenue (e.g., enhance VAT, property, and PIT systems).

Consideration of a general government debt anchor (e.g., 40% of GNI*) and expenditure ceilings.


Financial & Macroprudential Policy

The financial sector is resilient, but vigilance is needed amid global uncertainty and rising risks in the non-bank sector.

Residential property prices continue to rise due to supply shortages; commercial real estate is weakening.

Banks remain sound with strong capital and liquidity buffers; mortgage market supported by fixed rates and household net wealth growth.


Structural Reforms & Competitiveness

Encourage deeper linkages between MNEs and domestic firms to boost innovation.

Address housing supply constraints by increasing productivity and regulatory efficiency in the construction sector.

Ireland is well-positioned to benefit from digitalisation and AI, but must manage associated risks.

Continued engagement in the EU is key to strengthening competitiveness and trade resilience.