Ireland benefits by over €40 billion from EU, says Tánaiste

Robert Troy says Ireland’s 26.3 per cent growth rate made a mockery of the State

Tánaiste Frances Fitzgerald said the 26.3% figure had been published by the CSO which was an independent agency and it had already made comments about the figure and the processes it intended to examine.Photograph: Cyril Byrne
Tánaiste Frances Fitzgerald said the 26.3% figure had been published by the CSO which was an independent agency and it had already made comments about the figure and the processes it intended to examine.Photograph: Cyril Byrne

The State is a net beneficiary in the order of over €40 billion from the European Union, Tánaiste Frances Fitzgerald has told the Dáil.

“There is ongoing economic growth and we have improvement in the taxes coming in,’’ she said.

Ms Fitzgerald was replying in the House on Thursday to Fianna Fáil TD Robert Troy who said Ireland's 26.3 per cent growth rate had made a mockery of the country.

Many people had not felt the benefit of any economic recovery, he added.

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He said the State now had a €280 million obligation on the back of a report which bore no relation to Ireland’s economic growth.

"Public services are stretched beyond all limits, and the country still has 2,100 children and their families without a home and staying in hostels,'' Mr Troy said.

“Our home help hours right across the country are being slashed and people with disability cannot get access to personal assistance.’’

Ms Fitzgerald said the figure had been published by the Central Statistics Office (CSO) which was an independent agency and it had already made comments about the figure and the processes it intended to examine.

There were exceptional factors which showed the difficulty in interpreting Irish macroeconomic data, “and there is further work to be done on the interpretation of those figures,’’ she said.

Ms Fitzgerald also said that the Government would not make economic policy on that basis and would use the more normal growth rates of 3.5 per cent to four per cent.

Mr Troy said he wanted to know what impact the €280 million obligation was going to have on the services for the people they represented in the Dáil.

Ms Fitzgerald said it would not have any impact. The economy was growing because the right decisions were made, and there was further investment in areas like the health service, she added.

Michael O'Regan

Michael O'Regan

Michael O’Regan is a former parliamentary correspondent of The Irish Times