Tánaiste warns of risk of stagflation to Irish economy

Simon Harris is due to publish the Annual Progress Report on Tuesday.
Tánaiste warns of risk of stagflation to Irish economy

By Cillian Sherlock and Grainne Ni Aodha, Press Association

There is a risk of stagflation in the Irish economy, the Tánaiste has warned.

Simon Harris is due to publish the Annual Progress Report on Tuesday, which will include a range of forecasts on different scenarios based on potential impacts of the war in the Middle East.

Harris said the country’s growth forecast would actually have been upgraded if Iran had not been bombed.

 

“That does speak to the resilience of the Irish economy where growth is strong, there are more people in work than ever before,” he said, arriving at Government Buildings ahead of Cabinet on Tuesday morning.

“We’ve got to move beyond the lazy politics of suggesting that surplus is a dirty word or a derogatory term. Thank God we have a surplus in this country.”

Harris said there is a risk that inflation will rise to a level where the benefit of economic growth is not felt.

He said: “There’s a lot of risks at the moment and I suppose we’re trying to forecast and we’re trying to plan while grappling with external factors largely outside the control of this country.”

Jack Chambers speaking into a bank of microphones outside a building
Minister for Public Expenditure Jack Chambers will launch the report alongside Harris (Brian Lawless/PA)

Harris said Ireland is facing into the next period from a position of “real relative strength” and “fiscal resilience”, demonstrated by economic growth and high employment.

The Finance Minister said Ireland and Europe is “somewhat at the mercy” of decisions “taken by other people far away”, as he advocated for more sustainable energy use.

He said: “As we plan for the future, as we plan for the Budget, as we plan as a country, we’ve got to move the conversation beyond just what we do in the here and now around the energy crisis to how we move away from a reliance on fossil fuels.

“To break that link, we have to make sure that we don’t just talk about how we help people in the here and now, but we also talk about how we help people with their energy bills in a more sustainable fashion.

“How we help people get solar on the roof, how we help people replace windows and doors, make their own home warmer, make their own home cheaper to heat.”

“How also, through the Critical Infrastructure Bill, we accelerate the delivery of renewables.”

Harris is due to launch the economic forecasts with Public Expenditure Minister Jack Chambers around lunchtime.

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