Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
998869 Journal of Financial Stability 2016 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

•EU-IMF adjustment programmes could have better risk-sharing designs.•Distributional effects of the unavoidable Irish fiscal adjustment were mitigated by policy.•Building and maintaining trust is crucial in financial crisis management and resolution.

The Irish economy's heavy pre-crisis dependence on a credit-fuelled property price and construction bubble meant that it suffered more financial instability than most countries in the downturn 2008–2012 with the failure of the bulk of the banking system, heavy official and private debt and a severe employment decline. Faced with a sudden stop of international market funding, the Irish government had recourse to an EU-IMF financial support programme at the end of 2010. Reviewing the broad parameters of the programme this paper argues that, while a sharp fiscal adjustment was necessary, adverse distributional consequences were partly mitigated by government. But the programme should have embodied better international risk-sharing through financial engineering. Ireland's experience in financial crisis management and crisis resolution points to the importance of building and maintaining trust.

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Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics, Econometrics and Finance (General)
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