ABSTRACT

This book provides a cogent summary of the economic history of the Irish Free State/Republic of Ireland. It takes the Irish story from the 1920s right through to the present, providing an excellent case study of one of many European states which obtained independence during and after the First World War. The book covers the transition to protectionism and import substitution between the 1930s and the 1950s and the second major transition to trade liberalisation from the 1960s. In a wider European context, the Irish experience since EEC entry in 1973 was the most extreme European example of the achievement of industrialisation through foreign direct investment. The eager adoption of successive governments in recent decades of a neo-liberal economic model, more particularly de-regulation in banking and construction, has recently led the Republic of Ireland to the most extreme economic crash of any western society since the Great Depression.

chapter |5 pages

Introduction

part |1 pages

Part I

chapter 1|17 pages

From dependent free state to EEC member-state

Economic policies 1922–73

chapter 2|20 pages

A new frontier

The EEC/EU and economic governance: 1973–2011

part |1 pages

Part II

chapter 3|22 pages

Nature’s bounty

Agriculture and natural resources

chapter 4|25 pages

Late industrialization

From import substitution to foreign direct investment

chapter 5|24 pages

From good haircuts to bad bankers

The services sector in the Irish economy

part |1 pages

Part III

chapter 8|24 pages

A European outlier?

Demography and the labour force