European Commission releases €1bn to Ireland following review
The European Commission has cleared the release of €1bn to Ireland as part of the EU/IMF/ECB bailout loan programme following its seventh review.
This brings total bailout loans from the Commission to Ireland to €36.6bn and an additional €700m is also being loaned by Britain, Denmark and Sweden.
National Treasury Management Agency says “significant progress towards achieving sustainable market re-entry”
Ireland has made “significant progress towards achieving sustainable market re-entry,” the chief executive of the National Treasury Management Agency (NTMA) said today.
On Tuesday, the NTMA announced an auction of Treasury Bills (Bills) on Thursday 13 September 2012. The NTMA will offer €500m of Treasury Bills with a three-month maturity similar to the last Treasury Bills auction in July.
New figures show more growth
New figures show the economy expanded more than previously thought last year and we are closer to reaching the debt targets set out by the troika. This means that the budget deficit, as a percentage of economic output, is now smaller than once feared. But that won’t deter Finance Minister Michael Noonan from making cuts worth around E3.5bn in the next Budget.
Retail sector in “wretched” state
Reacting to the latest Retail Sales figures issued by the CSO today (Tuesday 28th August), showing an annual decrease of 1.5%, ISME, the Irish Small and Medium Enterprises Association, described the retail sector as wretched, outlining that thousands of jobs will continue to be at risk for the foreseeable future unless the Government intervenes to address issues impacting on the sector, particularly the rising costs to business.
World economies face slowdown as euro zone flounders, China brakes, US may slow
The euro zone is on track for its second recession in three years and China’s once booming manufacturing sector is contracting at a faster pace than previously reported. The US is also seen as struggling to keep up its pace of growth. Business surveys released today painted a global picture of economic malaise from Beijing to Berlin.