Results 10,621-10,640 of 27,019 for speaker:Michael Noonan
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform: Stability Programme Update: Discussion with Minister for Finance (30 Apr 2013)
Michael Noonan: That is not an economic argument.
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform: Stability Programme Update: Discussion with Minister for Finance (30 Apr 2013)
Michael Noonan: Deputy Doherty is telling me the reality of where some people are at.
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform: Stability Programme Update: Discussion with Minister for Finance (30 Apr 2013)
Michael Noonan: Everybody agrees with that; it is a tautology. Anyone in politics knows what it means for real people and real families and what 14% unemployment means in communities throughout the country.
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform: Stability Programme Update: Discussion with Minister for Finance (30 Apr 2013)
Michael Noonan: That is what we are trying to fix. We got the mandate to fix it and, thus far, we are making significant progress in fixing it. Sinn Féin's alternative policies would make it worse.
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform: Stability Programme Update: Discussion with Minister for Finance (30 Apr 2013)
Michael Noonan: To return to Deputy Pearse Doherty's previous point, the Irish Fiscal Advisory Council recommends the full implementation of a correction of €5.1 billion, so there is no change of position in what it advises us to do. On the employment figure, it goes back to Deputy Michael McGrath's point. We are making a distinction between targets and forecasts, and what we have in here is a...
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform: Stability Programme Update: Discussion with Minister for Finance (30 Apr 2013)
Michael Noonan: The international situation has changed. To base arguments on the value of exports is to base it on something that can move around depending on demand in our international trading partners, the exchange rate with the US or the UK as the dollar or sterling goes up or down, and price adjustments. I said in my introductory remarks that exports have decreased this year and I have given reasons...
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform: Stability Programme Update: Discussion with Minister for Finance (30 Apr 2013)
Michael Noonan: Because when the economy picks up there will be a return of Irish people who went abroad in the very bad times and they will seek jobs here. If the Deputy looks at employment rates rather than unemployment rates he will get a better projection.
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform: Stability Programme Update: Discussion with Minister for Finance (30 Apr 2013)
Michael Noonan: Emigrants will also come in from other parts of Europe under the free movement of labour.
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform: Stability Programme Update: Discussion with Minister for Finance (30 Apr 2013)
Michael Noonan: The sale of State assets on the expenditure side is within the responsibility of the Minister for Public Expenditure and Reform, Deputy Howlin, so I am not the expert on it. His position is that in the course of this year, probably towards the back end of this year, the sale of that portion of Bord Gáis which he announced will be under way and completed, and two power stations abroad...
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform: Stability Programme Update: Discussion with Minister for Finance (30 Apr 2013)
Michael Noonan: Any year.
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform: Stability Programme Update: Discussion with Minister for Finance (30 Apr 2013)
Michael Noonan: When the sales I have indicated Deputy Howlin expects to make come through, the figures will be adjusted to allow for that.
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform: Stability Programme Update: Discussion with Minister for Finance (30 Apr 2013)
Michael Noonan: If we had followed the policies Deputy Boyd Barrett often proposed we would be like Greece before the change of government and our unemployment levels would probably be around 35% to 40%. If we adopted his policies now, we could reverse what is a good trajectory and fall back into that position. What is my basis for projecting modest growth? The IMF has done an evaluation and says emerging...
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform: Stability Programme Update: Discussion with Minister for Finance (30 Apr 2013)
Michael Noonan: This document will not be sent to the Commission until this debate is completed. We will send it then either tonight or tomorrow morning. We deliberately held it back from the Commission so we could have this debate. The committee is getting the first cut of this. I could not bring it to the committee until I cleared it with the Government. As the Deputy knows, the troika is in town and,...
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform: Stability Programme Update: Discussion with Minister for Finance (30 Apr 2013)
Michael Noonan: It depends on how the committee puts its time to use. If it does what the Deputy does, and has done in the Dáil on several occasions which is to have a wrangle about process rather than dealing with the document, then it is a waste of time.
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform: Stability Programme Update: Discussion with Minister for Finance (30 Apr 2013)
Michael Noonan: At the risk of offending the Deputy again, Deputies Michael McGrath and Pearse Doherty made substantial inputs but Deputy Donnelley began his with a series of accusations. If we have limited time, I would have thought the best approach was to use that limited time to the best effect possible. I do not know what the timetabling arrangements will be for next year. However, this is an initial...
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform: Stability Programme Update: Discussion with Minister for Finance (30 Apr 2013)
Michael Noonan: The rise in current expenditure is due to interest rate increases. The capital expenditure is in line with the trajectory over the multi-annual budgets. We always showed there was going to be an adjustment in the capital spend downward because we thought we could pick it up with off balance sheet expenditure through other sources such as the European Investment Bank.
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform: Stability Programme Update: Discussion with Minister for Finance (30 Apr 2013)
Michael Noonan: As I said, one of the principal reasons is interest rates. There was an interest rate holiday, cleverly negotiated by our predecessors, which kicked back in when it expired.
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform: Stability Programme Update: Discussion with Minister for Finance (30 Apr 2013)
Michael Noonan: The promissory note, with an interest rate holiday, is being replaced by Exchequer bonds on which interest is chargeable. The promissory note had this holiday, but I do not want to describe it in adverse terms; it was probably clever negotiation. However, this created a difficulty for the incoming Government, while it eased the problems of the outgoing Government in an election year and the...
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform: Stability Programme Update: Discussion with Minister for Finance (30 Apr 2013)
Michael Noonan: On the information Deputy Dara Murphy is seeking, the answer is complicated. If the Deputy looks at page 21 of the document, he will see the bar graphs and if he looks at the footnotes, they explain them. Effectively, our position was so good this year because once-off events contributed largely to our getting from the target of 8.6% imposed by the troika to 7.6%. These events will not be...
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform: Stability Programme Update: Discussion with Minister for Finance (30 Apr 2013)
Michael Noonan: No, that will kick in after 2019. The debt ratio must fall. We believe, based on the figures we have included, that GDP growth will do the heavy lifting. The strategy must be to keep expenditure below the growth rate in the economy. There will be a little head room for extra expenditure but not a lot, based on current growth projections. Obviously, if growth increases, we will have more...