Advanced search
Most relevant results are first | Show most recent results first | Show use by person

Results 1-20 of 4,997 for esri

Written Answers — Department of Finance: Departmental Reports (20 Sep 2023)

Michael McGrath: ... Total Cost (Ex VAT) Published Date reports yet to be released provided to Minister Modelling of the multinational sector Joint project with ESRI €62,310 Yes N/A Capital buffers Joint project with ESRI €18,434 Yes N/A Recovery...

Committee of Inquiry into the Banking Crisis: Context Phase (11 Feb 2015) See 8 other results from this debate

Professor John FitzGerald: No. Anything I did, I did as John FitzGerald for the ESRI. If people approached me, they did it because I was in the ESRI. In most cases, it was much simpler if they paid the ESRI directly rather than pay me and I having to transfer that. I work for the ESRI and that is it.

Ceisteanna ó Cheannairí - Leaders' Questions (17 May 2023)

Simon Harris: Sinn Féin comes in here on a very regular basis and asks if we have seen the latest ESRI report. It regularly asks Ministers if they have seen what the ESRI said. We could probably paper the walls of this Chamber with ESRI reports Sinn Féin would like us to implement. Has Sinn Féin seen what the energy economist in the ESRI, Muireann Lynch, said only two weeks ago about the...

Committee on Arrangements for Budgetary Scrutiny: Engagement with Economic and Social Research Institute (22 Jun 2016) See 3 other results from this debate

Stephen Donnelly: I thank Professor Barrett for his statement and for his time. He has laid out some of the technical capacity and the two models that the ESRI develops and maintains. Over the past five years I have contacted the ESRI many times seeking budgetary analysis and information on things like distributive analysis. I have used such analysis, as have many other Members, to look at the regressive or...

Committee of Inquiry into the Banking Crisis: Nexus Phase (10 Jun 2015)

Sean Barrett: The phone call to the ESRI about the Alan Barrett article. Soon afterwards, as you know, all the independent articles were dropped from the quarterly economic commentary, it just became an in-house ESRI thing. Were those events connected? Was the ESRI worried that it was annoying the Central Bank?

Leaders' Questions (18 Nov 2015)

Enda Kenny: The Government commissioned the ESRI to carry out a report on the costings in respect of the universal health insurance model put forward in its programme for Government. The Government has taken into account the findings of the ESRI report and will not implement the findings of the report in respect of this particular model given the costings and the levy which would be imposed on people. ...

Written Answers — Department of Health: Universal Health Insurance (24 Nov 2015)

Leo Varadkar: The report by the Economic and Social Research Institute (ESRI), An examination of the potential costs of Universal Health Insurance in Ireland, ESRI Research Series Number 5, (September, 2015) was undertaken as part of a three-year Research Programme on Healthcare Reform agreed between the ESRI and the Department of Health. The agreed average annual cost of this programme, which aims to...

Joint Oireachtas Committee on Climate Action: Carbon Tax: Discussion (25 Sep 2019)

Mr. Robert Deegan: We would suggest that the extent of fuel poverty was covered by the ESRI study, although I do not know if the ESRI wants to say anything on that. It used a similar methodology to that which was used in the 2016 study so it used the current measure of fuel poverty, and that was published in the ESRI report of June.

Written Answers — Economic Competitiveness: Economic Competitiveness (28 Feb 2006) See 1 other result from this answer

Brian Cowen: The ESRI published its most recent Quarterly Economic Commentary in January 2006. The ESRI is forecasting economic growth this year of 4.7% in GDP terms, and 4.8% in GNP terms. It is forecasting employment growth of 3.2% and an unemployment rate of 4.2%. These forecasts are broadly in line with my own Department's forecasts for 2006, which were published at budget time. On budget day, my...

Written Answers — Quarterly Economic Survey: Quarterly Economic Survey (1 Feb 2005) See 1 other result from this answer

Brian Cowen: The ESRI published its most recent quarterly economic commentary on 21 December 2004. The ESRI is forecasting economic growth this year of 5.0% in GDP terms, and 4.6% in GNP terms. It is forecasting employment growth of 2.0% and an unemployment rate of 4.3%. These forecasts are in line with my own Department's forecasts for 2005, which were published at budget time. On budget day, my...

Written Answers — Departmental Bodies: Departmental Bodies (15 Jun 2011)

Enda Kenny: The ESRI is a private limited company with charitable status – it is not publicly owned. It is an independent body which operates in a commercial environment. Therefore I have no policy or administrative responsibility for the ESRI. Whilst the Department of Finance provides the ESRI with Grant-in-Aid to cover the public interest aspects of their output, I understand that it is not the...

Written Answers — Department of Finance: Departmental Projects (23 Feb 2023)

Michael McGrath: ...and Pensions Ombudsman – Periodic Critical Review Q1 2023 A Cross Country Perspective on Irish Enterprise Investment: Do Fundamentals or Constraints Matter? Conducted by the ESRI. Q1 2023 The role of firm dynamism in productivity - joint research with ESRI Q1 2023 Flows into self-employment - joint research...

Select Committee on Housing, Planning and Local Government: Planning and Development Bill 2023: Committee Stage (Resumed) (6 Mar 2024)

Eoin Ó Broin: ...issue with the information as presented, but the Minister of State has not addressed my question, which related to section 19 specifically. Let me explain it with a little more clarity. When the ESRI did its study in 2019, which was based on the census figures from 2016, the terms of reference for that work were not decided by the ESRI, but by the Department. I know this because I have...

Seanad: Order of Business (12 Dec 2018)

Jerry Buttimer: First, the ESRI assessment is done by comparing the budget against a hypothetical wage-indexed budget. Second, the ESRI results show that social welfare increases have happened, pay restoration has begun and the amount of income in people's pockets has increased. In the aftermath of the budget, the ESRI publicly acknowledged that the full indexation of the budget to wage growth would cost...

Leaders' Questions (12 Dec 2013)

Eamon Gilmore: The ESRI published two reports yesterday although Deputy Donnelly referred to only one of them. Every year it publishes a report on what it terms the distributional impact of the budget measures, based on what it calls the Switch model. The ESRI also published a second report which studied the impact of social transfers on people at risk of poverty. In the report on the distributional...

Seanad: Order of Business (12 Jun 2012)

Aideen Hayden: I agree with Senator Conway in his sentiments about the ESRI report. I have concerns about the ESRI report and the entire premise of it. If some of the members of the ESRI had to live on what social welfare recipients get, they might take a different tack. We should be concerning ourselves with how we make life better and how we make it easier for persons to return to work, and that should...

Committee of Inquiry into the Banking Crisis: Nexus Phase (18 Jun 2015)

...on the macroeconomy, but didn't link across to the financial sector. And this has been a big challenge for economics in the intervening period, but how do you make those linkages across? The ESRI is currently at an advanced stage - we would have used the HERMES model, developed by the ESRI. The ESRI are currently at an advanced stage of developing a new model which is called COSMO. I...

Waste Management. (25 Feb 2010) See 1 other result from this debate

John Gormley: I can confirm that the principal author of the report, Dr. Dominic Hogg, author of the Eunomia report, has been in contact with the ESRI. He has compiled a very large response to the ESRI report, pointing out the major flaws contained in that report. I understand he will be making that information public. These are independent consultants, as are the ESRI and so I cannot force anybody to...

Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform: Macroeconomic Forecasting: Discussion with Department of Finance (8 Oct 2013)

Ciarán Lynch: ...the witnesses. While the committee may have had some reservations regarding the timing of the presentation, I believe the content is very detailed, and other members may be of the same view. The ESRI uses the HERMES models, but I would like to hear what models the Department uses. The ESRI was predicting an unemployment rate of 16% for 2014 about three years ago. That is not the case...

Select Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform, and Taoiseach: Estimates for Public Services 2021
Vote 11 - Office of the Minister for Public Expenditure and Reform (Revised)
Vote 12 - Superannuation and Retired Allowances (Revised)
Vote 14 - State Laboratory (Revised)
Vote 15 - Secret Service (Revised)
Vote 17 - Public Appointments Service (Revised)
Vote 18 - National Shared Services Office (Revised)
Vote 19 - Office of the Ombudsman (Revised)
Vote 39 - Office of Government Procurement (Revised)
Vote 43 - Office of the Chief Government Information Officer (Revised)
(2 Mar 2021)

Pearse Doherty: ...the Minister for Public Expenditure and Reform and his Department, which has a budget of €44.9 million, a staff complement of 161 and a grant to the Economic and Social Research Institute, ESRI, of €3 million for 2021. My question concerns the use of funding and, more importantly, the information that comes back from that type of research. The Minister will be aware that...

   Advanced search
Most relevant results are first | Show most recent results first | Show use by person