Written answers

Tuesday, 27 May 2014

Photo of Joe HigginsJoe Higgins (Dublin West, Socialist Party)
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166. To ask the Minister for Finance the total amount of interest payments on the national debt for 2012, 2013 and projected for 2014; if he will break down the major entities in receipt of the interest by amount per entity. [23245/14]

Photo of Michael NoonanMichael Noonan (Limerick City, Fine Gael)
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National debt cash interest and General Government interest expenditure for the years 2012 to 2014 are set out in the following table.

National Debt Cash Interest-5,6797,316*7,752
€ million-201220132014**
Interest Expenditure (EDP_D41)-6,1357,6817,966

*Provisional unaudited outturn.

**April 2014 SPU forecasts.

A high level breakdown of interest payable by debt product is currently available for 2012 see table below. 

National Debt Cash Interest €million2012
Government Bonds4,075
EU/IMF Programme Funding 1,369
State Savings Schemes284
Short Term Debt39
Other42
Interest Receivable-129
Total 5,679

Rounding may affect totals.

It is the case that cash interest of just under €0.65 billion payable in 2013 on the floating rate bonds issued in 2013 to replace the IBRC Promissory Note was paid to the Central Bank of Ireland (CBI), as the holder of the floating rate bonds.

Photo of Joe HigginsJoe Higgins (Dublin West, Socialist Party)
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167. To ask the Minister for Finance the amount of interest on the national debt that is accounted for by the bailout of the banks in 2012, 2013 and projected for 2014. [23246/14]

Photo of Michael NoonanMichael Noonan (Limerick City, Fine Gael)
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The proceeds of all borrowing as well as revenues including tax and non-tax, and capital receipts are lodged to the Exchequer account to fund general expenditure. In general terms, no specific tranches of borrowing were undertaken solely for the purpose of recapitalising the banking sector. Therefore, that part of the debt interest bill that relates to general borrowing used to recapitalise the banks can only be estimated.

Capital injections into Irish banks from 2009 to 2011 can be separated into three categories. (1) Capital injections that were made under Ministerial direction by the NPRF Commission amount to €18.8 billion (net of the sale of Bank of Ireland preference shares in 2013). There is no interest cost associated with these payments as they did not require borrowing. (2) The promissory notes to IBRC and EBS added €30.85 billion to the general government debt, but not the national debt, in 2010. There was an interest holiday on the IBRC promissory note repayments in 2011 and 2012 and thus zero interest was payable for these years. In 2013 promissory note interest of €214 million was payable up to the date of IBRC's liquidation. General government interest is also payable on the EBS promissory note for all years with an average of €12 million payable between 2012 and 2014. Under the terms of the promissory note an annual payment €3.085 billion was to be made to the beneficiary banks. This payment was made in cash in 2011, and the IBRC element (€3.06 billion) was paid by way of a government bond in 2012. Both these payments impacted the national debt and incurred general government interest costs of approximately €0.3 billion in each of the years 2012 to 2014. The IBRC promissory notes were cancelled and replaced with a portfolio of eight floating rate Government bonds for a total amount of €25 billion. The bonds pay interest every six months (June and December) based on the six month Euribor interest rate plus an interest margin. The margin averages 2.63% across the eight issues. This gave rise to payments of €0.65 billion in 2013 and an estimated €0.8 billion in 2014. The Deputy should note that these payments contribute significantly to the surplus income of the Central Bank, up to 80% of which is paid to the Central Fund in the following year. (3) By the end of 2013, €10 billion (net of the sale of Bank of Ireland equity in 2011, the sale of Irish Life and the sale of contingent capital notes in 2013) is estimated to have been paid through direct payments from the Exchequer account to the banking sector.* Although no specific borrowing was made in the cases of interventions paid through the Exchequer, the impact can be estimated using the average rate of interest on government debt. The average rate of interest on general government debt for 2013 is given as 4% in my Department's Stability Programme Update, 2014 published last month. Using this interest rate to estimate the impact of injections into the banking sector from the Exchequer account gives estimated interest costs of €0.45 billion in 2012, €0.5 billion in 2013 and €0.4 billion in 2014.

*This figure excludes fees paid to the Minister under the Credit Institutions Financial Support and Eligible Liabilities Guarantee schemes amounting to €4.4 billion from 2008 to 2014.

Photo of Joe HigginsJoe Higgins (Dublin West, Socialist Party)
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168. To ask the Minister for Finance the total of the national debt; and the amount of the total debt accounted for by loans from the troika agencies. [23247/14]

Photo of Michael NoonanMichael Noonan (Limerick City, Fine Gael)
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General Government debt is the standard measure of Government debt used for comparative purposes throughout the European Union.  At the end of 2013, general Government debt stood at an estimated €202.9 billion or 123.7 per cent of GDP. A breakdown of the composition of general Government debt is available on page 17 of Ireland's Stability Programme April 2014 Update. The breakdown shows that of the €202.9 billion general government debt at end-2013, loans provided under the EU/IMF Programme accounted for just under €67 billion or one third of the overall total.   

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