logo
It would be some irony if the two parts of Ireland taught the UK lessons in devolution

It would be some irony if the two parts of Ireland taught the UK lessons in devolution

Irish Times01-05-2025
Quality of life is much the same North and South, although we tend to arrive at our similar outcomes through different ways.
That is a rough summary of the first full research report from
the Shared Island Initiative
, launched by Taoiseach Micheál Martin on Monday.
Both parts of Ireland have similar figures on income inequality, for example, but
Northern Ireland
achieves this more through its benefit system and the Republic more through its tax system. Housing consumes around one-fifth of disposable income in both jurisdictions, representing a great cancelling out of multiple factors. Health services on either side of the Border deliver the same levels of primary and secondary care. However, unmet demand in the North is more about long waits, while in the South it is more about high costs.
Will there be a teacher's strike in the autumn?
Listen |
45:36
Headlines are made by dramatic differences, not similarities, on closer inspection, so the lack of interest in Monday's announcement is unsurprising. But the record of the Shared Island Initiative is that what starts off dry as dust and condemned by some nationalists for lacking ambition, can then slowly and subtly transform attitudes in ways nationalism has never managed.
READ MORE
When the initiative was established in 2020, it commissioned the Economic and Social Research Institute (ESRI) to examine policy differences and the potential for co-operation across the island. Monday's report is an overarching summary of the programme so far.
A step change in this work was promised in last November's Fianna Fáil manifesto and adopted in the Coalition's programme for government. It mandates commissioning 'a North-South statistical series and publication to provide comparable data on economic activity, public expenditure and wider social and economic measures, including education, housing and health outcomes'.
Monday's report is the start of this new era of authoritative, comparative data. How much authority it acquires remains to be seen – none of this is a precise science – but it has been given the imprimatur of the Taoiseach's office.
The stated purpose of the data is not to support any constitutional argument, heaven forbid. It serves two official objectives: learning from policy differences either side of the border; and analysing the extent and potential of cross-Border co-operation.
Policy differences are to be studied for useful insight, rather than with any political goal of harmonisation. The ESRI report explains that there is more to learn from your immediate neighbours simply because their experience is more likely to be relevant. It mentions comparative studies between 'the four parts of the UK' as an example.
When the United Kingdom embarked on devolution three decades ago, there were hopes it would function as a policy laboratory, with regions learning from each other's different approaches to practical problems. Instead, devolution has become a platform for constitutional arguments, while public services are neglected. The devolved administrations pay scant attention to each other and Westminster believes it has little to learn from any of them. It would be quite an achievement, and quite an irony, if both parts of Ireland did better than the UK at making the policy laboratory work.
The clearest lessons to emerge from the ESRI report are that Northern Ireland needs to improve its further education and training. Although children reach the end of school with similar skill levels North and South, too many northerners then leave education with few or no qualifications. Comparison with the Republic reveals the extent to which a handful of poor policy choices are throwing human potential away.
[
Shared Island: Cross-Border co-operation should be expanded, ESRI report concludes
Opens in new window
]
On cross-Border co-operation, the second subject of the report's analysis, the revelation is how little of it takes place. Collaboration on healthcare is mainly confined to specialist initiatives in Border areas. Just 0.6 per cent of students at southern universities are from the North, with a 2.4 per cent figure in the opposite direction.
Tourism and energy are the only sectors where all-Ireland co-operation has developed at a significant, strategic level, yet only tourism has the benefit of dedicated North-South structures under the Belfast Agreement. The all-Ireland energy market owes its success to private investment in a highly regulated market. There are other cases where regulation gets in the way, such as the taxation of cross-Border workers. So, although there is plenty of potential for further co-operation, it is not as straightforward as tends to be imagined, or as the Belfast Agreement may appear to envisage.
While that will hardly be news to any informed observer, they are now better informed with official facts and figures. Taking ownership of the facts away from unreliable partisans is how a dry report can begin to slowly and subtly transform attitudes. It is easier to have a serious debate on where Northern Ireland and the Republic are going when there is agreement on where they are today. Not that the Shared Island Initiative has any particular destination in mind, of course. Heaven forbid.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Amazon fiasco is bad news for Ireland Inc
Amazon fiasco is bad news for Ireland Inc

Irish Times

time2 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Amazon fiasco is bad news for Ireland Inc

Taoiseach Micheál Martin was quick to say he will 'delve into' the circumstances of Amazon scrapping plans for a bid industrial plant in Dublin. The tech behemoth cancelled the €300 million project because it could not secure a power supply on time. Finding out what happened should be no more difficult than arranging a phone call between the Taoiseach and Terence O'Rourke, chairman of the State-owned ESB since 2020. Martin might also make enquiries of Amazon, one of the biggest and most valued client companies of IDA Ireland, the inward investment agency. The prospect of 500 new jobs was lost when Amazon's cloud-computing arm, AWS, abandoned plans to build high-tech server racks at Ballycoolin. Such racks are a form of specialist shelving used in data centres to drive AI technology, a priority area for foreign direct investment strategists. [ Amazon scraps Dublin plant and hundreds of jobs over failure to secure power supply Opens in new window ] The loss of this individual project is bad enough, the reputational damage worse still. Whatever way you cut it, the signal has gone out in a very public way that the electricity network in certain parts of Dublin can't meet new industrial demand. This is on top of housing delivery being hampered by serious constraints in power and water networks. READ MORE No surprise, then, that the Government is redoubling efforts to spur infrastructure investment. Given rapid population and employment growth, the need is obvious. But a report from Minister for Public Expenditure Jack Chambers highlights how it can take seven years to develop electricity substations and a decade to build a small water treatment plant. This is extraordinary, although it hardly comes as news to the electricity, water or transport sectors. Nor indeed to people waiting for utility suppliers to deliver the goods. [ Slowing pace of capital project delivery has knock-on effects for Irish society Opens in new window ] The ESB has one job: to supply power to customers. Surging demand and consequent network pressures have been apparent for years, already prompting special measures to curtail new data centres. Still, AWS electricity demand at Ballycoolin would be nowhere near data-centre levels. This prompts obvious questions for Martin: Why was the ESB unable meet such demand? And what will it do to avoid any repeat of the situation?

Nearly one in five experienced income poverty between 2015 and 2023, study shows
Nearly one in five experienced income poverty between 2015 and 2023, study shows

Irish Independent

time2 hours ago

  • Irish Independent

Nearly one in five experienced income poverty between 2015 and 2023, study shows

A study by the Economic and Social Research Institute (ESRI) also found that almost one-fifth (18pc) experienced income poverty in at least one year between 2015 and 2023. While the percentage of those at risk of poverty has gradually declined, lone parent families, single people and older adults living alone experienced a post-Covid spike. The rate of people at risk of poverty declined from 16pc in 2016 to 11pc in 2023. However, 18pc of individuals experienced income poverty in at least one year during that time period. The at-risk-of-poverty rate is the percentage of people with a household income below 60pc of the national median income. Lone parent families, large families and households with a working-age adult with a disability are at the most risk of poverty and deprivation, the new research shows. Basic deprivation implies that individuals are living in households that cannot afford adequate food, clothing, heating, or an occasional meal or drink out with family and friends. An average of 33pc of children in lone-parent families are being persistently deprived, with 21pc of them found to be at risk of poverty between 2016 and 2023. 'The longer people stay in poverty, the harder it is for them to escape' Material deprivation, which is the inability to afford essential goods and services, increased from 14pc in 2021 to 17pc in 2023. Inflation and the economic cycle were cited as two of the main reasons for this. Between 2016 and 2023, 22pc of people experienced deprivation at least once in two consecutive years, and almost half of these were in persistent deprivation. Households in the northern and western regions, people living with low-educated or unemployed household heads, and workless households were significantly more likely to experience transient and persistent poverty and deprivation. The report said that timely adjustments to social welfare payments, including pensions, 'are critical to protect vulnerable groups from inflation and economic disruptions'. Bertrand Maitre, co-author of the report, said: 'Research shows that the longer people stay in poverty, the harder it is for them to escape. This highlights the urgent need to tackle persistent poverty and to design policies that protect the most vulnerable groups from falling into long-term poverty.' The study was published in partnership with the Department of Social Protection.

The Irish Times view on the Government VAT row: tensions ahead
The Irish Times view on the Government VAT row: tensions ahead

Irish Times

time12 hours ago

  • Irish Times

The Irish Times view on the Government VAT row: tensions ahead

With many Government ministers now scattered to the beaches and byways, attention to matters in Leinster House has turned briefly quiet. But the reverberations from a row over VAT on hospitality still linger, offering a taste of fractious budgetary debates to come in September. The flare-up, pitting Fianna Fáil against Fine Gael, may seem familiar. It echoes the tensions seen earlier this summer over third-level college fees and once again highlights the uneasy balance at the heart of the Coalition. The proposal to reduce the hospitality VAT rate to 9 per cent was a Fine Gael manifesto pledge that found its way, with caveats, into the Programme for Government. But enthusiasm for the measure is not universally shared. Simon Harris, eager to demonstrate economic support for small business and the regions, has championed the move. However, his party colleague, Minister for Finance Paschal Donohoe, was notably blunt in the Summer Economic Statement. The cut, he noted, would consume nearly two-thirds of the pot set aside for tax measures. READ MORE That alone was enough to raise eyebrows. More pointedly, Fianna Fáil's Minister of State Niall Collins described the proposal as an unnecessary concession to a 'price-gouging' industry. Fine Gael countered that hospitality is a major regional employer under pressure from rising costs. Both sides later sought to play down the public spat. Coalition tensions are nothing new, but the nature of this disagreement suggests tougher debates to come. While calling the 2026 budget a 'hairshirt' one would be absurd, it is clear nonetheless that the era of fiscal generosity is drawing to a close. Trade-offs are inevitable. One such compromise may involve delaying the reduction until mid-2026. That might provide enough breathing room for competing demands, though no one will be entirely satisfied. In the end, the episode may be remembered as a sideshow to more serious economic challenges. Still, it has cast a light on the limits of coalition unity in an era of fiscal tightening.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store