Riots & unemployed young men. At a time of full employment. Tech & export weakness not (yet?) showing up in the jobs data
What will be the business and economic consequences of the Dublin riots?
There is often trouble when large pools of uneducated, unemployed young men are organised by old men - mad mullahs, army councils, Trump-style demagogues. The list of suspects is a long one. Whether that trouble fizzles out or leads to revolution depends on many things. Mostly how the rest of us react to far right (or left) neo-fascism.
Data continue to point to a very robust Irish labour market. Export (especially chemical & pharma) weakness has yet to lead to significant net job losses. Similarly, high profile layoffs in the tech sector are not showing up in the job stats. We are still short of workers. But not, apparently, rioters on scooters. Are they on benefits?
The UK’s Autumn Statement was a blast from the past. Transparent fiddling of the numbers, utterly unrealistic forecasts of fiscal austerity post-election and an unaffordable, unsustainable tax cut. Whoever wins the next election will have to reverse that tax cut and then some. Somebody needs a plan to get the UK economy going again.
Become a member at https://plus.acast.com/s/the-other-hand-with-jim.power-and-chris.johns.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free