Progressive-Economy@TASC
"The problem is unemployment - not the unemployed"
"The problem is unemployment - not the unemployed"

September 6th: New TASC figures show 77 per cent of survey respondents would prefer to work than stay at home for same pay

 

Responding to reports that those receiving unemployment assistance could be coerced into taking up “social employment” positions through the threat of losing income supports, TASC Head of Policy Sinéad Pentony said today making such schemes mandatory was unnecessary and would simply serve to stigmatise participants ...

 

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Stimulating Recovery pamphlet launched
Stimulating Recovery pamphlet launched

August 25th:  TASC today launched Stimulating Recovery, a pamphlet collating papers by London-based economic consultant Michael Burke, UCD Professor Ray Kinsella and TASC Head of Policy Sinéad Pentony at a recent seminar.  Stimulating Recovery is available digitally or as a PDF, and Sinéad Pentony's statement can be downloaded here.



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2010 Solidarity Factor issued: 9 out of 10 survey respondents believe government should take active steps to reduce income gaps
2010 Solidarity Factor issued: 9 out of 10 survey respondents believe government should take active steps to reduce income gaps

August 17th: Results also show that 16 per cent favour raising minimum wage, 29 per cent favour establishing maximum wage and 49 per cent favour combination of both approaches.

 

Commenting on the 2010 Solidarity Factor, incorporating the results of TASC’s 2010 Equality Survey, the equality think-tank’s Director, Paula Clancy, said today:

 

“There is now ample evidence to show that more equal societies do better across a range of outcomes. Equality is good for everyone in society – regardless of whether they are at the top or the bottom of the income ladder ...

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Life and Debt 2010: Financial Exclusion in the Age of NAMA
Life and Debt 2010: Financial Exclusion in the Age of NAMA

August 5th: TASC today published Life and Debt 2010: Financial Exclusion in the Age of NAMA.  This pamphlet was originally published in early 2009, based on papers delivered by Pauline Conroy (Ralaheen) and Caroline Corr (Combat Poverty) to a seminar on financial exclusion organised by TASC and the National Women's Council.  The papers have now been updated, and a summary of policy recommendations included ...

 

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TASC publishes discussion papers on strengthening public access to information
TASC publishes discussion papers on strengthening public access to information

July 29th: TASC today published two discussion papers The Role of Access to Information in Ireland's Democracy (download PDF here) and An Economic Argument for Stronger Freedom of Information Laws in Ireland (download PDF here). The papers, authored by TASC Policy Analyst Dr Nat O’Connor, form part of a project on Public Information, which will restate the case for strong laws to enforce the public’s right to know what government and public bodies are doing ...

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Don't waste this economic crisis - get involved in TASCNet!
Don't waste this economic crisis - get involved in TASCNet!

TASCNet is a new network of people interested in working with us to help transform Ireland. If you share our vision of a more equal and democratic society, and would like to make a positive contribution to realising that vision, then 'Get Involved' by joining the TASCNet programme  ...

 

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Website redevelopment
Website redevelopment

July 26th: We are currently redeveloping the TASC website to make it more informative and user-friendly.  The work will be completed on Friday, August 6th; in the meantime, we apologise to users of this site for any inconvenience experienced.



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Reduction in minimum wage would represent 'double strike' against economic recovery
Reduction in minimum wage would represent 'double strike' against economic recovery

July 20th: Speaking following a presentation by equality think-tank TASC on ‘The Minimum Wage’ to the Oireachtas Joint Committee on Enterprise, Trade and Employment, (presentation available for download here) TASC Director Paula Clancy said that any moves to reduce the minimum wage or JLC rates would represent what she termed a “double strike against economic recovery” ...

 

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Video of TASC Encounter with Emily O'Reilly now available
Video of TASC Encounter with Emily O'Reilly now available

July 19th: last week's TASC Encounter featured guest interviewer Mark Mortell in conversation with Ombudsman and Information Commissioner Emily O'Reilly.  A video of the event is now available for download here. Watch this space for news of the next TASC Encounter.



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TASC Presentation to National Pensions Framework Implementation Forum
TASC Presentation to National Pensions Framework Implementation Forum

July 15th: Speaking this afternoon following a presentation to the National Pensions Framework Implementation Forum, TASC Head of Policy Sinead Pentony said that, although TASC welcomed some elements of the National Pensions Framework, much work still needed to be done to ensure that workers could look forward to a secure income in retirement ...

 

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New thinkpiece uploaded: The Socio-Economic Realities of Mental Health
New thinkpiece uploaded: The Socio-Economic Realities of Mental Health

July 15: "An ever-growing body of research indicates that the failure to adequately tackle mental health issues could have potentially serious economic repercussions. Studies undertaken both internationally and within Ireland have revealed the importance of ensuring states pay attention to the mental health of their populations. At the same time, there has been an increasing awareness that in order to develop an effective approach to mental health, it is simply not enough to concentrate solely on medical solutions".

 

You can read the rest of the thinkpiece by Justin Frewen and Dr Anna Datta here, and a PDF is available for download here.



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2010 TASC Annual Lecture with Professor Kathleen Lynch: Q and A
2010 TASC Annual Lecture with Professor Kathleen Lynch: Q and A

July 9th 2010: The video of the Q&A session following the 2010 TASC Annual Lecture, delivered by Professor Kathleen Lynch, is now available here.  Our pic shows (l to r)  Professor John Horgan, who chaired the event, TASC Director Paula Clancy and Professor Kathleen Lynch.



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TASC publishes Submission to Financial Regulator on Corporate Governance in Financial Sector
TASC publishes Submission to Financial Regulator on Corporate Governance in Financial Sector

June 30th: TASC today published its Submission to the Financial Regulator relating to the Regulator’s Consultation Paper on corporate governance requirements in the financial sector. Click here to download a PDF of the submission, and here to read the statement issued by TASC Director Paula Clancy.  A digital version of the Submission is available here. See below the fold for the main requirements which TASC urges the Financial Regulator to include ...

 

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Emily O'Reilly to feature in next TASC Encounter
Emily O'Reilly to feature in next TASC Encounter

June 30th: TASC Encounters are a series of discussions featuring well known public figures and commentators. Our second TASC Encounter will take place on July 14th at 6.15 pm in the Royal Irish Academy (Dawson Street, Dublin 2). Emily O'Reilly will talk about her work as Ombudsman and Information Commissioner for the last seven years and will reflect on some of the issues that have arisen in areas such as accountability, freedom of information and good administration. Interviewer and chairperson for the evening will be communications consultant and Newstalk 106 presenter, Mark Mortell ...

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Video of 2010 TASC Annual Lecture now available
Video of 2010 TASC Annual Lecture now available

June 28th: Click here to watch the video of Professor Kathleen Lynch delivering the 2010 TASC Annual Lecture, From a Neo-Liberal to an Egalitarian State - Imagining a Different Future.



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From a Neo-Liberal to an Egalitarian State: Imagining a different Future
From a Neo-Liberal to an Egalitarian State: Imagining a different Future

June 18th: The 2010 TASC Annual Lecture, delivered by Professor Kathleen Lynch, is now available online.  Click here to download a PDF of 'From a Neo-Liberal to an Egalitarian State: Imagining a Different Future'.  The digital version is available here.



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FEPS/TASC Seminar - 'Stimulating Recovery'
FEPS/TASC Seminar - 'Stimulating Recovery'

June 10th: Speakers at a seminar organised by TASC and the Foundation for European Progressive Studies (FEPS) today emphasised the need for an investment strategy to grow the economy, create jobs and counter the current deflationary spiral. The emphasis was on ‘investment towards fiscal consolidation’, and the speakers presented a set of complementary arguments demonstrating that the Government’s fiscal policies have failed, are failing and will continue to fail. Our pic shows (l to r) Paul Sweeney (Chair, TASC Economists' Network), Sinéad Pentony (Head of Policy, TASC), Professor Ray Kinsella (UCD), Michael Burke (economic consultant, London).  The conclusion of Professor Kinsella's paper is available here, Sinéad Pentony's paper can be downloaded here and Michael Burke's paper is available here.



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Mutuals and alternative banking: A solution to the financial and credit crisis in Ireland?
Mutuals and alternative banking: A solution to the financial and credit crisis in Ireland?

June 1st: In a paper prepared for the Carnegie Trust's Commission of Inquiry into the Future of Civil Society in the UK and Ireland, Dr Jim Stewart - Senior Lecturer in Finance at TCD - argues that:

 

The banking and economic crisis has drawn attention to failures in many aspects of the current banking and financial system in Ireland. Alternative banking models such as mutually owned financial institutions can help provide part of the solution to the current crisis. One of the features of the current crisis is that most alternative banking institutions, both in Ireland and other countries, have suffered lower losses and required less state aid than publicly-quoted financial institutions. Yet in the debate on possible solutions to the banking crisis in Ireland, alternative banking models are rarely discussed.

 

The full paper is available for download here.



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New thinkpiece uploaded: Pauline Conroy on disability, difference and democracy
New thinkpiece uploaded: Pauline Conroy on disability, difference and democracy

May 25th: "Social, cultural and economic forces have functioned to block the achievement of a full citizenship status for people with disabilities. Among the obstacles are the scattered privatisation of service provision, a related lack of transparency in how public expenditure is actually incurred and a reluctance to cede the autonomy and independent living arrangements which people with disabilities want and expect as equal citizens". Read Pauline Conroy's thinkpiece on Disability, Difference and Democracy. Some Rights and Wrongs. (also available as PDF here).



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Mapping the Golden Circle
Mapping the Golden Circle

May 13th: A small number of interconnected businesspeople operated at the apex of Irish business during the boom years 2005-2007.
In a major new piece of research, Mapping the Golden Circle (digital version available here), equality think-tank TASC has revealed the extent of the network across 40 of Ireland’s top private companies and state-owned bodies in that period ...

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Failed Design? Ireland's Finance Acts and their Role in the Crisis
Failed Design? Ireland's Finance Acts and their Role in the Crisis

May 5th: TASC this morning launched Failed Design?  Ireland's Finance Acts and their Role in the Crisis.  A copy of the document is available for download here (digital version available here), and the accompanying statement is available here.  Following a presentation by TASC Head of Policy Sinead Pentony and Policy Analyst Nat O'Connor, Fr Sean Healy of Social Justice Ireland gave a response to the document ...

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TASC launches briefing on restaurant wages
TASC launches briefing on restaurant wages

May 3rd: The equality think tank TASC today launched A Square Deal: The Real Cost of Making a Meal in the Restaurant Sector. The research briefing tests the analysis advanced earlier this year by the Restaurant Association of Ireland, which has sought a reduction in the JLC pay scale governing workers ...

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Pensions: Debating the issues
Pensions: Debating the issues

April 21st: Following last month's publication of the National Pensions Framework, yesterday saw a lively debate showcasing very different views on the future of Ireland's pension system, chaired by Pensions Ombudsman Paul Kenny.  Much of the debate focussed on the contentious issue of tax reliefs ....

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Employer contributions for executive pensions 46 times more than for other employees
Employer contributions for executive pensions 46 times more than for other employees

April 13th: According to new research published by the TCD Pension Policy Research Group, the average annual employer pension contribution in 2008 for executive directors in large publicly quoted Irish companies amounted to nearly 46 times (€124,000 versus €2,700) more than for other covered employees ...

 


 

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New thinkpieces uploaded
New thinkpieces uploaded

March 26th:  Two new thinkpieces are now available on the TASC website. A Crisis of Ethics: Moral Hazard and Banking Regulation in Ireland by Dr. Damian Tobin of the University of London addresses the issues of moral hazard, ethics and behaviour in banking regulation in terms of the recent domestic banking crisis (PDF available here).  Meanwhile, Nigel Ryan asks Why are most of the best jobs on Irish radio and TV still the preserve of men? (PFD available here).



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TASC Encounter redux: Q and A
TASC Encounter redux: Q and A

March 16th:  It was a while in the editing, but we now have the Q&A session following the TASC Encounter between Mark Mortell and Fintan O'Toole available on video (below the fold) ...

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'All the wrong options have been pursued'
'All the wrong options have been pursued'

March 8th 2009: 28 economists, social scientists and economic analysts have written an open letter, published in today’s Irish Times, arguing that the Government's economic strategy is failing, and warning that the current approach of spending cuts combined with tax increases on low and average income earners will bring about a low-growth, high-debt future ...

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Pensions Framework Document: supplementary pension must be state-led and guaranteed, says TASC
Pensions Framework Document: supplementary pension must be state-led and guaranteed, says TASC

March 4th 2010: Issuing TASC’s response to the Pensions Framework Document launched yesterday, Head of Policy Sinéad Pentony said that the proposals provided a positive basis on which to move forward. However, she stressed that the proposed supplementary pension should be fully administered, funded and delivered through the social insurance system, rather than through the private pension sector ...

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TASC Encounter between Fintan O'Toole and Mark Mortell
TASC Encounter between Fintan O'Toole and Mark Mortell

February 25th: The Royal Irish Academy was packed last night for the first in a series of TASC Encounters.  Well-known communications consultant and broadcaster Mark Mortell 'interviewed' Irish Times journalist and author Fintan O'Toole about the issues raised in Fintan's recent book, Ship of Fools. The discussion was followed by a lively Q&A session - and the debate continued over a glass of wine.  Read on below the fold to see the video - and watch this space for news of further TASC Encounters ...

 

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TASC calls for tax breaks to be cut
TASC calls for tax breaks to be cut

December 3rd 2009: In its Pre-Budget Statement issued today, TASC estimated that tax breaks will cost an estimated €7.4 billion in 2009, and said that an overhaul of tax breaks could contribute significantly to the €4 billion cuts being sought by the Government in Budget 2010 ...

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Where do we all fit in the H.E.A.P.?
Where do we all fit in the H.E.A.P.?

November 18th: Together with the Irish Congress of Trade Unions, TASC today launched the Hierarchy of Earnings, Attributes and Privilege (H.E.A.P.) report, designed to present the facts about income inequality in Ireland in an accessible form. The report – which was authored by NUIG academics Professor Terrence McDonough and Jason Loughrey – comprises a poster illustrating the numbers of households at different income levels, broken down by occupational category and household type, together with an explanatory booklet (PDF available here) ...

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TALKING ABOUT TASC

"The members of TASC are a significant and valuable group of critical scholars, committed to intellectual rigour and emancipatory politics" - Michael D. Higgins TD


"TASC challenges the existing consensus and offers new thinking and fresh ideas" - Fintan O'Toole

ABOUT TASC

TASC is an independent think-tank dedicated to combating Ireland’s high level of economic inequality and ensuring that public policy has equality at its core. 

Click here to read more.

THE TASC BLOG

Tired of reading the same commentators toeing the same economic line?

 

Read progressive-economy@TASC for an alternative take - and join the debate!

CONSULT TASC

TASC provides research consultancy services in a range of policy areas, and is also happy to enter research partnerships with like-minded organisations.

 

For further information contact Paula Clancy, Director

Subscribe to Updates
TASC ECONOMISTS' NETWORK

Click here for a full list of the TASC Economists' Network - and here to read what some of them are saying on Progressive-Economy@TASC.


TAX BREAKS

TASC estimates that tax breaks will cost around €7.4 billion in 2009.  Click here to read an overview, and here to read more about just one tax break - that for landlords, which will cost around the same in 2010 as the saving to the Exchequer from cutting Social Welfare rates.


PENSIONS

choosing futureTASC believes that, instead of a risky system of private pension provision dependent on equity markets and incentivised by tax reliefs, the existing Social Welfare pension – on which most people rely for their retirement income – should be increased and universalised. TASC also argues that a mandatory earnings-related social insurance-based second tier pension should be introduced.


Click here to find out more about TASC's pension policy.


THE SOLIDARITY FACTOR: WHAT TASC SURVEYS SHOW

the solidarity factor

Did you know that one in 9 people believe the Government should take active steps to reduce the gap between high and low earners? And that nearly fifty per cent believe those 'active steps' should involve some combination of increasing the minimum wage and setting a maximum wage?

 

Click here to read the results of TASC's 2010 Equality Survey, published as The Solidarity Factor, and   here for the 2009 results.


FEATURED THINKPIECE

thinker2"Social, cultural and economic forces have functioned to block the achievement of a full citizenship status for people with disabilities".  Read Dr Pauline Conroy's thinkpiece on Disability, Difference and Democracy.