2,799 research outputs found
When Unemployment Disappears: Ireland in the 1990s
This paper examines the behaviour of the Irish labour market during the 1990s. Over the course of the decade the Irish unemployment rate fell from the highest to the lowest in the EU. Over the same period a record number of jobs was created and all the indicators suggest that full employment was achieved. The primary reason for this âemployment miracleâ was the output boom, which in turn may be attributed to Irelandâs âsuper competitivenessâ in the late 1990s. Several factors contributed to this â a low exchange rate, the inflow of FDI to high productivity sectors, and wage moderation following the return to centralised wage agreements in 1987. Labour market reforms, including a tightening of the social welfare regime and a switch of spending from income support to active labour market policies, played a positive role. The fact that unemployment has risen only slowly during the current downturn points to the lasting effect of these changes.
Well-being and Economic Conditions in Ireland
By European standards Ireland ranks high on many non-economic indicators of well-being. This paper explores how macroeconomic conditions have affected a range of these indicators. Time series data are used to explore the association between unemployment, inflation, and the level and growth rate of real income on the one hand and measures of subjective well-being and markers of mental health on the other. Over the longer term, 1975-2011, there was no upward trend in self-reported life satisfaction despite the secular improvement in living standards. While higher unemployment reduced life satisfaction over the first half of this period, its effect was weaker in later years. The rate of inflation has not had a significant effect on life satisfaction. There is no evidence that admission rates to psychiatric hospitals are affected by changes in economic conditions. However, higher unemployment is linked to higher suicide rates among younger males, although its effect appears to have weakened during the current recession. Finally, the recent rise in unemployment has had a much smaller impact on the birth rate than that due to the recession of the early 1980s. Overall, the impact of the current recession on the well-being indicators studied here has been surprisingly small.Well-being indicators, Mental health, Suicide, Birth rate, Unemployment, Inflation
Catching Up with the Leaders: The Irish Hare
macroeconomics, leaders, international, Ireland
The Effect of a Common Currency on Trade - Ireland before and after the Sterling Link
This paper uses the introduction of an exchange rate between Ireland and the UK in 1979 as a natural experiment to shed light on the effects of a common currency on the volume of international trade. No evidence is found from time series or panel regressions that the change of exchange rate regime had a significant effect on the pattern of Irish trade. This finding casts doubt on the belief that the European Economic and Monetary Union will have a major effect on the pattern of trade between participating countries.
SAFEGUARDING AMATEUR ATHLETES AN EXAMINATION OF PLAYER WELFARE AMONG SENIOR INTER-COUNTY GAELIC PLAYERS. RESEARCH SERIES NUMBER 99 December 2019
Following the publication of research into the commitments required of male
Gaelic players to play senior inter-county, and knock-on effects of inter-county
commitment (Kelly et al., 2018), the Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) and Gaelic
Players Association (GPA) established a working group to make an in-depth analysis
of the reportâs findings. One of the decisions taken by the working group was that
further research was required to examine a range of issues that emerged from the
original study. These included in particular: (i) the education and (ii) the
professional career experiences of senior inter-county players, (iii) their
engagement in risky behaviours (e.g. alcohol consumption), (iv) supplement usage,
(v) playersâ views on both provided and required supports, and (vi) what they would
change about their experience of playing inter-county and the inter-county set-up
POVERTY IN IRELAND: RESEARCH PRIORITIES. ESRI BROADSHEET No. 7, OCTOBER 1972
At an informal meeting of Directors of research institutes in
Ireland in February, I97z, the suggestion was made that the
ESRI should organise a conference on research priorities in
relation to poverty. The Directors were concerned that, despite
rapid economic growth in the i96os, signiifcant problems of
poverty remained. Moreover, the reduced economic growth
rates since I969, and the resulting increase in unemployment,
have intensi~ed concern about poverty and social deprivation.
The Directors" suggestion was also inspired by the Conference
on Poverty in Ireland held in Kilkenny in November, I97I under
the auspices of the Council for Social Welfare
Red Blood Cell Dynamics on Non-Uniform Grids using a Lattice Boltzmann Flux Solver and a Spring-Particle Red Blood Cell Model
The Computational Haemodynamics Research Group (CHRG) in Technological University Dublin is developing a computational ïŹuid dynamics (CFD) software package aimed speciïŹcally at physiologically-realistic modelling of blood ïŹow. A physiologically-realistic model of blood ïŹow involves calculating the deformation of individual red blood cells (RBCs) and the contribution of this deformation to the overall blood ïŹow. The CHRG has developed an enhanced spring-particle RBC structural model that is capable of modelling the full stomatocyte-discocyteechinocyte (SDE) transformation. This RBC model, incorporated into a ïŹuid dynamics solver, will provide a physiologically-realistic blood ïŹow model. In this work the overall plasma ïŹow is modelled using a novel technique: the lattice Boltzmann ïŹux solver (LBFS). This is an innovative approach to solving the NavierStokes (N-S) equations for ïŹuid ïŹow. It involves solving the macroscopic equations using the ïŹnite volume method (FVM) and calculating the ïŹux across the cell interfaces via a local reconstruction of the lattice Boltzmann equation (LBE). Fluidstruture interaction between the RBC and the plasma is captured by coupling the RBC solver to the LBFS via the immersed boundary method (IBM). Numerical experiments investigating RBC dynamics are performed using non-uniform grids and validated against existing experimental data in the literature. Finally all numerical solvers are developed using general purpose GPU programming (GPGPU) and this is shown to accelerate simulation runtimes signiïŹcantly
- âŠ