Osborne Pledges $10.5 Billion Assistance To Ireland
Brussels, Belgium (AHN) – Despite Ireland’s insistence that Dublin still has sufficient cash and does not need an international bailout now, British Chancellor George Osborne pledged Wednesday to provide Ireland with $10.5 billion (GBP7 billion) in assistance.
Ireland is a part of the United Kingdom, but Britain has other reasons to extend a helping hand to Dublin. The biggest reason is the $210 billion (GBP140 billion) exposure of British banks to Ireland. Data from the Bank for International Settlements showed that Britain stands to lose the most if the Irish economy went down because British financial institutions have the largest exposure to the Irish government, residents and businesses.
The Royal Bank of Scotland alone has a minimum $75 billion (GBP50 billion) in outstanding loans to Ireland.
Notwithstanding Ireland’s intransigence for fear of losing economic sovereignty and being forced to increase its 12.5 percent corporate tax rate, financial experts from the European Commission and the International Monetary Fund were arriving in Dublin Thursday to start discussions for a bailout. The arrival of the experts has somewhat calmed global stock markets.
Osborne admitted that aside from Ireland being Britain’s closest neighbor, it is in the interest of the British financial industry that stability be brought back to the region. Opposition MPs, however, criticized London’s bailout offer.
The extent of Irish banks’ financial hemorrhage will be known Friday when the Allied Irish Bank discloses the level of its losses and size of withdrawals from individual and corporate depositors.
Beleaguered Irish Finance Minister Brian Lenihan also acknowledged for the first time that as a small nation and part of the 16-nation eurozone, Ireland’s banking problems are too large and Europe has extended a helping hand to Dublin to resolve the financial crisis before it becomes too late.
View full post on All Stories
