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Irish think worst yet to come for battered economy

Reuters    Translate This Article
2 October 2010

DUBLIN (Reuters) - Most Irish people think the worst is yet to come for their economy and only a minority think a change of government could improve the situation, a poll showed on Saturday.

Voters' scepticism about opposition parties' economic prowess is a small crumb of comfort for Prime Minister Brian Cowen, the most unpopular leader in modern Irish history, as he prepares to introduce years of savage budget cuts.

The Irish Times/Ipsos MRBI poll showed 70 percent of people think the worst is yet to come for Ireland, which has been transformed from the EU's once fastest-growing economy to a problem child by a disastrous property bubble, a banking crisis and a mountain of public debt.

The survey was carried out on Monday and Tuesday, two days before Cowen revealed the total cost of cleaning up years of reckless lending by the country's banks could top 50 billion euros (44 billion pounds) and meant years of austerity measures.

Cowen's parliamentary majority is on a knife edge but most analysts think the government will hold on until three by-elections are held in the first quarter of next year. If Cowen's party loses all three, as expected, a general election is likely.

Some 45 percent of respondents in the Irish Times poll said a new government would have no impact on the economic situation, 39 percent said a new administration would improve things and 6 percent said it would make things worse. Ten percent said they did not know.

A majority, 54 percent, said the government should stick to a target of 3 billion euros of new cuts in the 2011 budget while 26 percent said more was needed.

Cowen has already said the government will have to go deeper than 3 billion euros in next year's fiscal plan to help tackle the worst budget deficit in the EU.

(Reporting by Carmel Crimmins; editing by Andrew Roche)

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