FEAR – Rules all

The Government doesn’t seem to be aware that the collapse of the global and national economies has a silver lining – Lisbon II is guaranteed a massive Yes vote.

Not only is Ireland a different country since the first referendum but the earth is a different planet and that planet is ruled by one emotion – FEAR.

All the Government has to say is – If you vote No again the EU will cut us adrift in a world of financial chaos. That means we will be fully dependant on our own politicians to run our affairs – People will be tripping over themselves to vote Yes.

That doesn’t mean that the Government will be taking any chances and it will be interesting to see what further abuses of the democratic system they have in mind.

Declan Ganley of Libertas, who gave a fine interview on One to One on RTE the other night, will be a prime target.

He was also answering questions in front of the Oireachtas Committee on Ireland’s future in the EU where he was yet again attacked by the losers.

“The Treaty is dead, you lost, get over it, he told them.”

Warped understanding of democracy

Without question, Ireland is the most centrally controlled, secretive and corrupt country in the EU.

It is therefore hilarious to witness politicians, various commentators and a disturbing number of journalists attack those who ran campaigns opposing the Lisbon Treaty referendum on the basis that, somehow, they were acting undemocratically.

The reality is that it is the politicians and much of the media who pose a threat to democracy by their absolute refusal to accept the democratic will of the people.

Declan Ganley, in particular, has been singled out and portrayed as the Devil Incarnate himself if we are to believe what these so called defenders of democracy think.

At the weekend we saw these defenders of democracy ban Irish media from attending a press briefing given by the Czech president Vaclav Klaus and Declan Ganley.

There is no difference whatsoever between this act of media suppression and similar bans imposed by the former Soviet Union. Not a murmur of protest was heard from the National Union of Journalists.

Here’s how RTE reporter, Sean Whelan, presumably himself a member of the NUJ, reported this piece of state media censorship (Link not available).

“President Klaus gave a briefing to Czech journalists but Irish officials wouldn’t let the Irish media in. It’s unusual not to have media access to a visiting head of state but then it’s unusual for a visiting head of state to be opposed to the Lisbon Treaty.”

Whelan’s view (or perhaps the view of somebody higher up in RTEs news department) seems to be that only visiting heads of state that are in full agreement with government policies will be allowed full media exposure.

Dissenters will be strictly monitored and their views censured by government agents, just like they are in China and other communist countries.

Minister of State, Conor Lenihan is also very worried about the threat to democracy by people who take it into their heads to act democratically. Here’s what he had to say on Today FM yesterday.

“There is an issue around Lisbon that does affect our democracy in one very serious way.

What’s happening is that people who were part of the loose alliance of groups that opposed Lisbon are now being accorded the same status as for instance Lucinda (Creighton FG) and Alex (White Lab) here who are actually quite different, they’re elected representatives.

But one of the issues now is that even in media picking and choosing of panels they’re now being given equal status which I think is somewhat suspect.”

“But there’s a really profound issue here because the people and parties that supported Lisbon represent the democratic will of the people of Ireland yet now we have people who have never being elected, who don’t put themselves before the electorate, yet come out at the time of referendums and campaign.”

Ok, Conor Lenihan is not the brightest but even he should realise that it is the main political parties in the country with massive support from mainstream media that are challenging the democratic will of the people, not those who successfully campaigned for a No vote.

The show’s presenter, Sam Smyth, who I presume is also a member of the NUJ, made no challenge whatsoever to Lenihan’s claim that only elected politicians should be allowed to campaign on political matters.

Clearly, Smyth is a Yes man.

Copy to:

RTE News
NUJ
Dept. of Foreign Affairs
Sam Smyth
Conor Lenihan

NTPF rip off

Letter in yesterday’s Irish Times.

Madam,

The National Treatment Purchase Fund (NTPF) has a budget of of €100 million in taxpayers’ money for 2008.

According to the NTPF’s latest report, some 20,000 “in-patients” were treated in 2007 at a cost of €92 million. The report does not provide precise details of the procedures performed or of their individual cost, but at least two-thirds of the procedures listed, such as endoscopy, tonsillectomy and dental extraction, would normally be carried out as day-case procedures, which are relatively inexpensive.

Some 10,000 out-patient consultations and some 2,000 MRI scans were also provided. Excluding the out-patients, the cost per in-patient treated was therefore €4,600. Four private hospitals shared €49 million of the fund.

The Mid-Western Regional Hospital complex in Limerick, which includes three hospitals – the Regional Hospital, the Regional Maternity Hospital and Croom Orthopaedic Hospital – has a budget of €195 million. In 2007, it treated 33,000 genuine in-patients, about 75 per cent of which were emergency cases, of all levels of complexity, and 19,000 day-case “in-patients”; 29,000 new out-patients were seen along with 109,000 review out-patients. Again excluding this massive out-patient activity, the cost per-inpatient treated was €3,750.

There is something radically wrong here. On the basis of these numbers and the case mix, the NTPF figures suggest a waste of, at the very minimum, €20 million.

Those who are committed to eroding our public hospital system in favour of creeping privatisation might take note.

Yours, etc,

Dr GERRY BURKE, Riverside Clinic, Steamboat Quay, Limerick.

The figures quoted in this letter are astonishing and outrageous. The NTPF was originally set up to treat seriously ill patients languishing on long waiting lists. The idea was to treat these patients outside the jurisdiction in order to relieve pressure on a creaking and inefficient health service.

But as always in Ireland the scheme has been corrupted. Here’s how it now works.

A consultant in a public hospital treating a public patient will be paid X amount for his work. If that patient is put on the NTPF list the consultant’s fee is considerably increased.

So, we can have a situation where a consultant, working in a public hospital paid for by the taxpayer, treats a patient in the morning and decides to put him on the NTPF list. The same consultant returns in the afternoon and because the patient is now on the NTPF list and therefore judged to be a private patient the consultant’s fee is multiplied.

As the above letter reveals many of the treatments are not of a serious nature and therefore should not qualify for NTPF. I suspect that the €20 million wastage mentioned is a fraction of the total cost to the long suffering taxpayer.

See here for more on this scandal.

Home Choice Loan scheme – It's all clear now

I wasn’t completely clear on the motives for the Government’s new Home Choice Loan scheme for first time buyers until I watched Prime Time last night.

There are at least 50,000 newly built houses lying empty in ghost estates across the country. Most of these houses will have been built by ‘Fianna Fail friendly’ developers who now find themselves unable to repay big bank loans – Time to call in some favours.

The new scheme will, in effect, transfer responsibility for repaying these loans from rich developers to poor taxpayers. This is obvious from the conditions laid down for applicants. Only new houses are included in the scheme. Applicants must be first time buyers who have been twice refused a mortgage from a bank or building society.

Effectively, the Government is creating its very own sub prime market by giving first time buyers, whose credit rating is so risky that regular lending agencies won’t touch them with a barge pole, up to 92% mortgages in a rapidly falling market. Inevitably, many will be unable to keep up payments and taxpayers will be forced to make good the losses.

Developers’ interests looked after, bankers’ interests looked after, taxpayer’s screwed.

It’s all clear now.

Waiting for visionary leadership

”We still call for political reform to get rid of the current political system plagued with corruption and abuse of power.”

(Irish Examiner).

No, unfortunately, it’s not a call by Irish citizens but citizens in Thailand where former Prime Minister, Thaksin Shinawatra has been sentenced to two years in jail for corruption.

The red hot anger demonstrated by the elderly over the medical card debacle is impressive but it is focused on a narrow sectional interest. Once the politicians satisfy their demands the anger will dissipate and it’s business as usual.

Real change will never happen in Ireland until the people en masse realise that the entire political and bureaucratic administration of the country is seriously dysfunctional. And that will never happen until we see the emergence of a visionary and courageous political leader.

It’s worth noting that Thailand, in common with most countries, has a raft of laws for dealing with political and business corruption. The system they use is also common in most countries – police, prosecution, courts and appropriate punishment.

No such system exists in Ireland.

An open letter to Minister for Finance

I received the following by email yesterday. I’ts an open letter to the Minister for Finance from Justine McCarthy. It’s worth reading.

Dear minister,

You told us not to be frightened. You said you would make the budget “as fair as possible”. You promised us you were going to challenge the vested interests and protect the vulnerable.

Did you mix the two of them up? Have the vested interests so roundly usurped the position of the vulnerable that you can no longer tell them apart?

If the budget is your answer to our problems, I can only say, on behalf of the old, the sick and the handicapped – to use a phrase your own party coined to maximum effect 21 years ago – thanks, but no thanks.

They say it’s an ill wind that doesn’t blow somebody some good. Tom Parlon was testament to that truism last Tuesday. After hearing you pledge eight different times in your Dáil speech that you were protecting the vulnerable, the OPW could have illuminated the Rock of Cashel with Parlon’s satisfied grin.

Now there’s a man who is delivering for his generous paymasters, having segued without statutory impedimentfrom managing the state’s property portfolio as junior finance minister to lobbying for the Construction Industry Federation. Parlon’s denies this is a blinding conflict of interest.

Minister, you gave the builders fillip upon financial fillip, using the first-time buyer as a fig-leaf. Their increased tax relief on mortgages, the lowering of stamp duty on commercial buildings, the tax reliefs for decontaminating docklands sites and the new restriction on Housing Finance Agency loans exclusively to new-builds amount to a sedative prescription for nervous property developers and speculators.

Next, you turned your attention to established homeowners and your motto was ‘if it moves, tax it’. It is no coincidence that the rich men who told you how to fashion the budget got their way while the elderly, the ill, the children and the socially marginalised got bled dry.

Seán Fitzpatrick, whose Anglo Irish Bank is a beneficiary of the citizens’ €480bn bank guarantee, said you should terminate universal state pensions. You did.

The financier Derek Quinlan, whose investment consortiums pushed development land and property prices to Monopoly levels during the boom times, said you should announce incentives to kick start the property sector. You did.

Tom Parlon told you to cut stamp duty on commercial buildings. You did.

And they are just the ones we know were bending your ear. You even indirectly acceded to the Small Firms Association’s callous demand that you cut the minimum wage by imposing the 1% levy without exception.

The demarcation between winners and losers that hallmarked the Celtic Tiger as indelibly as the gulf between rich and poor is more pronounced than ever after your budget. The ethic of the survival of the fittest continues to flourish.

It is bad enough that older people are left fearful and fretting about how they will manage to pay the doctor but worse is that ordinary decent citizens who have tried to live responsible lives have been made to feel they are a burden on their country.

An 83-year-old lady, who suffers from two chronic conditions and lives alone but whose income is a paltry sum above the eligibility threshold for the medical card, said: “I think they’re trying to kill us with the stress of it all. That way, they’ll save a few quid.”

It might sound melodramatic to you, minister, but the likelihood is that people will die avoidable deaths as a result of this budget. Not everyone will be lucky enough to live to regret it. Ireland already records a 21% surge in winter deaths; between 1,500 and 2,000 people, or virtually double the incidence they have in Finland.

Most of these deaths are caused by cardiovascular and respiratory illness. After your predecessor introduced the medical card for everyone over 70 in the 2001 budget, an academic study threw up some interesting observations.

One was that possession of a medical card prompted people who were previously reluctant to go to their GP to do so. The other was that it did not make those who had the card go to the doctor more frequently. In other words, they did not abuse the facility.

Unlike, say, members of the medical profession with whom your colleague, the minister for health, negotiated the financial terms of the scheme, conceding such lucrative terms as to make you deem it untenable. So the doctors creamed it, and the elderly got punished.

The medical card provided an entry to a comprehensive community healthcare network for older people who are often intimidated into passivity by fast-paced modernity. It was an encouragement to look after themselves; something invariably absent when someone lives alone and does not want to be a bother to anyone.

According to Age Action Ireland, the people they represent are expert at developing coping mechanisms to deal with their financial situation. They go to bed early and get up late to save money on light and heating. They eat less than they should. They wear inadequate clothing.

There are 121,000 pensioners residing on their own. The living-alone allowance was designed specifically to protect these people from dangerous isolation.

Do you know what the living alone allowance is, minister? It is €7.70 a week. It has not been increased by a minister for finance since 1996, throughout all those years of squandered slap-ourselves-on-the-back prosperity.

There are people in their 70s and their 80s and their 90s, living alone with a small independent income to supplement their state pension who will now pay the 1% emergency levy along with the increased tax on their savings and, having lost their medical card, will be subjected to the €100 A&E charge and the 20% rise in hospital bed fees.

If they have medical insurance, the cost of that will go up 6% because of the hike in hospital charges. If they are admitted to a nursing home for long-term care, the exchequer will take 15% of the price of their house and call it a “Fair Deal”. You know, sometimes it is quite a challenge to feel patriotic love for a country that would do this to its people.

Speaking of patriotism, let’s examine this cherished value. Ireland is supposed to be a republic. That means its principal ethos is equality but, in reality, we gave up pretending a long time ago.

Eight years from now, the state will celebrate the centenary of the Easter Rising when Pearse and his compatriots envisaged in the proclamation that all the children of the nation would be treated equally. I can only imagine how mortified our patriots must be in their graves.

One of the most shameful legacies of the Celtic Tiger is Ireland’s 22nd place ranking for child poverty of 26 of the world’s richest countries in an ESRI report from December 2006.

Your solution, minister, was to give no increase whatsoever in child benefit and, moreover, to abolish benefit for 18-year-olds, the age when teenagers are recognised as being most prone to poverty.

These decisions represent a fundamental and seminal shift in Ireland’s attitude to its once cherished children. People are already holding their breath for your announcement that the child benefit that remains is to be taxed.

Your budget was so packed with landmark departures from erstwhile core values that many of them have slipped through almost unheeded. Because of the collective anger over the treatment of older citizens, the total abandonment of the long-articulated commitment on maximum class sizes for primary school children has barely been mentioned. So too with the deferred implementation of the Education for Persons with Special Education Needs Act.

You might, minister, have hoped that, at this stage, nobody was going to notice the 1% cut you announced in funding for voluntary disability bodies. That, however, isn’t even the half of it.

The HSE already imposed a 1% funding cut on the same organisations this year. When the deficit naturally arising from inflation is added, the true loss to the disability sector is 4-6%.

One of the starkest consequences of your budget is that those who were already treated as voiceless in our society will now become invisible too. The erosion of the Equality Authority and the Combat Poverty Agency, among others, will exacerbate inequality in our already unconscionably unequal society.

Yet, while the establishment is content to dispense with egalitarianism, it cynically uses another pillar of republican ideology – namely, fraternity – as a rallying call.

If you thought the cabinet’s 10% pay cut would shame everyone into following suit, it’s not going to work. Hard lessons have been learned about political cynicism since last we were in this economic hole.

The last time a politician went on television and told us to tighten our belts his name was Charlie Haughey and, unknown to us then, he was living off the beneficence of rich and powerful men.

While he was shopping for monogrammed silk shirts in Paris, we were donning our hairshirts. The last leader of Fianna Fáil, Bertie Ahern, eulogised Haughey’s patriotism at his graveside. Since then, Ahern’s own relationship with his country has come under the microscope in Dublin Castle. So don’t blame the citizens, minister, if you find your call to patriotic duty goes unanswered.

The trust that made us so acquiescent in the 1980s no longer exists. Nor is it about to come rushing back in light of your disingenuous announcement that you and your cabinet colleagues are taking a 10% pay cut.

What you failed to mention was that your €12,000 unvouched expenses – your ‘walking around money’ is not included in that or that your fabulous pension entitlements will continue to be calculated on the basis of the salary you were being paid before the budget.

Perhaps if politicians had vowed to work harder (I mean more than the 90-odd days you turn up in the Dáil in a year), if Enda Kenny had promised to provide an effective opposition and if you had sought ways to make real, lasting economies in the Oireachtas, you might have got a more enthusiastic response to your green-flag clarion call.

Instead of TDs claiming expensive accommodation expenses for attending the Dáil, why not adopt the Swedish model by accommodating deputies and senators in a dedicated Oireachtas hostel. I’m sure one of your builder pals would have a convenient place to sell you at a reasonable price.

One other thing, minister: could you not think of any ways to make the very rich contribute their fair share, having benefited so handsomely from the good times? Why did you not, for instance, impose a 3% levy on people with income exceeding €300,000, 4% for income exceeding €400,000, and so on?

Did you consider reintroducing probate tax on wills worth over a specific value, something on a sliding scale that would reflect the emergence from the Celtic Tiger of an inheritance class? Did any of your advisers recommend closing the ‘Cinderella’ loophole in the tax residency law that deprives the exchequer of millions upon millions of euro?

It would appear not. The solution you came up with was a €10 airport departure tax for Joe Citizen while Mr Moneybags flies out free gratis in his private jet.

You will be relieved to know, minister, that the single most unedifying spectacle of the entire budget was the sight of your backbenchers leaping to their feet at the end of your budget speech to raucously cheer you to the rafters.

Unless they do not read newspapers and listen to radio and television, Fianna Fáil backbenchers will have known as well asthe rest of us that the abolition of the medical card for people over 70 was being floated well in advance of the budget. Not one of them said boo.

It was only when they realised their constituents’ anger might jeopardise the security of their Dáil seats that they manfully revolted. These were the same backbenchers who drooled over the show of macho defiance by your predecessor, Charlie McCreevy, when the ESRI tried to warn him in 2002 that fiscal caution was required. His way of thanking them was to ridicule them as “pinko-liberals”.

You know, minister, if we had seen true patriotism being respected in recent years, we might be better disposed to donning the green jersey. But what we saw was naked cynicism bolstering naked greed.

Last year when, again, the ESRI raised concerns about the direction of the economy, Bertie Ahern, as Taoiseach, made a novel suggestion of his own. He told the economists to go off and kill themselves.

Forgive me if I sound dispirited. I am.

Justine McCarthy

A flawed and deadly assumption

On 4th Oct last I wrote:

“There will be no sacking of senior bank management, there will be no appointment of outsiders to bank boards or if there is they will be given the job of making the coffee. There will be no financial cost to the banks; there will be no strings attached to the deal because it is the banks that are calling the shots.”

Here’s what happened.

No banker has been sacked.
No banker has had his pay reduced or capped.
No banker has suffered any restriction on bonuses or share options.
The committee set up to oversee bonuses and pay for bankers is a joke.
No independent outsiders are being appointed to bank boards. The observers being appointed will be chosen by the bankers from a panel approved by the Minister. These observers will have no power whatsoever; they are nothing more than window dressing.

Ireland is the only Western state that has failed to take effective action against the greedy and irresponsible bankers – Why?

Again, on 4th Oct I gave the answer:

“We at Public Inquiry have been shouting the message for years – Ireland is a corrupt state, the politicians do not work in the interests of the people, the civil servants for the most part serve the politicians and the Government, not the people. Banks and other big business do as they please with impunity; they are never, ever brought to account. How long will it take before the message gets through?”

Let me be even more precise. Instead of acting in the interests of the State and its people the Government, the regulators and the bankers are acting to protect the corrupt system of administration that has evolved in Ireland over recent decades.

This is not to say that any person involved in the present scandal are themselves corrupt individuals. It is to say that the actions of those involved are exactly what can be expected from those who are making decisions within a corrupt system.

This is why people like Shane Ross, David McWilliams and others always express puzzlement at the reaction of politicians and regulatory authorities to these scandals.

Their mindset includes an assumption that Ireland is just like any other any other Western democracy. They assume that the Government and regulatory authorities will always act in the best interests of the State and its people. This assumption is the fatal flaw in their reasoning.

During the period when we were waiting to see the details of the guarantee scheme that the Government and regulatory authorities were working out with the greedy and irresponsible bankers these financial experts expressed views on what action would or should be taken.

They are now expressing shock that all their predictions and analysis turned out to be wrong. They have expressed astonishment that the Government has, in effect, allowed the bankers off the hook.

Why is it that we here at Public Inquiry can make an accurate prediction of how the authorities are going to act based on our analysis of the situation and all the experts get it wrong? The answer is simple – We start off from the undeniable fact that the administration of Ireland is intrinsically corrupt.

Once this fact is accepted everything else falls into place. There will be no surprise when banks and other financial institutions are allowed to rob their customers, no surprise when state authorities fail to act against stock market fraudsters, no surprise when politicians who blatantly commit perjury are not made accountable.

Nothing will change in this country until the reality of what we are as a nation is accepted. No individual, organisation or state can begin to reform itself until the reality of their situation is faced and accepted, it is only when that point is reached that the rot can be cut out.

We are a long way from that place.

Copy to:
Senator Ross
Financial Regulator

No courage for the truth

Crooked politicians and dodgy businessmen are not the only ones who suffer from severe amnesia when it comes to accountability; journalists too, it seems are prone to the condition.

Jody Corcoran, writing in the Sunday Independent, uses a scatter gun to blame all and sundry for the mess we find ourselves in.

The present government, the Opposition, the Trades Unions, our flawed political system, an apathetic electorate, a grotesquely fattened public service, the HSE, the Mahon Tribunal, Charlie McCreevy and the OECD – All, that is, except Bertie Ahern.

Apparently, Ahern, who was the most powerful man in the country from 1997 to May of this year had no hand, act or part in the mess the country finds itself in. In a long and rambling article (over 2,000 words) Corcoran only mentions Ahern once in relation to benchmarking.

“Bertie Ahern did not want the hassle, so he set up the benchmarking body.”

That’s it, one sentence and the great Bertie is free of all responsibility.

Of course, the reason for this unbalanced and unprofessional article is simple. For years Corcoran has worshipped the ground that Ahern walked on. No matter how bizarre or pathetic the actions and words of his hero Bertie, Corcoran defended him to the last.

And, like his hero, Corcoran simply doesn’t have the courage to tell the truth.

Copy to:
Jody Corcoran

The nightmare facing Irish taxpayers

Understandably, all attention will be on today’s hair shirt budget but believe me it is a minor event in comparison to the following statement from the CEO of the Financial Regulator, Patrick Neary, to the Joint Oireachtas Committee on Economic Regulatory Affairs (RTE News, 1st report).

“The six Irish banks covered by the (guarantee) scheme have a total regulatory capital base of €42 billion. This figure takes account of provisions of €2.1 billion against impaired loans totally €3.6 billion. Speculative lending to construction and property development in Ireland amounts to €39.1 billion of which €24 billion is supported by additional collateral or alternative sources of cash flow and realisable security. This leaves a balance of €15 billion secured directly on the underlying property.”

This, in effect, means that the six banks in question are insolvent and will have to be bailed out by the taxpayer.

The €15 billion that Neary mentioned is only a minimum estimate of the massive bill facing Irish taxpayers. It is very likely that at least a portion of the €24 billion allegedly supported by ‘additional collateral or alternative sources of cash flow and realisable security’ will also prove to be lost money recklessly loaned out by greedy bankers.

Neither did Neary make any mention of taxpayer’s exposure as a result of the extended government guarantee to a number of non Irish banks last week.

Irish taxpayer’s could be facing a bill of between €20 and €25 billion.

Here’s what the so called Financial Regulator is going to do in response to the disaster.

“We will immediately recruit an additional 20 senior supervisory staff with banking experience to be placed on site (pun, I assume, not intended) in key banks to monitor developments. We are now requiring banks to set out new business plans focusing on the need to reduce their risk profile and how their models of banking are sustainable in the new environment. There will be enhanced reporting obligations in relation to capital, asset quality and individual large loans to supplement our daily liquidity reporting requirements.”

This, of course, is pure bullshit. What’s the point of requiring banks that are now insolvent because of their reckless greed to focus on their need to reduce risk?

It is, of course, no accident that Neary announced the full extent of the nightmare facing Irish taxpayers on hair shirt budget day. He’s using the event as a means of covering up his own incompetence.

But then again he’s only following the example of the Government who are hiding behind the global financial crisis to cover up the crucial part they played in allowing bankers and property speculators to destroy the economy.

Neary on Prime Time recently:

Doctors – Feeding in the gutter

Question – What do you get when you mix political stupidity, grasping greed and gross incompetence?

Answer – A ripped off taxpayer.

During a discussion on RTE (1st report, 2nd item), political correspondent for the Irish Times Stephen Collins revealed that doctors get €640 for every medical card patient over the age of 70. This is in stark contrast to the €180/200 they get for all other medical card patients. How did this outrageous situation come about?

In the 2000 budget the then Finance Minister Charlie McCreevy stupidly announced, without any consultation whatsoever, that all citizens over the age of 70 would be automatically entitled to a medical card.

Because of McCreevy’s stupidity in not negotiating first, the doctors were able to extract the enormous and immoral fee from incompetent civil servants. These civil servants are probably the same idiots who ‘negotiated’ the fees for tribunal lawyers.

As for the doctors? Well, there was a time when the medical profession was held in high esteem. Now, they’re down there, feeding in the gutter with priests, politicians, policemen, solicitors, estate agents and all the other so called pillars of society.