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Irish economy shrinks 0.3% in 2013

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Eurozone member Ireland, which exited an international bailout programme at the end of last year, saw its economy shrink by 0.3 percent in 2013, official data showed on Thursday.

Gross domestic product dropped after a 2.3-percent contraction to output in the final quarter of last year compared with the previous three-month period, the Central Statistics Office said in a statement.

"Preliminary estimates indicate that GDP in volume terms decreased by 0.3 percent for the year 2013," the CSO said.

"On a seasonally adjusted basis ... GDP for the fourth quarter of 2013 declined by 2.3 percent compared with the previous quarter."

Industry made the most negative contribution to the fourth-quarter result, falling by 4.7 percent, the CSO added.

Output was hit also by a 10.5-percent decline to net exports during the final quarter of the year, largely owing to higher imports.

In December 2013, Ireland became the first of the rescued eurozone countries to exit its bailout programme following a period of state spending cuts and tax rises, but its economy remains fragile despite falling unemployment.

Ireland's unemployment rate sank to a near five-year low of 11.9 percent in February, official data revealed last week.

Dublin had turned to the International Monetary Fund and European Union in November 2010 for an 85-billion-euro ($118.6 billion) lifeline following a banking crash and one of history's worst housing bubbles.

After painful belt-tightening, Ireland is now returning unaided to the international lending markets -- while eurozone strugglers Greece, Portugal and Cyprus remain locked into the bailout process.

On Thursday, the Irish treasury said it had successfully placed its first issue of long-term debt since 2010.

The treasury said it had raised 1.0 billion euros with an issue of 10-year bonds at 2.967 percent, and that investors had made offers totalling 2.9 billion euros.

Eurozone member Ireland, which exited an international bailout programme at the end of last year, saw its economy shrink by 0.3 percent in 2013, official data showed on Thursday.

Gross domestic product dropped after a 2.3-percent contraction to output in the final quarter of last year compared with the previous three-month period, the Central Statistics Office said in a statement.

“Preliminary estimates indicate that GDP in volume terms decreased by 0.3 percent for the year 2013,” the CSO said.

“On a seasonally adjusted basis … GDP for the fourth quarter of 2013 declined by 2.3 percent compared with the previous quarter.”

Industry made the most negative contribution to the fourth-quarter result, falling by 4.7 percent, the CSO added.

Output was hit also by a 10.5-percent decline to net exports during the final quarter of the year, largely owing to higher imports.

In December 2013, Ireland became the first of the rescued eurozone countries to exit its bailout programme following a period of state spending cuts and tax rises, but its economy remains fragile despite falling unemployment.

Ireland’s unemployment rate sank to a near five-year low of 11.9 percent in February, official data revealed last week.

Dublin had turned to the International Monetary Fund and European Union in November 2010 for an 85-billion-euro ($118.6 billion) lifeline following a banking crash and one of history’s worst housing bubbles.

After painful belt-tightening, Ireland is now returning unaided to the international lending markets — while eurozone strugglers Greece, Portugal and Cyprus remain locked into the bailout process.

On Thursday, the Irish treasury said it had successfully placed its first issue of long-term debt since 2010.

The treasury said it had raised 1.0 billion euros with an issue of 10-year bonds at 2.967 percent, and that investors had made offers totalling 2.9 billion euros.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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