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Ireland's industrial policy in an integrated global economy : the case of the Celtic Tiger in the 1990s

The research of this paper focuses on Ireland's economic development in the 1990s. The central question of this paper is to demonstrate how the Irish government developed an industrial strategy that would create and attract a large amount of Foreign Direct Investment. (FDI), Two critical concepts se...

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Main Author: Casey, Bronagh
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Political Studies 2014
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access_status_str Open Access
author Casey, Bronagh
author_browse Casey, Bronagh
author_facet Casey, Bronagh
author_sort Casey, Bronagh
collection Thesis
description The research of this paper focuses on Ireland's economic development in the 1990s. The central question of this paper is to demonstrate how the Irish government developed an industrial strategy that would create and attract a large amount of Foreign Direct Investment. (FDI), Two critical concepts serve as analytical focal points. Firstly I look at economic globalization and the debate surrounding the sovereignty of the nation-state. I set up as the null hypothesis the liberalist assumption that the nation-state is in demise, and have to surrender its power to global market forces. The alternative hypothesis. the mercantilist perspective. argues that the state is not in demise and is still the primary actor in the international system. In this regard, I look at Irish government policy and the degree of influence in economic development from 1987-2000. The second concept focuses around industrial policy. This includes the participation of state institutions in industrial strategy. such as the Industrial Development Authority. I also focus on the model that the Irish government followed in order to pursue FDI. The 'Closed Loop' model consists of three stages: firstly. to select industry areas offering the best economic returns; second, to find the best companies in those industry areas: and third. to persuade their target companies to invest in Ireland. Industrial policy includes the range of incentives and policy decisions the government undertook in order to attract Multinationals to Ireland. This includes policy decisions on areas such as education, tax, infrastructure. wages and spending of structural funds. Through a literature review of the two concepts regarding Ireland's growth. I conclude that the Irish government has been deeply involved in the entire process of integration. This paper supports the mercantilist hypothesis that the state still remains the primary actor in the international economy. It also supports the view that the state can manipulate and exploit globalization in order to maximize its own interests. Irish economic development in the 1990s is a prime example of this.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:15.376Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2014
publishDateRange 2014
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/6726 Ireland's industrial policy in an integrated global economy : the case of the Celtic Tiger in the 1990s Casey, Bronagh Political Studies The research of this paper focuses on Ireland's economic development in the 1990s. The central question of this paper is to demonstrate how the Irish government developed an industrial strategy that would create and attract a large amount of Foreign Direct Investment. (FDI), Two critical concepts serve as analytical focal points. Firstly I look at economic globalization and the debate surrounding the sovereignty of the nation-state. I set up as the null hypothesis the liberalist assumption that the nation-state is in demise, and have to surrender its power to global market forces. The alternative hypothesis. the mercantilist perspective. argues that the state is not in demise and is still the primary actor in the international system. In this regard, I look at Irish government policy and the degree of influence in economic development from 1987-2000. The second concept focuses around industrial policy. This includes the participation of state institutions in industrial strategy. such as the Industrial Development Authority. I also focus on the model that the Irish government followed in order to pursue FDI. The 'Closed Loop' model consists of three stages: firstly. to select industry areas offering the best economic returns; second, to find the best companies in those industry areas: and third. to persuade their target companies to invest in Ireland. Industrial policy includes the range of incentives and policy decisions the government undertook in order to attract Multinationals to Ireland. This includes policy decisions on areas such as education, tax, infrastructure. wages and spending of structural funds. Through a literature review of the two concepts regarding Ireland's growth. I conclude that the Irish government has been deeply involved in the entire process of integration. This paper supports the mercantilist hypothesis that the state still remains the primary actor in the international economy. It also supports the view that the state can manipulate and exploit globalization in order to maximize its own interests. Irish economic development in the 1990s is a prime example of this. 2014-08-28T14:21:01Z 2014-08-28T14:21:01Z 2004 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/11427/6726 eng application/pdf Department of Political Studies Faculty of Humanities University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Political Studies
Casey, Bronagh
Ireland's industrial policy in an integrated global economy : the case of the Celtic Tiger in the 1990s
title Ireland's industrial policy in an integrated global economy : the case of the Celtic Tiger in the 1990s
title_full Ireland's industrial policy in an integrated global economy : the case of the Celtic Tiger in the 1990s
title_fullStr Ireland's industrial policy in an integrated global economy : the case of the Celtic Tiger in the 1990s
title_full_unstemmed Ireland's industrial policy in an integrated global economy : the case of the Celtic Tiger in the 1990s
title_short Ireland's industrial policy in an integrated global economy : the case of the Celtic Tiger in the 1990s
title_sort ireland s industrial policy in an integrated global economy the case of the celtic tiger in the 1990s
topic Political Studies
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/6726
work_keys_str_mv AT caseybronagh irelandsindustrialpolicyinanintegratedglobaleconomythecaseoftheceltictigerinthe1990s