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The Langers Forum
Leo Varadkar
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<blockquote data-quote="Stacky" data-source="post: 7239217" data-attributes="member: 22688"><p>All you need now is some facts and data to back up your daft claim.</p><p></p><p>You cannot even go into a <em>"recession"</em> on a single quarters fiscal data but do carry on.</p><p></p><p><strong>Ireland</strong>’s economic growth will slow significantly in <strong>2023</strong> due to high inflation and weaker consumer confidence, according to the OECD. The country will <strong>avoid</strong> a <strong>recession</strong>, with exports of multinationals expected to support gross domestic product growth “albeit at a decelerating rate,” the OECD said in a report on Wednesday.</p><p></p><p>Ireland's economy is projected to remain on a solid growth path with GDP growth of 5.5% expected in 2023 and 5% expected in 2024, according to the European Commission's Spring 2023 Economic Forecast, which was published today.</p><p></p><p>That is up from the Commission's earlier forecast of growth of 4.9% for this year and 4.1% for next year, made in February.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Stacky, post: 7239217, member: 22688"] All you need now is some facts and data to back up your daft claim. You cannot even go into a [I]"recession"[/I] on a single quarters fiscal data but do carry on. [B]Ireland[/B]’s economic growth will slow significantly in [B]2023[/B] due to high inflation and weaker consumer confidence, according to the OECD. The country will [B]avoid[/B] a [B]recession[/B], with exports of multinationals expected to support gross domestic product growth “albeit at a decelerating rate,” the OECD said in a report on Wednesday. Ireland's economy is projected to remain on a solid growth path with GDP growth of 5.5% expected in 2023 and 5% expected in 2024, according to the European Commission's Spring 2023 Economic Forecast, which was published today. That is up from the Commission's earlier forecast of growth of 4.9% for this year and 4.1% for next year, made in February. [/QUOTE]
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