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Regular Features

13.30 FRIDAY – TALKING HEADS

Talking Heads is a vital three person panel discussion on the main events of the week.

13.30 TUESDAY – PERSONAL FINANCE WITH JOHN LOWE

Rabo Logo

In Association With

John Lowe, a Fellow of the Institute of Bankers with over 30 years financial experience, is authorised by the Financial Regulator as an Authorised Advisor for life, pensions and investments. John is also a Mortgage Intermediary for a myriad of lenders. He is managing director of Money Doctor, the trading name of Providence Finance Services Limited based in Stillorgan Co Dublin. Check out www.moneydoctor.ie. You can contact John by phone on 01 278 5555 on email him directly on info@moneydoctor.ie.

Or to get a question to John, email lunchtime@newstalk.ie any time, or during the show text 53106 for 30 cent or call 085 106 9108.

ECONOMIC ANALYSIS WITH OLIVER GILVARRY

Oliver Gilvarry

Oliver Gilvarry

Oliver Gilvarry, Head of Research at Dolmen Securities, is a regular contributor to Lunchtime.
A graduate of NUI Maynooth, and DCU, Oliver is a qualified accountant. He is currently Head of Research in Dublin Stockbrokers, covering the financial and insurance sectors and also has responsibility for economic analysis. Oliver previously worked in the financial sector for a number of years in ICC, Bank of Scotland (Ire) and KBC Bank.

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Your Comments

everybody should watch this documentary and the cover up of the Vatican from the bottom to the very top the pope himself. http://freedocumentaries.org/int.php?filmID=126 Educate yourself on what frame of mind the Vatican are in.
bazzer | 2010-03-02 19:37:55

Banks may have been bailed out by the Irish tax payer to the tune of many billions. I've no doubt many billions more will be spent propping them up in future. Therefore, there's a temptation to expect banks to 'return the favour', as it were, by supporting Irish businesses in need of credit during the present economic crisis. But banks have an obligation to the Irish taxpayer NOT to extend credit to businesses unlikely to survive what is - if we're honest - a downward economic spiral that cannot be arrested. This country's banks were not saved so they could lend money as irresponsibly as they did during the boom. Much of the global economic 'recovery' is welfare dependent - in other words, demand is being driven by the public sector, ultimately at the taxpayer's expense. This was a necessary response to the credit crisis and it has prevented the recession from becomming a Depression. The logic is that the Public sector will support demand until the Private sector recovers confidence and resumes the job of consumption, creation and employment. But recent figures suggest that neither the private sector nor the consumer will be riding to the rescue any time soon, not in Britain, Europe or the US. This means that the export-led recovery the Irish are banking on will not materialise - the world, in fact, is at the very best headed for a decade of stagnation and, at worst, for a succession of debt-induced crises that will produce the Depression we thought we'd avoid. Irrespective of which scenario materialises, the prospect for Ireland is appalling. Unlike the politicians, the Banks here are not obliged to be witlessly optimistic in their outlook - realistically, they see tremendous difficulties ahead and it would be irresponsible of them to extend credit to businesses that are unlikely to survive those difficulties. To do so would only greatly exacerbate Ireland's debt woes. Plainly, the present crisis was caused by a huge private debt burden. Our response has added to that a huge PUBLIC debt burden - in other words, overall debt is an even bigger problem for the world economy than it was in the summer of 2007, rendering the system many times more vulnerable to shocks. And there are, necessarily, many shocks ahead of us. Whether we want to take our medicine or not, it is being prepared for us. We are heading into what is bound to be a truly dreadful decade - there's no avoiding it. To respond properly to that challenge we have to face it honestly. And as the legacy of the tribunals tells us, honesty is not something the Irish are particularly good at. Since bad banking practices were the catalyst for virtually all of Ireland's present economic woes, it is imperative we insist on best practice from now on. Lending to businesses that are virtually dead men walking cannot be regarded as prudent banking practice.
raymarino | 2010-03-01 18:26:17

Is there now also an issue around members of the Gardai briefing against someone whose politics they disagree with?
Shambob | 2010-02-18 14:02:58

Disgraceful performance by Harris. The production team should be ashamed. It's not as if you didn't have Harris being vile a couple of days earlier
tony_murphy | 2010-02-11 19:59:55

Great job jim, and Eamon, these scanners are a step too far, they're dangerous and invasive and Ireland's got to stop lying down and blindly following the US and the EU.
Alan Keenan ∇ | 2010-01-21 19:03:00