Wednesday, March 23, 2016

Political and economic unification of Ireland could potentially deliver a €35.6 billion boost in GDP for the island in the first eight years - according to a new study

The research found that unifying both economies could bring a sizeable boost to the economy in the North with a more modest boost in the Republic. Dr Kurt Hubner, professor at the University of British Columbia in Canada and author of the Modeling Irish Unification study, said the fact that the North would benefit more from such a union is not surprising. "The Republic of Ireland would benefit quite a lot, but the benefits would be mainly accrued by Northern Ireland," he said. "And that's not really a surprise, because if you compare the two entities, then Northern Ireland is obviously the less developed economy. It is more or less confirmed across the world that the less developed entities would benefit the most, in absolute terms, as well as in relative terms."

1 comment:

roundeye said...

That assumes fungibility between the Irish in ROI and the population of NI. The Protestants are descendants of the Border Reavers, the same population that make up the Scots-Irish in the US.

It is like saying the German settlers of Wisconsin are the same as Appalachian folks. Different tribes.