mahoganygas wrote: » The main problem with holding people accountable is that there was no single overriding reason why Ireland entered a recession in this period. There certainly were some domestic issues and blame can be laid at the door of politicians, property speculators and bankers.
punisher5112 wrote: » Bankers that caused most and developers along with corrupt politicians.... Nobody has had to answer or seen any jail time. Most are back making a fortune again anyway.
armabelle wrote: » So by saying this you are saying that there are no "people" to blame, just institutions? How can that be? Surely people set up institutions. If a building falls down, those that built it are responsible. Similarly, if I buy a toaster and it breaks after a week, the company would be giving me a new one so I am not out of pocket. Isn't the loss to the Irish economy and everyone in it as a result of the crisis so big that there must be someone that is held accountable?
armabelle wrote: » Really? That is awful. You Irish must be placid and peaceful people for this to happen and nobody go down. Was there a protest of some kind ever in Ireland about this when it happened? Did people even want justice?
Godge wrote: » Your examples aren't great. The responsiblity doesn't necessarily lie with the builder or the manufacturer. The building could fall down because of an earthquake. You could have stuck a fork in the toaster. We can say the banks failed, we can say government revenue collapsed. However, we need to understand how and why, before we can apportion blame. Then we need to establish whether it was avoidable, whether it was incompetence, or whether it was corrupt. There is a certain narrative in Ireland among the protesting class that it was all the fault of corrupt bankers and politicians. Looking at it objectively, that hasn't been demonstrated to have been the case.
mahoganygas wrote: » Well in those example you have given both the building company and the toaster manufacturer are institutions. Who do you hold accountable? The individual bricklayer who placed a brick incorrectly? His supervisor? The Director of the company who wasn’t on site for the entirety of the building project? The owners of the building company? You can see that it’s difficult to assign blame to any single individual. Also what are you blaming people for? “The 2008 crisis” is a very broad term. What factors caused the crisis and which factors just seemed to make it worse? Therein lies the problem with holding people accountable. Again, to my point above:Specifically which bank officials, property developers and politicians can you prove are guilty of specifically which crimes?
armabelle wrote: » it is difficult but surely for something like this the builders and institution/s should be blamed and fined instead of the tax payer?
Godge wrote: » There is a certain narrative in Ireland among the protesting class that it was all the fault of corrupt bankers and politicians. Looking at it objectively, that hasn't been demonstrated to have been the case.
Fr Tod Umptious wrote: » But blamed and fined for what ? What law did they break ? Many a good person in the building/property trade lost their livelihood over their own reckless actions, but they did nothing illegal.
armabelle wrote: » instead of answering that, allow me to ask you the question: what did the Irish citizens actually lose as a result of the crisis?
Fr Tod Umptious wrote: » A lot of Irish citizens lost a lot of different things. Some lost their family homes, others lost their jobs, others lost their savings, others had income reduced due to increased taxes etc.
armabelle wrote: » so if any one of these things had happened to you, wouldn't you feel as though a crime has been committed against you?
Fr Tod Umptious wrote: » People lost their homes because they had unsustainable mortgages, or used their homes as collateral for other loans. People lost their jobs because the domestic economy, build on a construction bubble, collapsed.
armabelle wrote: » Oh ok, well then great... then there are really no victims in the crisis and it is a beautiful world.
Fr Tod Umptious wrote: » I don't understand what you ate saying. Rather than asking rhetorical questions why don't you tell us what your opinion is
Fr Tod Umptious wrote: » No not at all. People lost their homes because they had unsustainable mortgages, or used their homes as collateral for other loans. People lost their jobs because the domestic economy, build on a construction bubble, collapsed. People lost their savings because they invested them in investments that failed, bank shares, developments, global stocks for example. And everyone ended up paying more tax because of the shortfall as a result of the property collapse. None of the above happened due to specific criminal acts. Yes bankers are on trial, but for causing the crash, because individuals and banks alone did not cause the crash.
El_Duderino 09 wrote: » It's too hard to quantify the damage done by each party. The banks packaging bad debt and selling than as good debt, was a problem. Some of it was irish, some was external. How much of the blame lies with irish people's fundamental misunderstanding of economic cycles? Boom-bust. Everyone can't have a massive house and a holiday home. That's only for rich people and still everyone thought they could afford it. In all the talk about the recession, never once have I heard the Irish people's role in it. Saving money went out the window. The only way to absolve the people of any blame is to compare them to children who were left unsupervised and they got into the drinks cabinet. Now they have the inevitable hangover and want someoneelse to be held accountable for their mistake. It won't happen because people don't want to know who was responsible. Next time there's a few bob going around, the tradesman will be back out in his new Beemer and looking for property in the holiday destination of the day.
mahoganygas wrote: » I wouldn't say that we are placid about it. There has been a lot of anger and hurt over the financial crisis.
armabelle wrote: so do you think people deserved what they got? I mean those kids with a hangover probably did don't you think?
El_Duderino 09 wrote: More importantly, we have never had a discussion about what we should do next time there us money floating about. I'm going to be a complete heretic and suggest that next time there's money, we put some aside for a rainy day...