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Thursday, October 31, 2013

Donie's Ireland news BLOG Update

Troika now expected to seek a swift enactment of the overhaul of Irish legal profession

 

Inspectors here to carry out final review of bailout expected to press Government

The Government is set to come under further pressure from the troika to advance a long-awaited overhaul of the legal profession as its inspectors carry out their final review of the bailout.
Officials from the European Commission, the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund arrived in Dublin yesterday for a 10-day mission, their 12th visit under the rescue programme agreed almost three years ago.
Debate over the terms of any emergency credit line and the associated fiscal policy conditions is set to dominate the final weeks of the bailout, which concludes in mid-December.
Further troika attention centres on a mini-stress test on Ireland’s banks, which is ongoing. This examination is known formally as an asset quality review and it is a prelude to wider stress tests next year on all large euro zone banks.
Unforeseen weakness
However, the early scrutiny of the Irish lenders reflects a troika demand for clarity about the current situation within the banks – and anxiety about any risk of unforeseen weakness – in the run-up to the formal exit from the bailout.
While the inspectors will examine the health and social welfare provisions set out in Budget 2014, they are also expected to focus their attention on unfinished elements of the reform programme set out in the bailout agreement. An informed source said that the long delay in the enactment of the Legal Services Regulation Bill ranks high among the inspectors’ concerns.
The draft law, which is designed to reduce legal costs, has been viewed with apprehension by many in the legal world.
The reform package, which includes the creation of barrister-solicitor and multidisciplinary partnerships, has been criticised by the professional bodies for both barristers and solicitors.
Legislation unveiled
The Government unveiled the legislation in 2011 and the committee stage Dáil debate started in March 2012, but it was then delayed by more than a year until July. While Government amendments to the first four parts of the Bill were introduced at that time, the committee stage debate is not due to resume until next month and a further swathe of amendments to the most contentious elements of the draft law are still awaited.
Legal reforms
Having queried the slow pace of the parliamentary debate in previous missions, the troika is now expected to demand a further update from the Coalition and to seek  a swift enactment of the legal reforms.
The commission gave its blessing to the fiscal strategy in the budget before it was published, but the inspectors are expected to look in detail at the plan. Scrutiny on contentious health provisions in the budget is likely on this front.
Still at issue, two weeks after the fiscal plan was published, are questions over the validity of the forecast savings  to be derived from the Haddington Road pay deal and the audit of the medical card scheme.
The assumptions set out in the budget are viewed with deep suspicion by health service managers.
A further question of ongoing concern to the troika is its push for more “labour market activation” measures to encourage unemployed people to pursue job opportunities

Dr James Reilly gives HSE health officials more time on cuts plan

 

HSE officials given extra 10 days to finalise details of massive health cuts for next year

Minister for Health James Reilly who today decided to give HSE officials an extra 10 days to draw up a service plan detailing where cuts will be made to meet a spending reduction of €666 million next year.
Minister for Health James Reilly has given HSE officials an extra 10 days to draw up the service plan detailing the areas of the health service where cuts will be made to meet a spending reduction of €666 million next year.Dr Reilly said he will be informing the HSE about the time extension granted in a letter to be sent later today. He said he was granting the extra time in view of the “complexity of the situation” and the fact that the plan is being drawn up earlier in the year than normal and won’t have to be implemented until the start of 2014.
The Minister had a formal meeting with HSE bosses last week, at which they sought extra time to draw up the plan.
The HSE is legally required to prepare a plan for the Minister within 21 days of the Budget, which meant it was due to be ready next Tuesday.
The Minister has the power to reject any plan prepared by the HSE, which he did in 2011.
This would trigger a further 21-day period during which the plan is revised.
Dr Reilly said there was “absolutely no question” of capital expenditure in health being cut in order to meet the savings target for next year.
He said he was proud to be presiding over some of the biggest capital projects the Government was undertaking, including the new national children’s hospital, the relocation of the National Maternity Hospital from Holles Street to St Vincent’s Hospital campus and the planned move of the Central Mental Hospital from Dundrum to Portrane.
Asked whether the planned upgrading of radiotherapy facilities in Galway and Cork would be affected by budget cuts, Dr Reilly said the service plan would set out precisely which items of expenditure were going ahead and which “might be slower for other technical reasons”.
Dr Reilly welcomed the communications campaign launched by the HSE earlier today to provide more information on the issue of medical card eligibility.
He said the campaign had been devised at his request in response to public concern on the issue.
Dr Reilly insisted there has been no slowing down in the issuing of medical cards, though he accepted there had been “teething problems” associated with the centralisation of the processing of applications.
Asked why far fewer cards have been issued this year compared to last year, he said this was because a “huge number” of cards were given out last year when a backlog of over 50,000 applications was cleared.
“People need full information around medical cards. They are naturally worried and become anxious when they can’t get full access to all the facts they need. I welcome this major campaign being rolled out by the HSE over the coming weeks which I hope will help explain clearly people’s entitlements and may ease the fears of those who have been worried unnecessarily.
“No one who is entitled to a medical card need worry. Despite the significant savings  to be made by the HSE in the year ahead, nobody who is entitled to a medical card will lose it or be refused one.”
The HSE’s plan includes extra resources for the national call centre dealing with medical card enquiries, media advertisements, a new information leaflet, improved support on the HSE website and more training for frontline staff.

Irish bond rally puts yields too low for some as bailout exit nears

 

Goldman Sachs and BlueBay Asset Management are among firms saying yields are now too low

The longest bond rally since 2005 is making Irish securities too expensive for some investors just as the State begins to rely on their money  again.
The extra yield, or spread, over German bunds slid to a three-year low this month as Ireland moved closer to exiting the €67.5 billion emergency aid programme it took in November 2010.
Goldman Sachs and BlueBay Asset Management are among the financial companies judging that the yields are now too low for a country  that is barely growing and still with a debt load bigger than its economy.
“With the spreads where they are now, we think there are better stories, better places to invest,” said Russel Matthews, a fund manager at BlueBay in London, which oversees $56 billion and has been putting money into Portuguese and Slovenian bonds.
“We are positive on the story, but from a valuation perspective we don’t think it’s that exciting.”
Ireland’s 10-year borrowing costs tumbled to 3.53 per cent yesterday from a euro-era high of more than 14 per cent in July 2011. That compares with 6.71 per cent for Slovenian bonds and 6.17 per cent for Portugal, whose government is aiming to follow Ireland and leave its own bailout programme next year.
Deutsche Asset and Wealth Management, which oversees $1.24 trillion, reduced its Irish holdings after the rally, even as it remained positive on the outlook for the country ,Oliver Eichmann, head of euro fixed income  at the company in Frankfurt, said in an email yesterday.
The spread on Irish securities over bunds narrowed to 1.69 percentage points on October 17th, the lowest since April 2010, according to data .
The rally has also pushed Irish yields below those of Italyand Spain. “We currently view Irish bonds as expensive,” Goldman Sachs analysts Francesco Garzarelli and Silvia Ardagna wrote in a note to clients last week. “The market has taken a constructive view on upcoming developments” regarding the State’s return to bond markets, they wrote.
Technical analysis based on how Irish bonds have performed compared with peers supports that view. The 14-day relative strength index for 10-year Irish securities reached 83.9 last week, the most since April. It has been above 70, a level that signals it has climbed too much, for 20 consecutive days. The gauge was above 70 for 10 consecutive days ending May 10th – before the yields climbed more than 50 basis points in the following two months.

Irish Women urged to act FAST on stroke warning signs

  
The Irish Heart Foundation has urged women  to be vigilant about the warning signs of stroke, after recent statistics revealed that 53% more women than men died from stroke here in 2012.
The annual number of stroke deaths in Ireland has fallen below the 2,000 mark for the first time in years following a 9% fall in mortality in the past four years.
Central Statistics Office figures showed the number of deaths nationally fell by 188 to 1,928 to the end of 2012 despite our ageing population and a dramatic increase globally in the incidence of the disease, the Foundation points out.

The figures also confirmed, however, that almost twice as many WOMEN as men died from stroke.

“The higher death rate from stroke among women is not widely known. The fact is that stroke kills almost twice as many women as breast cancer in Ireland, which is why we are particularly asking women to make a special effort to be aware of the ‘FAST’ warning signs”, Chris Macey from the Irish Heart Foundation said.

F.A.S.T. STANDS FOR:

Face – has their face fallen on one side?
Arms – can they raise both arms and keep them there?
Speech – is their speech slurred?
Time – time to call 999 if you see any one of these signs.

The Foundation says by knowing the warning signs, and acting on them as soon as possible, people can have a huge influence on their outcome after stroke.

Computer simulation reconstructs how biggest animal to walk the planet moved

The 40m  skeleton of an Argentinosaurus huinculensis, on display at the Museo Municipal Carmen Funes in Argentina, was digitally reconstructed to examine how the dinosaur walked and ran. Photograph: Dr Bill Sellers, the University of Manchester 

DINOSAUR WALKS THE WALK 94 MILLION YEARS ON

The 40m skeleton of an Argentinosaurus huinculensis, on display at the Museo Municipal Carmen Funes in Argentina, was digitally reconstructed to examine how the dinosaur walked and ran. 
A massive dinosaur has proven it can walk the walk after scientists digitally reconstructed the 40-metre long fossil, allowing it to stroll about for the first time in 94 million years.
Scientists from the University of Manchester joined colleagues from Argentina to laser scan the skeleton ofArgentinosaurus in order to build a computer model of how it must have walked.
They managed not only to recreate its walking movements but also how it moved when it broke into a run.
“We used the equivalent of 30,000 desktop computers to allow Argentinosaurus to take its first steps in over 94 million years,” said Dr Lee Margetts who was part of the team. Details of the research were published online yesterday on plosone.org.
Scientists are always interested in how dinosaurs might have moved and clues to this can be found in their fossil skeletons. So large is the four-legged Argentinosaurusdinosaur, some palaeontologists rejected the notion that it walked at all and believed its fossil remains must have been put together incorrectly.
Proof positive
The project, led by Dr Bill Sellers of Manchester’s faculty of life sciences, proved this was not the case.
“If you want to work out how dinosaurs walked, the best approach is computer simulation,” said Dr Sellers. “This is the only way of bringing together all the different strands of information we have on this dinosaur, so we can reconstruct how it once moved.”
He developed his own computer software to accomplish this and has used it to model the gait of living and extinct animals.
Intelligent software
The software doesn’t just take the locomotion of a modern animal and alter it to suit an 80-tonne monster such asArgentinosaurus, the largest dinosaur yet discovered. It has a learning component and works only from the specific details of the fossil remains such as limb length and limb orientation. It uses the hard data to predict the “best possible movement patterns”, Dr Sellers said.
Once run, the software delivered a video version of howArgentinosaurus walked. Its predicted gait was a leisurely two metres a second or 7.2km per hour, about the speed of a fast walk for a human.
The research team – which included Dr Rodolfo Coria from Carmen Funes museum, Plaza Huincal, Neuquén Province, Argentina – believes studying locomotion in other animals can help us understand the complexity of human motion and inform the development of walking robots.
The scientists hope to study the gait of dinosaurs such asTriceratops, Brachiosaurus and Tyrannosaurus rex.

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Donies News Ireland daily BLOG update

Irish Teachers working for €50 a week on Job-Bridge schemes

 

A good few of Irish schools are using the Job-Bridge scheme to hire qualified teachers to work for only €50 a week on top of social welfare payments.

This is despite one of the country’s biggest education unions ordering members not to take jobs in the Government’s controversial internship scheme, amid suggestions that young teachers are being exploited.
Schools struggling with overcrowded classrooms and ever-tightening budgets are turning to the scheme to get the extra staff they need.
New figures show 58 teaching positions were taken up under Job-Bridge. At least 32 of the posts were for primary teachers, who were hired across 17 different counties. There is currently an advertisement for two primary teachers in Claregalway on the Job-Bridge website.
The Government had previously cleared the way for schools to use JobBridge in this way, sparking anger from the INTO union, which says that teachers should be employed either full-time or paid a fair rate for substitution work.
JobBridge offers nine-month internships to unemployed people who get an additional €50 a week from the State on top of their social welfare payments.
INTO had passed a ruling saying primary schools should not recruit teachers under the internship scheme, which it described as “exploitative”.
However, many schools are desperate for extra staff as they face restrictions on the number of teachers they can employ based on the number of pupils in attendance.
The Department of Education has set the pupil-teacher ratio at 28-1 in primary schools, and maintained that figure in the Budget.
Although they cannot employ an extra teacher full-time once they reach this limit, many schools are successfully applying to JobBridge for an additional teacher to tackle overcrowded classrooms.
Fianna Fail education spokesman Charlie McConalogue said the Government had to provide more jobs for desperate young teachers, not only JobBridge placements.
“The answer is not to get young teaching graduates to basically work for free for a year. That’s not fair. They’ve trained for four years and we have to respect their role,” he said.
Sinn Fein education spokesman Jonathan O’Brien said JobBridge allowed the department to get teachers in on the cheap.
“I don’t think it’s right that you give somebody an extra €50 a week to go into a classroom teaching, with all the pressures and strains and responsibilities, and not have a real prospect of full-time employment at the end,” he said.
However, Fine Gael TD Jim Daly, who is a former school principal and INTO member, believes JobBridge is beneficial to teachers and schools.
LANGUISHING: He obtained the latest figures showing dozens of schools ignoring INTO’s directive following a parliamentary question.
Mr Daly said young teachers could gain experience through the scheme, as they would otherwise be languishing on the dole. He has appealed to INTO to lift its threat of sanctions against schools that hire teachers through JobBridge.
Graduates must complete 300 hours of teaching practice within three years to register  as a qualified teacher.
However, Mr Daly said many are unable to get the work experience they need because principals were hiring fully qualified teachers. He said JobBridge provided a foot in the door.
“They can’t break the cycle. JobBridge is a perfect fit, but the INTO’s attitude smacks a little bit of ‘I’m alright Jack, close the door after me’,” he said.
An INTO spokesman disagreed, saying it was impossible for teachers to balance JobBridge with the odd day of more lucrative substitution work.
“What Deputy Daly is essentially saying to young teachers is that they should work for €10 a day,” he said. “That is callous.”
INTO said there was no evidence that hundreds of teachers would jump at the chance to take up a JobBridge internship.
And it added that the opposition to the scheme comes from recently qualified teachers.
Junior education minister Ciaran Cannon urged INTO to reconsider its stance, given that 1,400 new teachers will be recruited in primary and secondary schools next year.

Irish house prices down 2.6% but up in Dublin 12.3% year to September 

 

A two-tier property market is now emerging as prices continue to slide outside the capital

National property prices rose again in September, advancing by 3.6 per cent on an annual basis, up from the 2.8 per cent reported in August. Prices are now growing at their fastest rate since September 2007.
In Dublin, property prices are now 12.3 per cent higher than a year ago, according to CSO’s residential property price index, but the two-tier market continues with prices outside of the capital falling by 2.6 per cent in the year to September.
National property prices rose by 1.8 per cent in September, for the fourth consecutive month, pushing the property index up to 3.6 per cent on an annual basis.
In Dublin, property prices are now 12.3 per cent higher than a year ago, growing by 3.9 per cent in September.
Dublin house prices increased by 4.2 per cent in September, up by 12.2 per cent on September 2012, while apartment prices in the capital also advanced, and are up by 11 per cent on September 2012.
However, the CSO adds the caveat that apartment prices are based on lower transaction levels.
Outside the capital, prices fell  by 0.1 per cent in September, matching August’s decline. On an annual prices, prices outside of Dublin fell by 2.6 per cent in the year to September.
Dublin house prices are now 49 per cent lower than their highest level in early 2007, while apartments are 59 per cent lower.
David McNamara of Davy Stockbrokers says that the “stark divergence” between Dublin and the rest of the country “points to a market currently supported by a lack of supply, with an influx of cash buyers compensating for weak mortgage lending”.
“Evidently, cash buyers are attracted by rising rental values, attractive yields and the current perception of property as undervalued,” he said. Cash buyers accounted for 54 per cent of national transactions in Q2 and a similar split looks likely in Q3 according ot Mr McNamara.
Looking ahead, he expects growth rates in Dublin to start to moderate “as some of the big gains at the tail end of 2012 fall out of the annual comparison”. Outside of the capital, he expects prices to fall further “in many oversupplied regions”.
Dublin house prices are now 49 per cent lower than their highest level in early 2007, while apartments are 59 per cent lower.
Outside of Dublin, the price of residential properties is 48 per cent lower than at their peak in 2007.

IT problems affect production of new Irish driving licences

 Daniela Reicke (left) Cork, and Aoife Murphy, Blarney, Co. Cork at the launch of the new credit-card sized driving licenses at Government Buildings. Photograph: Eric Luke/The Irish Times.    

Daniela Reicke (left) Cork, and Aoife Murphy, Blarney, Co. Cork at the launch of the new credit-card sized driving licenses at Government Buildings.

CUSTOMERS IN NORTHWEST MOST AFFECTED BY ISSUES ON FIRST DAY OF OPERATIONS

Operations at the National Driver Licence Service are running normally again after an IT problem left members of the public unable to renew or obtain new licences on what was the first day of the new service.
The service changed today meaning members of the public seeking a new license or a renewal must now visit one of the service’s new centres rather than the motor tax office.
As part of a face-to-face application  process, a photo and signature is captured digitally on plastic licenses.
The glitch affected 12 centres located “predominantly” in the northwest of the country, according to a spokeswoman for the service.
There was also disruption to the customer helpline which was out of service for “a brief period” this morning.
Callers to all 34 national centre offices were affected between 10am and midday – but the spokeswoman said the helpline is now up and running again.
“There have been a few teething issues with the ‘Go Live’ of the new NDLS service today, which is to be expected  with the introduction of a new national service,” said the spokeswoman.
“As soon as the issue was identified remedial action was taken and we can report that the issue has now been fixed .
“We would like to thank the public for their patience today as we introduce  the new National Driver Licence Service and get it bedded in.”

Revenue to seek 2014 Local Property Tax payment from Irish household's by Christmas

  
Irish Revenue is to write to 960,000 property owners

PROPERTY OWNERS WHO OPT TO PAY THE LOCAL PROPERTY TAX FOR 2014 USING A DEBIT CARD, CREDIT CARD OR CHEQUE WILL HAVE TO PAY BY NEXT MONTH, ACCORDING  TO THE REVENUE COMMISSIONERS.

Revenue is to write to 960,000 property owners asking how they intend paying next year’s tax.
People who made a single payment this year are asked to contact Revenue to let them know their preferred payment option for 2014.
Revenue has said 46% of householders paid the tax for 2013 by cheque, cash, credit card or debit card.
They will have to contact  Revenue in the coming weeks.
Those making paper tax returns must select a payment option by 7 November. 
People filling out tax returns online have until 27 November.
Local Property Tax Manager with the Revenue Commissioners Vivienne Dempsey told RTÉ News: “If you are paying at source, so through your wages or your pension, then it will come out on your first payment in January and be spread evenly across the year to December.
“But if you pay by debit card or by credit card, or if you are sending in a cheque, the payment will come out in November.”

Housework and Gardening, can help & boost your Heart Health

Study of Swedish seniors found a reduced death risk of up to 30%
   

ACTIVITIES SUCH AS GARDENING, DO-IT-YOURSELF PROJECTS AND HOUSEWORK MAY BE AS GOOD AS FORMAL EXERCISE WHEN IT COMES TO REDUCING THE RISK FOR HEART ATTACK AND STROKE, SWEDISH RESEARCHERS SAY.

For people 60 and older, just keeping busy with daily activities can reduce the risk of cardiovascular problems by nearly 30 percent and even prolong life, they added.
Being on your feet and active cuts the time spent sitting around, pointed out lead researcher Elin Ekblom-Bak, of the Swedish School of Sport and Health Sciences and the Karolinska Institute, in Stockholm.
“Sitting is mainly replacing time you spend in daily activity and vice versa,” Ekblom-Bak said. A recent study found long periods of sitting actually increased the risk fordiabetes, cardiovascular disease and death, she noted.
“The results of this study showed  that activities of daily life are as important as regular intentional exercise for older adults for cardiovascular health and longevity,” she said.
But that doesn’t mean formal exercise isn’t important. “We saw that those who exercised regularly and that also had a daily physically active life had the lowest risk of all,” Ekblom-Bak explained.
The time people spend exercising, however, is only a small part of the day, which leaves a lot of time for daily activities or sitting, she added.
For the new study, researchers collected data on more than 3,800 men and women in Sweden who were born in 1937 and 1938. Participants were asked about their lifestyle, which included information on their diet, whether they smoked or drank alcohol, and how physically active they were.
The participants were also asked how often they took part in activities, such as gardening, do-it-yourself projects, car maintenance and blackberry picking over the past year. They were also asked about any exercise they did.
To see how heart-healthy they were, the researchers examined the participants and took blood samples to assess levels of fat and sugar. They also checked for high levels of blood-clotting factor, which is linked to a raised heart attack and stroke risk.
During more than 12 years of follow-up, 476 of the participants died from or experienced a first heart attack or stroke, and 383 died from other various causes.
People whose daily activities kept them moving reduced their risk of a heart attack or stroke by 27 percent and the risk of dying from any cause by 30 percent, compared to people who spent the least amount of time on their feet.
“Promoting daily life activities is as important as recommending regular exercise for older adults for cardiovascular health and longevity,” Ekblom-Bak said.
“This is particularly important for older adults as they tend to spend a greater portion of their active day performing non-exercise physical activity, as they often find it difficult to achieve recommended exercise intensity levels,” she said.
The report was published online Oct. 28 in the British Journal of Sports Medicine.
Traditional notions of retirement often don’t support continued physical activity at this stage of life, a U.S. expert said.
“It is almost expected that as we age, we move less,” said Samantha Heller, a senior clinical nutritionist and exercise physiologist at NYU Langone Medical Center, in New York City.
“Retirement, a patient told me, is for sitting around, resting and watching TV,” she said. “Unfortunately, sedentary lifestyles now range across all age with the same unhealthy results: increased risk for diseases such as cardiovascular disease, metabolic syndrome and certain cancers.”
The human body is designed to be moving a good portion of the day, Heller said. “The less one physically moves, the less they are able to move ,” she said.
Regular physical activities such as house cleaning , gardening, lawn care and climbing stairs help keep the body mobile and strong, Heller said.
“You can burn up to six times as much energy per minute when house cleaning as you do when you are sitting still. People of all ages need to be encouraged to get up off the couch and turn off the computer and TV and move,” she said.
Heller said there are simple ways to add more physical activity into the day, such as the following:
  • Standing up when talking on the phone.
  • Marching in place when watching TV — at least during the commercials.
  • Getting up from your desk every hour and doing jumping jacks, knee lifts or knee bends for three to five minutes.
  • Climbing a flight of stairs every few hours.
  • Vacuuming the house.
  • Mopping the floor.
Another expert described the physical fallout of being sedentary.
Dr. Gregg Fonarow, a professor of cardiology at the University of California, Los Angeles, said sitting for too long may have adverse effects including burning fewer calories, and increasing insulin resistance and fats in the blood.
“Greater time spent in non-exercise physical activities can potentially counter these effects,” Fonarow said. “These findings further emphasize the importance of decreasing sedentary time and encouraging everyday regular non-exercise physical activity to improve cardiovascular health.”
Although the study found an association between being active around the house and reduced heart risk, it did not establish a cause-and-effect relationship.

United Nations cooks up a battle plan to defend Earth from asteroids

  

Nowhere’s one straight out of the comic books: The United Nations has announced it’s going to start proactively searching for asteroids in Earth’s path — and taking measures to protect us from deadly collisions.

Asteroids, or as they’re known in the scientific community, “flying death rocks,” can be thrown off-course by a single hit from a spacecraft, if the projectile is launched five to ten years in advance.
This isn’t the last-minute USS Enterprise-style save you were probably looking for when you clicked that remarkably exciting headline, but a last-minute save would mean certain death for people unfortunate enough to be in the flying death rock’s path.
First steps, according to our besties at Scientific American, are the UN officially forming an International Asteroid Warning Group (note: will not include X-Men). This group will work with the existing Committee on Peaceful Uses of Outer Space.
Since no nation or space agency has claimed responsibility for keeping Earth safe from asteroids yet (thanks, America), private entities and astronomers will keep an eye out for potentially dangerous asteroids. Once these are identified, nations in a position to defend Earth will have to designate an agency, such as NASA, to coordinate counter-measures.
We live in thrilling times, my friends. Next stop: Starfleet!
may be as good as formal exercise when it comes to reducing the risk for heart attack and stroke, Swedish researchers say.

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Donie's Ireland daily news BLOG Monday

Number of firms in Ireland going bust falls by a third amid growing confidence

 

THE NUMBER OF COMPANIES DECLARED INSOLVENT FELL BY A THIRD COMPARED TO A YEAR AGO, AS BUSINESSES CONTINUE TO STABILISE AFTER THE BUST.

New data from business information  firm Vision-net shows that 93 firms went bust in October, a decline of 33pc on the same period a year ago.
Among the firms that went under, some 65 were liquidated, 21 entered receivership, and an examiner was appointed to seven. Significantly, liquidations were down 32pc in the last 12 months, while the number of companies going into receivership fell by half.
Some 1,069 new companies were incorporated between July and September, Vision-net said. That is an increase of 17pc on the same period last year
Overall, 2,777 businesses were started during the month – a rate of 126 per day. Vision-net managing director Christine Cullen said the results confirmed the trend of an economy that was at least bottoming out. “Our data has shown consistent positive signs of business recovery over recent months, and this trend has continued in today’s data.
“The number of companies failing is reducing significantly and on the other side of the equation, the number of new Irish companies now being created is also increasing. It points to a growing confidence in the Irish business community,” she added.
REAL ESTATE
Construction remained the sector with the most companies failing, although that is closely followed by the likes of retail, professional services, manufacturing and real estate.
Vision-net says that in September, there were 450 registered commercial and consumer judgments worth €40.6m awarded in the courts.
Of these, 295 were judgments awarded against consumers worth as much as €30.5m – well up on previous months. The Revenue Commissioners, credit unions, banks, real estate and local authorities made up most of the creditors.
Ms Cullen said the higher level of judgments against consumers needed to be monitored.
“The increase in the value of consumer judgments this month is a one to watch in the coming months, not least because of the potential it has to scupper growth in areas such as retail  or hospitality,” she claimed.

Irish home re-possessions will rise, warns the EU ahead of troika visit

 

The EU has warned that an increase in home repossessions is on the cards in its second-last inspection report before the end of the €85bn bailout.

It came as Finance Minister Michael Noonan met the IMF Christine Lagarde in Washington to discuss the possibility of getting a safety net loan after the country exits the bailout on December 15.
And staff from the IMF, the EU and the European Central Bank are arriving in Dublin tomorrow for the 12th and final ‘Troika’ inspection visit since the country entered the bailout in almost three years ago.
In its just-published report on its most recent inspection visit, theEuropean Commission warned that a rise in home repossessions is on the way as the banks finally tackle the issue of mortgage arrears.
“While safeguards have been put in place to keep co-operating borrowers in their homes, given the number of non-cooperating borrowers, particularly in investment properties, an increase in the number of repossessions from the very low levels experienced in recent years is likely,” it said.
The Government is required to still heed the directions of the Troika until the final bailout loan is paid over. But it has a choice of whether it wants to seek a safety net loan of up to €10bn from the Troika after the bailout – or to rely on the cushion of a €25bn cash pile it has borrowed in advance for next  year.
As part of his discussions, Mr Noonan had a 45-minute meeting with IMF deputy managing  director David Lipton early today in Washington followed by an evening meeting with IMF managing director Christine Lagarade at the Irish Embassy in Washington.
A spokesman for Mr Noonan said the agenda for both meeting was the same – the options available for exiting the bailout programme.
“Ultimately it is a matter for Irish Government to evaluate and decide on the post programme options,” he said.
The Government is understood to be leaning in the direction of managingwithout a safety loan facility from the Troika because it does not want restrictive conditions similar to the current bailout deal.
In its inspection report for its last visit in July, the European Commission mentioned the difficulties in achieving this year’s target of €300m savings from the Haddington Road public sector agreement. And it said the cost of liquidating the former Anglo Irish Bank could lead to also lead to Budget overruns. This is because the State will have to pay the shortfall if there is another write down on the value of Anglo’s remaining toxic property loans as they are transferred to NAMA.
However, it said that Ireland was making “good progress” in dealing with the public and private debt which built up during the economic crisis. It said that the property tax had “proved smoother” to implement than the €100 household charge.
The Troika report reveal that the Government still has not decided on the level of water charges households will pay when the first bills arrive in January 2015.
However, it said that the Government wants the new Irish Water company to be excluded from its balance sheet and not counted as part of the national debt. It said this would require “a credible plan to guarantee that the company covers 50pc of operating costs from water charges”.

The maternal depression obsession causes anxiety

 

Exaggerating the risk of depression for both mothers and their children can only cause greater anxiety.

One study, published in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA),focused on how the mental health of children is detrimentally affected by the state of mind of their mothers.
Its main finding, as BBC News put it, is that ‘depression risk starts in the womb’. ‘Antenatal depression’, argue the report authors, was found to be an ‘independent risk factor’ for depression in offspring.
The other study was a report from Netmums, charity Tommy’s, the Institute of Health Visiting and the Royal College of Midwives. Based on a poll of 1,500 women who self-identified as depressed, this research found that many of these women reported ‘low mood and tearfulness’ and most frequently put theirproblems down to ‘trying to live up to unrealistic expectations’.
The message communicated from these studies is that more must be done to help pregnant women and mothers with their feelings. One suggestion from the report authors is that pregnant women and midwives draw up a ‘wellbeing plan’ to promote ‘open discussions’ about a women’s feelings. The authors of the JAMA study argue for ‘interventions’ during pregnancy, aimed at ‘preventing depression in the offspring of depressed mothers’.
Both reports create the impression that pregnant women and mothers are more depressed than we assume, and that this depression affects the next  generation. Yet, as I have argued elsewhere, there are good reasons to look more critically at studies and reports like this.
Measuring ‘the problem’
The starting point for studies like this is the measurement of depression in pregnant women and mothers. Yet when one looks closer, it becomes clear that measuring depression is an inexact science. Proportions of women said be depressed vary considerably. ‘One in 10’ is a statistic often cited, but other studies suggest ‘one in 12’ or ‘one in 15’, or even ‘one in four’. The Netmums report says ‘one in seven’. Those promoting maternal depression as a serious issue presumably intend the figures to highlight the size of the problem, but when the differences between sets of statistics are so pronounced, questions need to be asked.
So why are the figures so varied? Because the scales and reports used for maternal depression stats are varied and controversial. The most widely used scale  (used by JAMA) is the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS), which involves a multiple-choice questionnaire.
For example, the first question  asks for responses to the statement ‘I have been able to laugh and see the funny side of things’. The female respondent then has to choose one of the following: ‘As much as I always could’; ‘Not quite as much so much now’; ‘Definitely less than I used to ‘; or ‘Hardly at all’. An overall score is then calculated by adding together scores for the 10 items.
While the responses may indicate something about the respondent’s mood and feelings, it is doubtful whether they form an adequate basis for a proper ‘diagnosis’. Indeed, over many years there have been questions raised about the number of ‘false positives’ (that is, women incorrectly diagnosed as depressed through use of the EPDS). Yet the authors of the JAMA study nowhere acknowledge this problem.
The Netmums survey suffers from the same deficit. The 1,547 women who took part in it ‘self-selected to do so’, on the basis that they experienced ‘mental health problems’ which were either ‘diagnosed by a health professional or self-diagnosed’. It may be that the phenomenon of ‘false positives’ is even more at issue here than in the JAMA study.
Official guidance in the NHS advises the use by health professionals of what are known as ‘the Whooley questions’ (just two questions) to assess ante-natal and post-natal depression (PND) in the first instance. On the NHS Choices pages about diagnosing PND, it states: ‘Your GP should be able to diagnose postnatal depression by asking two questions: During the past month, have you often been bothered by feeling down, depressed or hopeless? During the past month, have you often been bothered by taking little or no pleasure in doing things that normally make you happy?’
It is surely sensible to question whether these methods of assessment provide reliable evidence for encouraging a woman to think of herself as ‘depressed’ and become subject to drug treatment or other forms of therapy. Over the years, I have encountered significant hostility when calling into question the notion that it is simply ‘a good thing’ to generate more and more efforts to ‘identify’ and ‘treat’ post-natal and ante-natal depression through these sorts of procedures. There is both bemusement at the proposition that it may not actually help, and the suggestion that it is harsh and unfeeling not to want to do as much as possible to recognise the ordeal of pregnancy and motherhood and get health professionals to help.
Yet ‘diagnosis’ of mental illness is not something that should be taken lightly. It inevitably places an individual’s ways of coping into the hands of someone else and demands in particular that they ‘open up’ about the most intimate aspects of their life, namely their feelings about themselves and their baby, to a professional. This takes matters out of the domain of privacy and intimacy and into another realm, and in doing so a relationship  of emotional dependency is created.
There is another more and more important reason for scepticism about the growing profile of maternal depression, too, and this is to do with the connections now routinely bandied about between depression and ‘damaged children’.

PREJUDICE ABOUT THE CHILD DISGUISED AS EVIDENCE

The study  published in JAMA is titled ‘Maternal Depression During Pregnancy and the Postnatal Period, Risks and Possible Mechanisms for Offspring Depression’. As this title suggests, the hypothesis of the research is that there may be a relation between depression in mothers and that in their children which is in some way ‘passed on’. This is one of a very large and growing number of studies which use information  collected from large numbers of parents over decades to look for associations and correlations between aspects of their lives, behaviour and practices and those identified in their children. (The dataset used in the case of the JAMAstudy is called the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children, ALSPAC.)
The JAMA authors claim their research identified antenatal depression as a ‘risk factor’ for depression in children that should be taken seriously and investigated more. Yet, as they themselves suggest, the risk identified through their number-crunching is ‘small’. Hence it may also be argued that given the issues raised above about how ‘depression’ in the parents in the study was identified, the findings can be taken into consideration, but should not be a cause for alarm or suggestions of any kind that depression is ‘passed on’. Other limitations to the study are usefully discussed usefully here.
Unfortunately, however, although sober assessment means the message could be ‘not that much to worry about’ or ‘we don’t know what there is to worry about yet’, the authors could not resist speculating about the ‘passing on’ of depression ‘in the womb’. They set up their paper by suggesting that a possible explanation for children of depressed mothers being themselves depressed is that ‘cortisol, elevated in depression, passes through the placenta and directly alters fetal neural development with long-term consequences’.
Notably this gloomy speculation about the indelible ‘hard wiring’ of the fetal brain was something others then picked up on with abandon, eschewing any need to express even mild caution about the idea that it ‘all goes back to the womb’. One professor from Kings College London told BBC News that the development of an individual’s mental health  started in the uterus, and that ‘the message is clear’. Celso Arango, a professor of psychiatry from Madrid, commented to the Guardian: ‘Researchers are only just beginning to realise that it is not psychiatrists, psychologists or neuroscientists that are having the biggest impact on preventing mental health issues, it is gynaecologists.’

Six wonderfull Irish web women

running Irish-based technology companies

WHO ARE BUCKING A WORLDWIDE TREND IN AN INDUSTRY STRUGGLING TO ATTRACT FEMALES

  

Above 3 of the Irish Web Women l to R Cathriona Hallahan, Regina Moran, Kathryn O’Donoghue
While attracting young women into careers in technology remains an issue globally, here in Ireland, many of our leading tech companies have senior female leaders at the helm. This is the opposite experience to the tech sector in California’s Silicon Valley, where there is a lamentable dearth of top female executives.
Some would say that the technology industry has an image problem. It might seem like the preserve of the “geeky” man, which could put women off. In advance of the Dublin Web Summit, which takes place on October 30 and 31 in the RDS, ‘Weekend’ met six vibrant women at the very top of the technology industry in Ireland, who have reached their current roles from a variety of backgrounds and routes.
Cathriona Hallahan, Managing Director, Microsoft Ireland
Dubliner Cathriona Hallahan (48) has worked at Microsoft Ireland since 1986, and was appointed MD in March 2013. She is married to racehorse breeder Tim Molloy and they live on a farm with their daughter, Molly (13).
“I did a secretarial course after school and joined Microsoft in 1986 as an accounts clerk. My first job was to go out and buy biscuits for the tea. The company has developed and transformed over the past 27 years. When you are young and pro-active and willing to go the extra mile, you will be recognised for that in an expanding company.
“Promotions and recognition came quite quickly in the early days, but as I went up into management  and director roles, I was mainly competing with men who were quite senior and very qualified, often with experience from other companies.
“I always tell women that they need to be very open about their aspirations. I remember asking one manager why I hadn’t been interviewed a few years ago for a position that one of my male colleagues got, and he said that I hadn’t told him I was interested. I think there’s a slight attitude difference between men and women, in that a man is more likely to apply  for a job, thinking, ‘I have 80pc of what they’re looking for’, whereas a woman will hold back, thinking, ‘I haven’t got 20pc of the requirements’.
“My husband works from home , so he’s there to pick our daughter Molly up and do the running around, which means I don’t have to worry about that side of things.
“I try not to work at weekends if I can, although I’ll check  my emails on the phone to see if anything is burning. I wouldn’t say I have the answer to the work/life balance, but it’s helped by having a really strong team.
“My management style is very open and transparent, and I qualified as an executive coach ten years ago as I’m very passionate about people. I love seeing people who have worked with me progressing in their careers, and thinking that I may have made a difference in their lives.”
Favourite apps, Newstalk, Xbox Music, Bing Travel
The next big thing, “Enterprise social networking, such as Microsoft’s Yammer, where a company’s internal and external use of social media is used to connect individuals who share similar business interests or activities.”
Regina Moran, CEO, Fujitsu Ireland
Tipperary woman Regina Moran is married to Jim, who is a stay-at-home dad to their three children, Conor (17), Maeve (14) and Eoghan (eight). Regina leads a team of 350 people as CEO of Fujitsu Ireland . She is in her late 40s.
“I think it’s hard to have it all, and there are choices that have to be made along the way. There came a point where my husband Jim and I had to decide who was going to be more involved at home, as we knew we both couldn’t have high-flying careers and a family life with three children.
“At that time, Jim was a very successful electronic engineer, but my career  was a bit more advanced. It’s a tough decision for any family, particularly the person who has to let go of their career, but it gave us stability. I’d like to think we’re good parents and Jim is fantastic, as I don’t think I could do it without the support I get from him. It’s demanding for him, as the children are so involved in sports and music.
“I studied electronic engineering and, in the early days, it was very male-oriented. Later, I did an MBA because I wanted to run a company, and felt it would round out my technical background. I was thrilled being appointed CEO of Fujitsu Services in 2006 and Fujitsu Ireland in 2009, as although it’s a global company, you’re given a lot of autonomy to shape the destiny of your local organisation.
“Even though I love work, I enjoyed every second of my maternity leave with my children, as it’s a very precious time. When you are off, the organisation moves around you, and you can’t assume that you are in the same situation coming back as before you went. Organisations move on and maybe new people have joined, so you have to accept that and take it on the chin. You may need to re-establish yourself and keep believing that you have huge value to add.
“There are times when my job is very demanding, so when it’s less demanding, I try to spend time with the family and not get caught up with things for the sake of it. I keep meetings as short and focused as they can be. I don’t always succeed in switching off when I’m away, but it helps knowing my leadership team is first rate.
“Careers in technology are a passport to anywhere in the world. I’ve travelled a lot and am currently learning Japanese so that I can speak it in Tokyo. Our industry is new and exciting and diverse every day, and I get a great buzz from that. It energises me.”
Favourite apps, Global Corporate Challenge, Vimeo, JapEn (translator)
The next big thing, “Human-centric computing, ie, the collision of the physical and digital worlds using sensor technology and real-time information . For example, Fujitsu in Japan has invented a walking stick for elderly people that monitors their heart rate and pulse. It detects falls and is connected to an alert centre.”
Kathryn O’Donoghue, Director of Ads Policy Operations in Europe, the Middle East and Africa at Google
After a diverse career in technology both in Ireland and abroad, Kathryn O’Donoghue, (49) has worked at Google since 2009.
She lives in Dublin with her partner, Willie Kavanagh.
“I’ve been working in the technology industry for a long time, and it’s clear there isn’t equality at the highest levels.
“When I think about the glass ceiling, there are two sides to it.
“Research shows that diverse teams in organisations will outperform non-diverse teams, so I think it’s an incredible waste of talent to ignore women or minorities for whatever reason, whether that is an unconscious bias or deliberate discrimination.
“It also isn’t good business  sense. From managing both men and women, I feel that women are more shy at articulating their ambitions.
“My advice to them is to say yes to opportunities when they are offered, and then figure out how to make it all work afterwards. As women, we have to step up and take on the roles that are there.
“I think the skills that helped me progress include being good at solving problems and getting things done.
“I’m optimistic and like to see the bright side, even if things get really bad.
“Courage helped as well, as I went to live in countries where I didn’t speak the language, and took positions  where I didn’t know the industry as well as the one I’d come from.
“I have lived abroad for years in Italy, Zurich and Paris, which was good fun, and that gave me the opportunity to learn new languages and explore other countries.
“I came back from Paris in 2008 for mainly personal reasons, as my partner Willie was based here, and we were commuting back and forth at weekends. I joined Google shortly after that.
“My job is busy, so it’s important to recharge.
“We go to our house in the middle of Wicklow at weekends, which overlooks a lake, and go hill-walking and do some gardening.
“I like to stay involved with my family, and Willie has a lovely  22-year-old daughter, Sam, who is at college.
“I’m not very disciplined when it comes to switching off my phone.
“But I try not to answer  it outside of work unless something blows up, although I keep an eye on email.
“I tend to be quite relaxed, but everyone gets stressed at times, for example, if multiple, very serious deadlines are coming at the same time.
“I find that exercising and reading are great ways to get rid of stress because when you come back, the intensity is diminished.
“The hours can be long, and when l’m working in India, I can find myself doing 16 or 17-hour days. But then you can take the time to recover from it afterwards.
“It is important to develop your confidence, be ambitious, know your value, ask for opportunities and be willing to take risks.
“And understand that there are trade-offs – it’s very hard to have everything, so make those trade-offs intelligently.”
Favourite apps, Google Now, WhatsApp and Spotify
The next big thing, “That technology will be seamlessly integrated into everyday life through wearable computing, such as Google Glass and smart watches.”
Louise Phelan, Vice President of Global Operations in Europe, the Middle East & Africa at PayPal
Louise Phelan is from Laois and joined PayPal in 2006. Now in her mid-40s, she lives in Dublin with her husband, Noel, and has two step-children, Andrew (18) and Heather (16).
“My dream was to be a paediatric nurse, but I decided at 22 that it wasn’t the right path for me. I took a complete risk and changed my career path to study law, economics and credit management .
“To be honest, my femininity or gender hasn’t impacted me at all in any role that I went for in my career. I was fortunate to be given great opportunities, and I grabbed them with both hands.
“I was lucky because I’ve had a good family and support mechanisms to make sure I was successful in my roles.
“There is quite a bit of travel involved in my job, because PayPal has multiple locations and our mothership is in the United States.
“Hours can be long because we work across global teams and different time zones, so it’s about balance and give and take and trying to work  things so it suits everybody involved as much as possible.
“I work very hard, but when I’m off, I play  hard too. Noel and I make time for ourselves. I also go to my gym at half-past-six in the morning and I don’t care what’s happening in the world.
“It’s not as easy some days if there’s a fire burning somewhere, but you just have to manage. I did stints moving around to different locations throughout my career, but I never permanently moved to another country as my family here are a huge part of my life.
“I’m one of 17 children and have nine sisters, so that keeps me busy. My mum, Delia, is 88, and seeing her every Saturday is very important to me as she’s been a fantastic support.
“I didn’t have children and the reality is that it was a choice that I made. I don’t think it was anything to do with my career, really, but was more related to the timing of where my life was and what I was doing.
“It probably made things easier in ways when it came to work , and if I could do it again would I do it differently – who knows? I have two step-children, Andrew and Heather, and they’re both fantastic.
“My advice to other women is to follow your dreams and your hearts and stay true to yourself. You have to continually develop yourself and put yourself out there to network as that gives you an opportunity to showcase yourself and to understand who the other men and women in the industry are. And don’t take yourself too seriously!”
Favourite apps, PayPal, eBay, Facebook
Next big thing, “I think that soon we won’t carry money and all of our transactions will be done with our phones, so gift vouchers, etc., will all be stored in the one location.”
Sonia Flynn, Director, Facebook Ireland
Sonia, 38, is from Kildare, and now lives in Dublin with husband Joe and eight-month-old son Leon. Having joined Facebook in 2009, she was appointed director in 2011, and is responsible for more than 400 staff in Dublin.
“I studied applied languages so don’t have a technical background, and I oversee operations and the office in Dublin. Even though I work at Facebook, I also have a lot of fun with it personally, as it keeps me incontact  with people from way back or those I met travelling.
“I’m married seven years to Joe, and have spent at least half of that time on the road, having lived in places like Bulgaria, India and Poland. We had to make the long-distance thing work, and Joe has always been so supportive.
“I waited a while to have a baby, as I travelled a lot for my career and put some things aside at times. I was probably as surprised as anyone that I’ve had a baby, to be honest, including my parents!
“I’m just back after eight months’ maternity leave, and think some women, myself included, lose a little bit of confidence after having a baby and can suffer from feeling guilty.
“You also worry about re-engaging your brain and contributing at the same level when you return to work. We have a system here where you are paired up with someone who has been through the same thing, so you can talk through what’s on your mind. Even though I’m a senior person on site, I’ve taken full advantage of that with my “buddy” Katie, and she has been great.
“Before I returned, I spent a lot of time on my calendar trying to work things out. We have a fantastic childminder who comes to the house and looks after Leon. He has a better social life than I have and goes to a music class and interactive play  class.
“I would happily have worked really late before I had the baby, but now I try to make sure I’m home to see him off to bed, and then I can log back on afterwards.
“To relax, I love walking on Sandymount Strand, and my guilty pleasure is ’80s and alternative music. I did a DJ course when I was four months’ pregnant, as years ago I presented a show called Artbeat on Anna Livia.
“I told my husband that I wanted a non-mummy present last Christmas, so he bought me a mixing desk. Mind you, I’m probably not ready for public performances yet!”
Favourite Apps, Facebook, Airbnb, Hailo,
Next big thing, “The trend around apps continues and will deepen, so people will be able to do even more through their phones .”
Fidelma Healy, Chief Operating Officer, Gilt Ireland
Originally from Limerick, Fidelma Healy lives in Dublin with her two children, Tim (20) and Emer (13). In her late 40s, she started with Gilt Ireland in March 2011, and was responsible for setting up its offices in Dublin and Limerick.
“The technology industry constantly changes, which I relish, as I thrive in that kind of environment. I’ve never been conscious of the glass ceiling because for me it was just a case of doing my job well and enjoying what I was doing.
“I’m a great believer in a good gender balance but have to admit that it can be hard to find female engineers with experience. We’ve agonised about it over the years and wondered if it’s because if you go back ten years, there weren’t as many females being encouraged to study maths. The experienced people we need may come from that time. I definitely see a mood change now and think a career in engineering could suit a lot of women as there is a lot of flexibility there.
“I’m a single mum, so I give an awful lot of my life to work  and then it’s about balance at home. What suffered for a long time was time for myself as my life was a cycle of work, home, and time with the children. I’ve got hill-walking at weekends now and prioritise it whether it’s sunny or snowing because being up in the mountains and away from it all is almost like a form of meditation that helps me to switch off.
“When they were younger , I had to choose schools for my children that allowed me to drop them at 8am and collect them at 6pm or 6.30pm, which narrowed my options significantly.
“I don’t think my kids suffered as a result, and while I was the one who occasionally missed things like plays, I did my very best and managed to make most things.
“I want my children to understand that a woman’s career  is as important as a man’s and I think both of them see that.”

China watch-dog to monitor smog’s impact on our health

  

China’s health watchdog has vowed to set up a national network to monitor the impact of air pollution on human health within the coming three to five years.

The goal was revealed in a work plan on air pollution released by the National Health and Family Planning Commission on Monday.
Under the plan, the network will gather data on the compositions of PM2.5, airborne particles measuring less than 2.5 microns in diameter, in different regions and the density changes of main air pollutants, which will provide data support for the analysis and evaluation of their impact on health.
The document noted that the absence of a long-term, systematic monitoring system has prevented the country from uncovering the link between air pollution and human health.
According to the plan, the network will first cover a number of cities in 16 provinces and municipalities where smog is frequent as well as certain villages and towns in rural areas in six provincial-level regions by the year end.
The evaluation will be based on the integrated and long-term analysis of PM2.5 data, weather information and cases of local residents’ diseases and deaths, the plan added.