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Ship of Fools

How Stupidity and Corruption Sank the Celtic Tiger

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Ship of Fools

By: Fintan O'Toole
Narrated by: Roger Clark
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About this listen

Between 1995 and 2007, the Republic of Ireland was the worldwide model of successful adaptation to economic globalisation. The success story was phenomenal: a doubling of the workforce; a massive growth in exports; a GDP that was substantially above the EU average. Ireland became the world's largest exporter of software and manufactured the world's supply of Viagra. The factors that made it possible for Ireland to become prosperous - progressive social change, solidarity, major state investment in education, and the critical role of the EU - were largely ignored as too sharply at odds with the dominant free-market ideology. The Irish boom was shaped instead into a simplistic moral tale of the little country that discovered low taxes and small government and prospered as a result.

There were two big problems. Ireland acquired a hyper-capitalist economy on the back of a corrupt, dysfunctional political system. And the business class saw the influx of wealth as an opportunity to make money out of property. Aided by corrupt planning and funded by poorly regulated banks, an unsustainable property-led boom gradually consumed the Celtic Tiger. This is, as Fintan O'Toole writes, "a good old-fashioned jeremiad about the bastards who got us into this mess". It is an entertaining, passionate story of one of the most ignominious economic reversals in recent history.

©2010 Fintan O'Toole (P)2010 Audible, Inc.
Economics Europe Political Science Politics & Government Capitalism Government Taxation Banking Money Socialism United Kingdom

Critic reviews

“O’Toole...has produced a coruscating polemic against the cronyism and corruption that in his view helped to fuel the boom…. [H]is highly readable book is a salutary reminder that cronyism, light regulation and loose ethics can be a deadly combination.” (Financial Times)
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Fintan presents a well balanced view of what went wrong in Ireland. We all want a simple story, the banks caused the crisis. But, he paints a picture of a crisis waiting to happen in a country the kept voting in openly corrupt politicians who allowed unregulated banks and financial institutions to run wild, and sqandered money through the boom times. Worse still the government just kept borrowing to keep it all going for the last 7 or 8 years.

It's a nicely narrated book that moves along quickly and kept me engaged. Tone of the book is conversational.

I really enjoyed it.

Measured, balanced and easy listening

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Like others, I enjoyed the content but it was completely the wrong choice of narrator. I was determined to hear what Fintan O'Toole had to say but was driven to distraction by the narrator and his pronunciation. It was a real struggle to get past that but worth it. Please use a different narrator for your next book!

Wrong choice of narrator

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An excellent book, very well written and researched. However great fan of audible that I am, this is one of these books that I would have preferred to read as a paper book. There is so much detail that I needed sometimes to refer back to previous chapters to really follow it properly and that is more difficult on an I Pod..
But I stuck with it to the end, and felt that I understood much better the economic problems which have befallen Eire, and it was very, very interesting.

Informative

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I agree with the reviews of others regarding the narrator who seems to be reading the book for the first time.
There appears to be no quality control involved in this and many other Audible books (“That should be subsidies Roger, not subsides, try again”).

Interesting book but excruciating narrator

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Perhaps a salutary tale for post Brexit Britain and the dangers of too little regulation. Beautifully written, delightful vocabulary and turn of phrase. Can be a little terse at times with lots of statist and names. Roger Clark has a wonderful voice.

Simply fascinating

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