Ireland has climbed to be ranked 2nd in the world out of 189 countries in a United Nations index measuring longevity education and wealth.
What's behind the country's rapid climb since the index was launched in 1990? I spoke to lead author @pedrotconceicao irishtimes.com/news/ireland/i…
A few interesting things in summary:
- it's more to do with a rapid increase in average education than it is with economic growth, though that is significant (Ireland's economy basically doubled)
- the economic growth aspect is not inflated by the presence of multinationals in Ireland. The index uses a different measure to GDP (GNI) specifically to avoid that distortion
- Ireland does pretty well all round but it's remarkably, notably bad on one specific measure of gender equality: the percentage of women in parliament.
It's less than one in four, which is way below comparable countries like New Zealand and Denmark which are like 40/60
- when you adjust for inequality within the country, Ireland does move down the scale and is overtaken by Iceland and Finland. This is mostly due to inequality in wealth, rather than in education or life expectancy.
Nevertheless, the level of inequality is below the OECD average.
I told @pedrotconceicao that I expected people in Ireland would look at this ranking sceptically because it doesn't cohere with prevalent perceptions in the country. This led to quite an interesting conversation...
He wasn't able to comment on Ireland specifically, but this is apparently quite a global phenomenon. The UN conducted a study of this last year and found severe gaps in many countries between perceptions of the level of economic inequality, and what the data shows.
Essentially even when conditions have improved, expectations have risen faster.
"Our interpretation is that it is to do with expectations and aspirations not being met," he said. "A segment of the population that feels it is being left behind."
Absolutely agree with Thomas this is just an interesting study that allows us to look at progress over time, not ammunition to deny all the very real problems and mock the people trying to fix them

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Naomi O'Leary

Naomi O'Leary Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @NaomiOhReally

14 Nov
Amazon's Twitter customer service causing extreme hilarity on Irish Twitter by declaring a united Ireland
Worth checking out the whole thread 👌 good work Saturday night twitter
'Come out ye package fans' was special
Read 4 tweets
8 Oct
Irish news:
- 'on foot of'
- traffic at the Red Cow roundabout
- 12 jobs announced for Longford
- controversy over the handling of health/justice/Tusla scandal
- car accident, reported on the national hourly news bulletin
- 'senior hurling'
- Liveline drama fuels resignation
Italian news
- Pope Francis appeals for compassion for refugees
- Berlusconi scende in campo
- unions protest layoff terms in struggling industry
- right-wing positions to be powerbroker after next election
- Alitalia needs bailout
- Berlusconi scende in campo
Irish news (Northern edition):
- deadlock in Stormont
- talented local celebrated
- controversy over the behaviour of students in the Holylands
- minor matter becomes proxy sectarian row on call-in radio show
Read 8 tweets
7 Oct
A few @PassportIrish episodes from the past year that seem especially relevant:
Rise of the right: expert on the far right @CasMudde explains the potential for such movements in Ireland and what we can learn from the experience of other countries (February)patreon.com/posts/33599639
Journalist @samirashackle discusses her reporting digging into the collapse of attempts to investigate alleged war crimes in Iraq and the movement in favour of British military impunity patreon.com/posts/29677129
(We also touched on this in our discussion of the backlash against truth and justice efforts and the re-politicisation of Northern Ireland in right-wing British politics during the Brexit process in our episode on Collusion) theirishpassport.com/podcast/s3-epi…
Read 4 tweets
5 Oct
Ireland's Covid-19 approach has attracted international praise just as it comes under criticism at home: featured approvingly on the Dutch equivalent of SNL and @berlingske reporting it "transparent, predictable and an obvious inspiration for Denmark" irishtimes.com/news/health/ir…
You can behold the odd sight of a Merrion Street PDF broadcast to Dutch television viewers at 11:00 here as comedian presenter @arjenlubach criticises PM Mark Rutte and explains the Irish 5-phase system. "How nice would it be to make a super clear plan.."
Lubach perceptively hit the nail on the head by pointing out that the weakness in the system is that someone will still have to announce to the nation "we are going to stage X", and politicians won't want to. He suggested an automatic trigger if cases rise above set levels.
Read 5 tweets
4 Oct
Ireland typically runs a hospital bed occupancy level of 95%, and over 100% in the winter, with people lying in corridors. Our health system would be the quickest to be overrun in the EU, according to ECDC. That's relavant to policy decisions now.
The fact that Ireland lacks healthcare capacity is a policy and political choice about allocation of resources and taxation.
For context the average hospital bed occupancy rate in the OECD (fellow rich countries like Ireland) is 75% oecd-ilibrary.org/sites/0d67e02a….
Read 9 tweets
30 Sep
This is going to be like turning around an oil tanker. It follows six months of dissing of face masks by public figures apparently impervious to evidence that contradicted their prior convictions, from the head of the public health agency down.
Until August 17, the public health agency's advice to elderly care homes was that masks were unnecessary for staff in brief contact with patients, such as for short conversations. This advice was quietly changed in August without informing care providers nos.nl/nieuwsuur/arti…
The worried partner of a nurse wrote to me to point out RIVM advice that masks make people careless was superseded by their own research suggesting that they actually make people more careful, but that the guidelines weren't updated rivm.nl/documenten/cov… nos.nl/artikel/234172…
Read 5 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Too expensive? Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal Become our Patreon

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us on Twitter!