Saturday, 9 January 2021


9‭ ‬January 1980: Charlie Haughey made his infamous 'as a community, we are living away beyond our means' speech on this day. He started his address to the Nation by saying:

I wish to talk to you this evening about the state of the nation's affairs, and the picture I have to paint is not, unfortunately, a very cheerful one. The figures which are just now becoming available to us show one thing very clearly. As a community we are living away beyond our means.

I do not mean that everyone in the community is living too well. Clearly many are not and have barely enough to get by. But taking us all together, we have been living at a rate which is simply not justified by the amount of goods and services we are producing. To make up the difference, we have been borrowing enormous amounts of money, borrowing at a rate which just cannot continue. 

At the time the newly appointed Taoiseach was commended for his straight talking and his apparent determination to tackle the worsening Public Finances as the Economy started to go on the slide.‭ ‬But it was all an illusion as his Government failed to grasp the nettle and engaged in only token reform of the State’s Finances.‭ ‬In the subsequent Budget,‭ ‬the Minister of Finance, Michael O’Kennedy increased PAYE allowances and widened tax bands,‭ ‬but also increased indirect taxation. Taxes on cigarettes, alcohol and petrol all went up, while duties on cars, television sets and gramophone records were also raised.‭ But borrowing continued at unsustainable levels as Haughey fought to cling to power at any price by  spending more than the State could afford.

It was only in the late‭ 1990’s that it emerged that Charles J. Haughey, was also ‘living beyond his means’ with his extravagant Lifestyle as a Country Squire and a Yachtsman down in Kerry besides owning his own island there & was being financed by figures known and unknown in the Irish Business World. In particular his penchant for expensive Charvet shirts from Paris at a time when he told people we had to ‘tighten our belts’ raised much anger - but not a little mirth at the mans audacity!

 

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