THE ROYAL IRISH ACADEMY IS IRELAND'S LEADING BODY OF EXPERTS IN THE SCIENCES AND HUMANITIES

The Royal Irish Academy/Acadamh Ríoga na hÉireann champions research. We identify and recognise Ireland’s world class researchers. We support scholarship and promote awareness of how science and the humanities enrich our lives and benefit society. We believe that good research needs to be promoted, sustained and communicated. The Academy is run by a Council of its members. Membership is by election and considered the highest academic honour in Ireland.

Read more about the RIA

Austerity Conference and Keynote Lecture

When

Thursday, October 29, 2015, 18:00 - Friday, October 30, 2015, 16:30

Where

Academy House, 19 Dawson Street, Dublin 2

Tickets

Full Price Keynote Lecture Ticket Thursday 21 October 18:00 5 EUR
Concession Keynote Lecture Ticket Thursday 29 October 18:00 3 EUR
Free Ticket for Conference Friday 30 October Free

The Royal Irish Academy in association with University College Dublin invites you to attend this keynote lecture presented by Prof. Simon Wren-Lewis, University of Oxford. This lecture has been arranged by the Academy's Social Sciences Committee.

The Debating austerity in Ireland conference has been arranged by the Royal Irish Academy’s Social Sciences Committeein in association with UCD College of Social Sciences and Law.

Keynote lecture: How to avoid austerity by Professor Simon Wren-Lewis, University of Oxford

Thursday 21 October at 18:00

Austerity may be defined as a large fiscal contraction that causes a substantial increase in unemployment. If the government has a budget deficit that is unsustainable, or a debt level that is too high, it is sometimes suggested that austerity is inevitable. For an economy with a flexible exchange rate and debt in its own currency, which includes the Eurozone as a whole, this is simply false. Fiscal contraction can always be delayed until monetary policy can offset the deflationary impact of any fiscal contraction. Unfortunately this is not true for a member of a currency union that requires a greater fiscal contraction than the union as a whole. Even in this case, however, a sharp and deep fiscal contraction will be an inefficient waste of resources. As the macroeconomic theory behind these propositions is simple and widely accepted, the interesting question about the current global austerity is why it has happened.

Simon Wren-Lewis is currently Professor of Economic Policy at the Blavatnik School of Government at Oxford University, having previously been a professor in the Economic Department at Oxford. He is also an Emeritus Fellow of Merton College. He began his career as an economist in H.M.Treasury, and then moved to the National Institute of Economic and Social Research, where he ended up as Head of Macroeconomic Research. In 1990 he became a professor at Strathclyde University, and from 1995 to 2006 he was a professor at Exeter University. He has published papers on macroeconomics in a wide range of academic journals including the Economic Journal, European Economic Review, and American Economic Review. Since becoming an academic he has advised H.M.Treasury, the Bank of England and the Office for Budget Responsibility. In September 2015 he was appointed to the British Labour Party’s Economic Advisory Committee. He writes on economic policy issues in various publications and at his blog: mainlymacro.blogspot.com.

Academic work has often had a strong policy focus. In 1989 he published, with colleagues at the National Institute, a study suggesting that an entry rate of 1.95 DM/£ into the ERM was too high, which at the time was a minority view. In 2002 he wrote one of the background papers for the Treasury's 2003 assessment of its five economic tests for joining EMU. He was also the principal external advisor to the Bank of England on the development of its core macroeconomic models. A long time advocate of Fiscal Councils, his 2007 proposal was influential in the formation of the UK‘s Office of Budget Responsibility. Since starting his blog at the end of 2011, he has written extensively about macroeconomic policy in the UK and the Eurozone.
 

Conference: Debating austerity in Ireland

Friday 30 October from 09:30-16:30

The conference shall comprise four sessions:

• Framing austerity: Ireland in a European context 
• Challenging austerity: power, responsibility and impact 
• Austerity and the Irish social landscape 
• Austerity to recovery: where do we go from here?

Papers will be delivered by economists, sociologists, political scientists and geographers from Irish universities. Contributions will also be made from the Economic and Social Research Institute and Social Justice Ireland. There will be an opportunity for questions and answers at the end of each session, with a final discussion at the end of the conference which is to be chaired by Karl Whelan, MRIA.

List of speakers: 

John McHale, Dept of Economics, NUIG
Kieran Allen, School of Sociology, UCD
Niamh Hardiman, School of Politics and International Relations, UCD
Julien Mercille, School of Geography, UCD
Niamh Hourigan, Department of Sociology, UCC
Chris Whelan MRIA, Emeritus Professor, School of Sociology and Geary Institute for Public Policy, UCD
Dorothy Watson, Economic and Social Research Institute
Ronan Lyons, Department of Economics, TCD
Seamus Coffey, Department of Economics, UCC
Sean O’Riain, Department of Sociology, MU
Sean Healy, Social Justice Ireland

 

 

Support the future of sciences & humanities in Ireland

Make a donation