Archive for January 2023
Flexible working hours good for business – UN
Flexible working arrangements like those introduced during the Covid-19 crisis are not only good for employees but also boost productivity and potentially a business’s bottom line, the United Nations said today. In its first report focusing on work-life balances, the UN’s International Labour Organization evaluated the effects of working time, working hours and working time…
Read MoreEuro zone recession may not be as deep as expected – PMI
Euro zone business activity contracted less than initially thought at the end of last year as price pressures eased, according to a survey which suggested the bloc’s recession may not be as deep as expected. S&P Global’s final composite Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) for the euro zone, seen as a good gauge of economic health,…
Read MoreExchequer collected record €83bn in tax last year
The Exchequer collected a record €83.1 billion in tax last year, according to figures published this evening by the Department of Finance. That is €14.7 billion ahead of the previous record set in 2021, an increase of 21.5%. The increase is put down to higher levels of corporation tax, income tax and VAT. The figures…
Read MoreServices sector growth picks back up in December
Expansion in the services sector picked up in December following four months of slowing growth in a row to push overall activity in the private sector back into positive territory, a survey showed today. The AIB S&P Global Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) for services rose to 52.7 from 50.8 in November. It had come close…
Read More105,253 new cars registered in 2022, down 10% on 2019
105,253 new cars were registered last year, up marginally on 2021, but down 10% on the pre-Covid levels recorded in 2019. The figures from the Society of the Irish Motor Industry (SIMI) reveal that 15,678 electric vehicles were registered throughout 2022 – up over 80% on the previous year and 355% higher than 2019. Petrol…
Read MoreCroatia joins the Euro and enters Schengen area
Croatia has switched to the Euro and entered Europe’s passport-free zone – two major milestones for the country after joining the European Union nearly a decade ago. At midnight (23.00pm on Saturday Irish time) the Balkan nation bid farewell to its kuna currency and become the 20th member of the Eurozone. It is the 27th…
Read MoreRemote working, new employment laws and pay claims – the world of work in 2022
The Covid pandemic led to a reimagining of the concept of work. Forced to stay at home, employees and businesses quickly realised that tasks they had always performed in-person or on-site could be done remotely. Staff who sat in traffic and sat at a desk in an office building all their working lives saw that…
Read MoreEuro zone business lending growth slows sharply in November
Bank lending to euro zone companies slowed in November, easing back from the sector’s biggest borrowing binge in over a decade as rising interest rates and a looming recession appear to be taking a toll, European Central Bank data showed today. Lending to businesses in the 19-country euro area expanded by 8.4% in November after…
Read MoreManufacturing contracts amid sharp fall in new orders
The Irish manufacturing sector contracted for the second month running in December, the latest Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) from AIB concludes. The deterioration in conditions came on the back of a sharp drop in new orders, the study found. A contraction in new and outstanding work accelerated and output fell, albeit at a slower pace.…
Read MoreRate of growth in prices being sought for properties slows to 6% – MyHome.ie report
The annual rate of growth in prices being sought for properties nationally slowed to 6% in the final three months of 2022, a new report from property website MyHome.ie concludes. The report suggests a continuation of the trend whereby prices in Dublin are rising at a slower pace than those in the rest of the…
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