Ireland Calling


Ireland Calling by John Spain

Emigration the only way out for young Irish in Ireland -- No future, no jobs, no hope if they stay behind

Posted on Thursday, October 18, 2012 at 08:05 AM

RSS


Recent Posts

Archives

submit to reddit

Children taking part in a Sinn Fein organized demonstration 
against emigration in Dublin earlier this year.

Behind the very occasional good news story about new jobs the economic situation here remains absolutely dire.  Not that you would think that watching the way Taoiseach (Prime Minister) Enda Kenny and his ministers turn up at every new job announcement to bask in the glory and suggest that we're emerging from the gloom.

There have been a couple of examples of this in the past two weeks, with the Kerry Group announcing 900 jobs at a new food product research facility to be built in Co. Kildare and the Paddy Power bookmaking business announcing 600 new jobs in their Dublin HQ in online gambling and the supporting technology and marketing.

Both of these are impressive developments in home grown businesses that are doing well, and of course new jobs are not only welcome but desperately needed.   But the way we are all supposed to accept news like this as the dawn of a bright new day and the way the Kenny and his ministers seize on these announcements and milk them to the last drop is worrying for several reasons. 

Firstly these are mainly high end jobs, some of which will require high skill sets and language abilities that will not be that easy to find among Irish school and college graduates.  As in similar job announcements recently, some of these jobs will go to foreign applicants who will come in here to fill the vacancies.   We will come back to this later. 

But the main issue in this week's talking points memo, as Bill O'Reilly would say, is that such announcements give a misleading view on the jobs situation here right now, because that remains extremely bleak. 

The fact is that Ireland is hemorrhaging people now, particularly young people, because they can't get jobs at home. 

The headlines and the statistics are soul destroying, and no doubt you will have seen some of them. 
Most of the figures come from information gleaned in the census last year, which led to the memorable headline that emigration was worse now than at any time since the famine. 

Another emotive headline said that one person was leaving every five minutes.  This was built on figures that showed that 87,100 people a year were emigrating – a daily average of 238, or one person every 303 seconds, which is just over five minutes. 

That was the situation over a year ago, and what level emigration is at now is anyone's guess, although no expert thinks it is coming down. 

Adding information from airline figures, from unemployment figures and other official statistics to the base of the census data allows the experts to estimate the current level of emigration.  But it's not an exact science, partly because there is no real effort to gather enough information.  Official Ireland does not really want to know.  

Read more on Irish immigration here.

The overall point is that we are losing a significant slice of the present generation of young people.  And many of them will never come back on a permanent basis. 

The return of emigration here on a scale that is now higher than in the eighties or in the fifties or probably any time since the famine has, of course, caused a great deal of discussion and comment here. 

But a lot of this is superficial. An in-depth analysis of emigration to identify its root causes would involve many sacred cows in Ireland, and official Ireland is not prepared to go there. 

Of course we know the immediate reason why so many people are leaving right now -- they can't find jobs at home.  The emigration figures are higher than ever before because our population is higher than at any time since the famine, and the economic  crisis we are going through now is deeper than any this century. 

Most of that is of our own making, but our situation is made even worse by the worldwide financial crisis and slowdown.    

That much is clear.  It's stating the obvious.

But what is not clear is why Ireland is so vulnerable and so prone to emigration.  Mass emigration is not unique to us, but we are probably the country in the world best known for it. 

There are historic reasons, of course.  We have a history of emigration that goes back to the famine and because we speak English, the U.K., the U.S., Canada and Australia are easy destinations for our escape.  
There are social reasons as well.  For decades, up to relatively recently, our Catholic belief in the evils of birth control meant that large families were common.

Families with eight or 10 children growing up on modest farms in areas with no industrial development were seen as something to be celebrated, even though the inevitable result was going to be emigration.

That has now changed drastically, with the high number of single parent or one child families bringing down the average number of children per family in Ireland to less than two.

But there are still large families, and the emigration option is deeply ingrained in us at this stage.  

Another critical factor is the failure of our culture and particularly our school system to develop a sense of entrepreneurship.   The idea of starting your own business is not a dream many young Irish have, at least not until they go abroad.  Too often here the aim is to get into one of the professions or the civil service.  

Our school system is still a largely classical education, with rote learning to pass exams and a failure to teach children to think for themselves and to develop initiative.  In spite of recent efforts to get kids to do more math and science, Shakespeare and Irish still take up large chunks of school days. 

Very few schools have computer rooms, and computer skills and programming/information technology is still not a Leaving Cert (high school) subject.   

On top of this we have very poor language skills by European standards.  It's not unusual for a Dutch or French or German teenager to speak English and another foreign language as well as their own.  They study English and often another foreign language, starting in primary (junior) school. 

Here we don't study a "continental" language until secondary (high) school because Irish, the dead language to which we continue to pay lip service, is a compulsory part of every school day and eats up the time for language.

One consequence of this is that many call center and technical support center jobs here (like some of the new Paddy Power jobs mentioned above) end up being filled by immigrants from other parts of Europe. 
During times of strong economic growth these factors tend to masked by the number of jobs in construction and services.  But these weaknesses -- particularly the failure to develop an enterprise culture here and the failure to radically change our education system -- mean that in normal times emigration remains a constant factor in Irish life.  

Another factor that masks our failure is the success of foreign direct investment (FDI) here, the multinational companies (many American) who open plants here to supply product or services to Europe or the wider world. 

The fact that we are English speaking and that we have a young workforce that used to be cheap (and is now becoming cheap again) helps us to maintain this, although the truth is that it is mainly tax driven.  The trouble with FDI is that it is moveable, and we have seen the consequences of that in the past decade as we were undercut by well educated, young workforces in other countries and plants migrated from here.  

The bottom line is that our efforts to create and maintain enough jobs here for our population has never equaled the performance of, say, the Scandinavian countries.  Our society remains locked in attitudes and beliefs that prevent us from developing the way we need to and from tailoring our population level and our education in a way that will allow us to take control of our national destiny rather than forever being forced to accept the humiliation of forced emigration. 

Voluntary emigration will always be an option for our adventurous young people, and so it should be.  But forced emigration of people who do not want to leave is a scandal and a failure. 

The ridiculous amount of immigration to Ireland that happened during the boom -- the census last year showed that we now have half a million non-Irish people living here -- is another facet of our failure to plan and organize our society in a sustainable, sensible manner.   Around half of the emigration figures produced by the census last year related to some of these people going home again, mainly east Europeans. 

But many now regard Ireland as their permanent home, partly due to our higher standard of living, education, housing, health care, welfare and so on.  

Faced with an economy now in crisis and the necessity to make huge cutbacks in state spending, the wisdom of allowing such large scale immigration now seems doubtful, if it ever made sense. 

But what to do about the situation in this era of political correctness where everyone is expected to look on multi-culturalism as a blessing remains to be seen.

The immediate problem is, of course, our flat-lining economy, with little sign that our unemployment level (almost twice the level in the U.S.!) is going to come down anytime soon.  

Even the IMF last week was wondering aloud whether the austerity program here was depressing economic activity so much that jobs would not emerge and that the cure might be worse than the disease.  Thanks, guys.  We could have told you that. 

The answer, as if you didn't know, is to split our banking and our sovereign debt, get the ECB to take a hit on our bank debt and give us a chance. 

Beyond the present crisis we are in -- and it is difficult at the moment to look that far ahead -- we need to grow up as a country and start taking responsibility for ourselves, for how big our families are and for how we are going to provide enough jobs for our population, whatever sustainable level that is.

Only then might forced emigration be consigned to where it belongs -- the history books.   See more: Labour Party , Fianna Fail


31 Comments

15 - 31 | See all comments

I only agree with about 65% of this article. Mr. Spain makes some good points here and there but dropping the Irish language for other languages for the purpose of call center jobs? Complaining about large Irish families?! Thats a good thing. Wtf is this China?
WKnee - on re-reading tour post I absolutely agree with your additional point that immigration into Ireland will have a huge negative impact. Too many idealistic 'goody two shoes' politicians think that (and I have repeatedly heard this nonsense) Ireland owes the world something because our people emigrated. Yes, we went to the U.S. which had vast territory and few people, same for Australia, Canada etc. Ireland is a tiny island with virtually no ability culturally or economically to absorb these type of culturally diverse immigrants without forever impacting our own society. They should ask the French and the Dutch how they are making out with their Muslims.
In the Korean War at least 29 young Irishmen were among those killed. Three of these won Bronze Stars and one of the three, Cpl. Ptk Sheahan of Moyvane, Kerry, also won a Silver Star. It is unfair, simply deplorable that if a grandnephew or grandniece of those any of those brave young men now sought a permanent U.S. visa,he or she would have only a very slim chance of obtaining such document. Shouldn't young would-be emigrants from the land of the 29 who made the Supreme Sacrifice for the U.S. while Irish citizens now be rewarded with U.S. visas, which appear easily available to applicants from countries, none of whose citizens served with the U.S. in Korea?
Seamus60: It appears your differences with Gerry Adams is of a personal nature.I see him in a different light,and can say he has never lied to me since I first met him 40 years ago.
WoundedKnee: Alright, at least you seek to understand.That I respect. My post was not to show any disrespect for the Irish or anything Irish.I am Irish born and raised.My only point being,for 80 years our Country has been ruled by a Government of Freestaters,I have personal experience of their performance for 70 of those years.It is my considered opinion they failed utterly.The situation in Ireland today would support that.Could you explain how this occurred.I am at a loss too understand it.Why did the people let this go on for so many years.Now since Ireland has become the dumping ground for those unwanted souls by our Masters in Europe, they will one day have the right to vote.They will Rid Dublin of all Freestaters,which the Irish have failed too do for the past 80 years. Ireland has been ruled,it has not been Governed.This was not the intent of Pearce, Connelly,or Collins.In closing consider your harsh position you leveled at some countries in your last post,i think the Poles and Indians would especially be keen to raise a few issues with your opinion of their countries. Ghandi would be disappointed.
greensod: "Read my post again,see if you can get my drift." I have reread it, and it's still incomprehensible. You don't seem to be able to express yourself in writing.
Why are there no jobs in Ireland? Simple, somebody made the assumption that a an agrarian-based country that never experience the Industrial Revolution of its powerful neighbour could be transformed into a "tiger economy" based on selling houses to each other. On top of this, they assumed that a few transient foreign companies taking advantage of Ireland's cheaper labour costs (in the past) meant that Ireland was now a big player in the South Korea league. Not so. Ireland has no form of income or industry to keep the masses employed and NI, that theme park of Uber-Britishness (go to Leicester and then to Belfast and then decide which city is more British)is entirely financed by the hard-pressed British taxpayer. Both countries are on the edge, ROI is terrified Berlin with cut off their funding, and the Unionists have to keep strong-arming the adoring government in Westminster to keep the tsunami of cash flowing. Once both streams of income are stopped, the island of Ireland is finished as a viable place to live. Shades of St Kilda here, I think.
Greensod. You can`t assure me anything about Adams whom I have known personally for 30 years. The man is a liar who has been on the payroll of the brits for decades with others closer to my home in Derry.
Wounded Knee, re yr 10/10/12, statement: "Is that why [the Israelis] carried out pograms of Arab villages (Deir Yasin, for example)?” This item was publicized by Hazem Nusseibeh (then editor of Palestinian Broadcasting Service in 1948). Check BBC interview of Nusseibeh in 1998 in Amman, Jordan, in which he openly admitted these were his invented falsehoods, done on orders from Khalidi, the then 1948 Secretary of Arab Higher Committee. Please research carefully both sides of controversies. I was unable to get my response on the same 10-10-12 posting.
Seamus60, I can assure you, Gerry Adams is not in the fooling Business.
WoundedKnee, Looks like you completely missed my point. Racism in Cavan is not one of our strong points.Read my post again,see if you can get my drift.
Protestants, Criminals, and Immigrants, are simply cheaper to Employ, and Exploit, than God Fearing Roman Catholics !
It's raining here now. Thinking about Ireland's cultural heritage evaporating is troubling me.
There's more to education than sculpting young nationals to fit into industrial machinery. Irish patriot/school teacher Comdt P H Pearse, BA BCL once said: "Tír gán téanga ís tír gán anam/A land without a language is a land without a soul!" What price would Seán Spáin have us sell our soul for? Native Irish nationals loose out to employment prospects in their own country because the bosses union - the Irish Business and Employers Confederation (IBEC) prevailed upon the current government to exclude foreign workers from the protection of Irish labour law. Consequentlly, Irish bosses can hire foreign workers at wage levels in their countries of origin, providing an economic incentive for discriminating against fellow Irish nationals. And 33,000 millionaire Irish households are probably more patriotic to the Caymen Islands than to their purely nominal nationality of convenience. If Irish workers worked as cheaply as foreign workers do in their own countries, there would be zero unemployment, giving a lie to the ideology mythology of political independence.
WKnee - I think you misunderstood what I said. We are saying the exact same thing; semantics. Yes, as I have every reason to know well, Ireland has indeed seen wave after wave of emigration. What I was trying to say (apologies for my lack of clarity) is that the depth of this emigration is a new experience for the current generation in terms of what they had been expecting.




Log into IrishCentral with your Facebook account


or sign-in directly

E-Mail:
Password:
 Remember me Forgot my password
Not a member? Register Now!
print this article Print
email this articleE-mail