The Generation Game
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Average customer review:Product Description
How big is your piece of the pie? After ten years of a boom and on the eve of a downturn, Irish society has been turned on its head by a Generation War. The clear winners have been the middle-aged Jagger Generation. They have been enormously enriched by the property boom, creating a new class of Accidental Millionaires. The younger generation - the cash-strapped Jugglers - will be badly exposed as the credit wave recedes. The Bono Boomers, wedged between the winners and losers, are not about to grow up just because the economy turns down. They've too many important dates to keep, like 'designer camping' at the Electric Picnic. The Bono Boomers are Ireland's first 'permalescents' - a permanently adolescent generation, too young to be old, too old to be hip.When the Botox Economy is laid bare and the financial filler of others people's money becomes evident, this 'Generation Game' will play itself out as the Jaggers, Jugglers and Bono Boomers struggle to maintain their slice of a diminished pie. However, the slow-down gives us the opportunity to take stock. There are plenty of reasons to be optimistic. Taking a trip around the globe from Shanghai to New York, from Latin America to Central Europe, we can learn from history and appreciate that Ireland has a unique economic resource: our Global Tribe. If we exploit the demographic potential of the Diaspora, we can re-invigorate the nation. The twenty-first century gives us the opportunity to see the island of Ireland as the cradle of a global nation which extends worldwide and is gelled together by the shared experience of the Tribe. The prosperity of future Irish generations is based on harnessing the collective power of past generations. This is the global Generation Game.Praise for "The Pope's Children": 'Funny, irreverent, bitingly accurate and even-handed' - "The Irish Times". 'Full of attitude' - "Village Magazine". 'The most definitive guide of Ireland today. Reed it and weep' - "Sunday Tribune". 'Brilliant and funny' - "The Guardian". 'Spot on. A deft dissection of social mores' - "The Irish Independent".
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #160806 in Books
- Published on: 2007-09
- Original language: English
- Binding: Hardcover
- 296 pages
Editorial Reviews
About the Author
David McWilliams is the author of The Pope's Children. He lives in Dublin with his wife and two children.
Customer Reviews
Cometh the hour...
When I landed up here 20 years ago everyone else was heading in the other direction, houses were dirt cheap and the late Raymond Crotty's Ireland in Crisis had just come out. Taking a country's yardstick for success its ability to provide for its people, he exposed a bankrupt state bled dry by very extensive, deeply entrenched vested interests. Another contemporary observer, Desmond Fennell, had a nightmare vision of our future as larger, insular version of Luxemburg, populated by a tiny comfortable elite surviving on EC handouts and sinecures and presiding over an empty rural playground for wealthy visitors. A decade later the mental landscape charted in John Water's insightful An Intelligent Person's Guide to Modern Ireland was recognizably the same except that an economic boom that nobody had seen coming had somehow contrived to happen.
While David McWilliam's perceptive and highly readable new book appears to belong to a different universe it resembles Crotty's work in surprising ways. Crotty's overvalued land (which he wanted to have taxed so as to bring it into use) is now McWilliam's overpriced "property", rejection of the EU returns as rejection of monetary union, and Crotty's emigrants show up again in the diaspora. An economist by training, McWilliams shows the same independence and practical intelligence as the self-taught Kilkenny man and grounds his case in personal observation and experience.
In what can be seen as a sequel to Ireland in Crisis, the mood is in contrast breezily upbeat and can-do and there is plenty of incidental detail to keep the pages turning. His cartoonish stereotypes will irritate the easily aroused but their catchiness is a virtue in helping the reader to follow the ins and outs of the argument. The signs are that it was written in a hurry, perhaps with TV deadlines in mind, particularly the final chapter, but I'd guess he's always in a hurry. And the generalizations can get a little airy, as for example his passing reference to "old Ratzinger's" Regensburg speech. I thought the "old Ratzinger's" intention here was not so much to open a debate about the future of Europe as rather to argue the centrality of reason in religious faith - a point the ever-reasonable McWilliams will surely accept. You might also question his confident prognosis for China in the absence of liberal reforms - see Will Hutton. But this is mere nitpicking as it's the bigger picture that we want from McWilliams.
In contrast to the other three writers (four, if you include John Healy) McWilliams is more the insider, a southsider economist and journalist, secure in his own place within things. He is also blunt in his acceptance of the post-Cultural Revolution settlement - his Redundant Radicals came out on top "because they were right". But he is clearly a decent man and fair to all the players in the game - immigrants, emigrants, winners, losers, even the ordinary Chinese working man.
Overt criticism has so far been reserved for Fianna Fail and their propertied friends (see his website for a lively discussion forum). But if Fennell and Waters are right many people continue stubbornly to support them precisely because they see more skullduggery (albeit of the genteel variety) outside FF than within. Maybe they are wrong, and maybe Crotty's vested interests were imaginary or, if real, have since vanished mysteriously like the morning mists. But if not, then McWilliams, who has cast himself as the people's champion, is on a collision course with his own tribe (to use a favourite word). As the others could testify, this won't be pleasant but he will be able to share the consolation of knowing that they at least were right - and more intelligent than their critics. Mar sin tabhair bualadh bos do. After all, who else do we have?
A mixed bag
I found the first about two thirds of this interesting with lots of historical data about previous booms and busts across the world and then I hit the last third. It suddenly stopped being interesting and started being a rant about how Ireland should privatise everything possible and become a haven for anyone of Irish ancestry wanting to come back.
Some of the UK's new border policies may change a fair bit of what's written here. He was saying that we need to be more UK/US centric with out thinking and if possible get out of the EMU, I think principally because we're coming to a situation where it's going to be more of a drain on us than the opposite. Ah yes, the politics of opportunity, take until something stops giving and then abandon ship.
His example of how we used to win the Eurovision at one stage and now the wins were heading towards Eastern Europe because of block voting doesn't really reflect the reality of how dreadful the recent entries have been from Ireland. Honestly I voted for several Eastern European entries myself and wouldn't have voted for Ireland if I had a chance.
An interesting read but I'm not sure that the amount of salt you need to digest it wouldn't be lethal.
This Book Is A Complete Rip ! Save Your Money
Ireland over the last 10 years has experienced an Economic Boom thanks mainly due to its low Corporation Tax Rate and been a English speaking country that has integrated itself to the European Union,its main exports are agricultural produce,software,pharmaceuticals and Property Prices In Ireland have skyrocketed,the country is experiencing Immigration for the first time since the foundation of the State in 1922. In a nutshell what this book says is commonsense the reason its so expensive is that it was
promoted on RTE Television the Irish State Broadcaster.Basically all the
manufacturing will leave Ireland For Low Wage India and China Ireland is doomed




