This is the equivalent of going to a restaurant, eating a meal and then being given a bill that includes the costs of the plate, cutlery, table and chair. The assumptions in this report are nonsensical. The real figure's less than €3bn.
This is the equivalent of going to a restaurant, eating a meal and then being given a bill that includes the costs of the plate, cutlery, table and chair. The assumptions in this report are nonsensical. The real figure's less than €3bn.
@KevinPMeagher I'm reminded how the british claimed German reunification would be too expensive. Thatcher was apoplectic when Haughey took advantage of Ireland's presidency of the EEC to call a summit supporting German reunification. They failed to stop Germany will fail to stop Ireland too.
@KevinPMeagher Kevin, I don’t know which restaurant you are going to but every time I go out to eat I am absolutely paying a percentage of the establishment’s fixed costs when I settle my bill. And so is every other customer. How do you think those costs get paid?
@KevinPMeagher Unsure as to what universe you live in but your restaurant bill does include the cost of the plates, cutlery, table and chairs. Do you actually believe that these things grow in the restaurant? I bet you prefer the reports that tell us we'll all be rich in a UI?
@KevinPMeagher I thought it sounded high, can you expand on the nuts and bolts of what they've done wrong in their analysis?
@KevinPMeagher Do you need to borrow our calculator? Ours works.
@KevinPMeagher But the cost of all those things are effectively included in a restaurant bill too surely? I haven't read this. It's mostly hypothetical and all bar the margins won't give a toss about the economics of reunification