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IMF sees significant negative Brexit impact on Irish economy

May 15, 2017
in Business News, Latest Nigeria News
Federal Govt To Vaccinate 41 Million Children Against Polio By December

KANO, NIGERIA - APRIL 12: A Nigerian schoolboy is vaccinated against polio during a mass nationwide polio inoculation April 12, 2005, in Kano, Nigeria. International aid workers once hoped to have polio eradicated off the face of the Earth by April 2005, the 50th anniversary of the approval of the polio vaccine. But recent efforts by some Nigerian Muslim leaders to stop Western inoculation programs have allowed polio to endure. Creating new victims even while hundreds of thousands of Nigerians suffer from the disease. Opportunities are scarce for polio sufferers, but programs like the Polio Victims Association allow them to make a small living, welding hand-cranked polio bicycles and other projects for a small salary. Nigeria is undergoing a massive countrywide push to inoculate every child under five - nearly 40 million doses of polio vaccine countrywide in four days. (Photo by Chris Hondros/Getty Images)

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The Irish economy faces a significant negative hit from Britain’s decision to leave the European Union as barriers to trade damage traditional sectors, the International Monetary Fund said in a report.

Ireland, whose economy has been the best performing in the EU for the last three years, is widely considered the most vulnerable among the bloc’s 27 remaining members to Brexit due to its close trading links with its nearest neighbour.

“While the impact to date has been modest, the overall effects over the medium term are expected to be negative and significant,” the IMF said in an annual report on the Irish economy.

“Risks are most acute for traditional sectors that depend on trade with the UK, with potentially sizable consequences for activity and employment outside of the main urban centres.”

The report also said that as one of Europe’s most open economies with one of its lowest corporate tax rates, Ireland faces uncertainty due to planned tax reforms in the United States and European Union.

The country should continue efforts to broaden its tax base, it said.

The government should avoid using temporary revenue gains, such as a recent surge in taxes paid by U.S. technology multinationals to justify long-term tax cuts or spending increases, it said.

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