Eire has risked its place as a magnet for overseas funding by failing to ship pressing infrastructure and enterprise reforms because the nation braces for transatlantic commerce turbulence, consultants and executives have warned.
The small nation, which as soon as declared itself “spiritually” closer to Boston regardless of being geographically nearer to Berlin, has grown wealthy from a long time of funding by American tech and pharma firms and has the world’s largest trade surplus with the US per head.
That makes it susceptible to US President Donald Trump’s tax and tariffs threats. However even with out these, Eire should do extra to stay engaging to outdoors traders and develop innovation at residence.
“It’s the frog within the pot downside,” mentioned Mike Beary, chair of College School Dublin’s governing authority and former head of Amazon Internet Companies in Eire. “We gained’t know we’re screwed till the second has handed . . . We have to cease being complacent.”
Eire is swimming in money. US tech giants corresponding to Apple, Microsoft, Google and Meta, and pharma teams like Pfizer and Eli Lilly, which have main operations or EU headquarters within the nation, have pushed document company tax receipts and eye-popping government surpluses.
However executives and legal professionals have blasted Eire’s “hostile” planning process, which has delayed power and different infrastructure initiatives. Eire additionally has an acute housing scarcity that even officers warn dangers hurting competitiveness.
Eire should “do every thing doable to resolve the problems which are going to impede extra overseas direct funding,” mentioned Martin Shanahan, former chief government of IDA, the state company chargeable for attracting overseas direct funding (FDI). “We now have no management over the US president or his administration . . . So [Ireland must] focus on the issues we will do ourselves.”
“Addressing these infrastructural points would require political will,” added Shanahan, now a accomplice at Grant Thornton.
Eire’s failure to ship has come again to chew it earlier than. In 2018, pissed off by delays in Eire’s cumbersome planning course of, Apple scrapped plans for an €850mn knowledge centre within the western city of Athenry.
That “ought to have been Eire’s ‘wake-up’ second,” Beary mentioned. But Eire has continued to overlook out on funding.
Knowledge centres, an trade Eire pioneered, have been pushed elsewhere by power provide issues, whereas plans from Google and Equinix have hit the rocks.
Eire’s authorities handed a serious planning reform final yr to hurry up infrastructure, together with offshore wind, however it isn’t anticipated to take impact totally for months — or to show a panacea.
Since Athenry, Eire’s dependence on US funding has deepened. Final yr, it secured a record €1.9bn in analysis, growth and innovation FDI, largely from US firms whose taxes helped ship a €13bn budget surplus.
IDA is assured of profitable €7bn in analysis and growth funding by 2029, with a brand new give attention to AI — a purpose chief government Michael Lohan says is “completely achievable” regardless of Trump’s drive for US firms to speculate at residence.
However dangers are multiplying. Trump has already pulled the US out of a world tax deal and has threatened overseas nationals and corporations within the US with punitive taxes to hit again at “discriminatory” levies on American multinationals.
He has additionally vowed to slap 25 per cent tariffs on all EU exports and has floated focusing on pharmaceutical exports with unspecified measures. Pharma exports make up 61 per cent of Eire’s €73bn exports to the US. Eire produces main medication like Eli Lilly’s anti-obesity therapy Zepbound, Pfizer’s Viagra and Allergan’s Botox.
Trump has pushed ahead with tariffs in opposition to China, however uncertainty over his plans for the EU may gradual funding.
IDA chair Feargal O’Rourke acknowledged probably “tumultuous” occasions forward — although he insisted Eire was dealing with them “from a place of appreciable power”. Lohan mentioned the IDA was planning to enchantment to main producers by providing so-called “massive scale, utility prepared websites”.
However the authorities must do extra, mentioned Aoife Lavan, president of the Irish Tax Institute. She referred to as for reforms together with slicing purple tape and overhauling tax coverage for small companies that “has hindered the pro-enterprise insurance policies of successive governments”.
“A transparent, easy and simple to adjust to tax system can be a serious aggressive benefit for Eire,” she added. “Progress has been made, however the tempo of reform has been frustratingly gradual.”
Entrepreneurs welcomed new “angel investor aid” tax breaks for funding in early stage progressive firms. Enterprise Ireland, the state company tasked with serving to homegrown firms develop, mentioned it was targeted on boosting capital to early stage firms particularly in high-tech sectors together with AI, superior manufacturing, healthcare.

However John Collison, co-founder of Eire’s largest tech success story, Stripe, lamented his residence nation’s “seeming inability to solve apparent infrastructural issues”, like capacity constraints at Dublin airport.
“We now have the cash and functionality to repair our infrastructure constraints,” mentioned Beary. “We simply should be daring.”
Eire boasts an financial historical past “outlined by daring, decisive bets,” mentioned Patrick Walsh, head of Dogpatch Labs, Ireland’s leading start-up hub.
He pointed to Eire’s funding of 20 per cent of its price range in a pivotal hydroelectric mission a century in the past when the federal government was almost bankrupt, a game-changing plan to open the economic system to overseas funding in 1958 and the creation of a monetary providers hub within the late Nineteen Eighties when rampant unemployment was once more driving Irish folks overseas.
In 2011, within the midst of an EU and IMF bailout, the federal government touted Eire because the world’s finest small nation to do enterprise. “Now the pitch must be the best place to innovate,” Walsh mentioned.
“We now have each cause to consider we will do it,” he added. “The one query is whether or not we seize the second — or let it slip away.”