IRIS publication 43338903
Regional income estimates for Ireland, 1995
RIS format for Endnote and similar
TY - JOUR - O'Leary, E - 1999 - May - Regional Studies - Regional income estimates for Ireland, 1995 - Validated - () - Ireland regional output and income net factor outflows - 33 - 805 - 814 - Regional income estimates for Ireland, 1995, Reg. Studies 33, 805-814. In Ireland since the mid-1980s a sizeable gap has emerged between gross domestic product (GDP) and gross national product (GNP), which by 1995 stood at 15%. This gap is unique among EU countries. It is attributable to net factor outflows, mainly due to profit outflows by foreign multinationals. Recently released official regional output data are being used by the Irish Government to decide which regions qualify for the next round of EU Structural Funds. This paper uses two methods for adjusting regional output for net factor outflows to derive regional income or GNP estimates. It suggests that, in addition to the West, Midlands and Border regions, the South-East and South-West regions might also be considered for qualification. DA - 1999/05 ER -
BIBTeX format for JabRef and similar
@article{V43338903, = {O'Leary, E }, = {1999}, = {May}, = {Regional Studies}, = {Regional income estimates for Ireland, 1995}, = {Validated}, = {()}, = {Ireland regional output and income net factor outflows}, = {33}, pages = {805--814}, = {{Regional income estimates for Ireland, 1995, Reg. Studies 33, 805-814. In Ireland since the mid-1980s a sizeable gap has emerged between gross domestic product (GDP) and gross national product (GNP), which by 1995 stood at 15%. This gap is unique among EU countries. It is attributable to net factor outflows, mainly due to profit outflows by foreign multinationals. Recently released official regional output data are being used by the Irish Government to decide which regions qualify for the next round of EU Structural Funds. This paper uses two methods for adjusting regional output for net factor outflows to derive regional income or GNP estimates. It suggests that, in addition to the West, Midlands and Border regions, the South-East and South-West regions might also be considered for qualification.}}, source = {IRIS} }
Data as stored in IRIS
AUTHORS | O'Leary, E | ||
YEAR | 1999 | ||
MONTH | May | ||
JOURNAL_CODE | Regional Studies | ||
TITLE | Regional income estimates for Ireland, 1995 | ||
STATUS | Validated | ||
TIMES_CITED | () | ||
SEARCH_KEYWORD | Ireland regional output and income net factor outflows | ||
VOLUME | 33 | ||
ISSUE | |||
START_PAGE | 805 | ||
END_PAGE | 814 | ||
ABSTRACT | Regional income estimates for Ireland, 1995, Reg. Studies 33, 805-814. In Ireland since the mid-1980s a sizeable gap has emerged between gross domestic product (GDP) and gross national product (GNP), which by 1995 stood at 15%. This gap is unique among EU countries. It is attributable to net factor outflows, mainly due to profit outflows by foreign multinationals. Recently released official regional output data are being used by the Irish Government to decide which regions qualify for the next round of EU Structural Funds. This paper uses two methods for adjusting regional output for net factor outflows to derive regional income or GNP estimates. It suggests that, in addition to the West, Midlands and Border regions, the South-East and South-West regions might also be considered for qualification. | ||
PUBLISHER_LOCATION | |||
ISBN_ISSN | |||
EDITION | |||
URL | |||
DOI_LINK | |||
FUNDING_BODY | |||
GRANT_DETAILS |