Summary
An English-speaking country once failed economically due to protectionist policies, leading Ireland to embrace foreign investment with low corporate taxes from the 1960s, resulting in a trade surplus with the US. Donald Trump’s tariffs threaten Ireland’s economy, which relies heavily on US pharmaceutical companies, accounting for a significant portion of its exports and tax revenues. While Ireland’s low corporate tax rate remains, its recent fiscal success is unsustainable, and Trump’s potential tariff actions could jeopardize its FDI-led growth model, posing the most serious economic threat since the 2008-09 financial crisis.