Dublin - The Irish Association of Pension Funds has warned that some private pension funds would collapse during the current financial crisis unless action was taken to shore them up, national broadcaster RTE reported Thursday.
The association had sent proposals to the government on how to deal with the problem, association chairman Patrick Burke said at the start of its annual conference in Dublin.
One proposal was to allow people about to retire to put off buying annuities as costs had increased owing to the credit crisis. You purchase an annuity when you hand over a lump sum in return for a stream of income over a defined period until your death.
Dublin - Irish President Mary McAleese eas due to sign into law Thursday afternoon a bill that would guarantee all deposits and borrowings for the six Irish-owned banks for the next two years, national broadcaster RTE reported.
Under the plans, the six banks - Allied Irish Bank, the Bank of Ireland, the Anglo Irish Bank, Irish Life & Permanent, the Irish Nationwide Building Society and the Educational Building Society - are to be provided a 400-billion-euro (560-billion-dollar) guarantee.
Dublin - Networking website Facebook plans to set up its international headquarters in the Irish capital Dublin, Deputy Prime Minister Mary Coughlan said in a statement Thursday.
The Dublin headquarters was expected to offer technical and sales support to users and customers in Europe, the Middle East and Africa, the statement said, without giving details of the amount to be invested.
Some 70 positions were expected to be created in Dublin, a spokeswoman for the Irish Department of Enterprise, Trade and Employment.
The Irish government has donated more than 1.5 million dollars to Irish immigration organizations in the United States, a statement from Foreign Minister Micheal Martin said Sunday.
The total of 1,518,500 dollars would go to 16 organizations "which provide frontline support and advisory services to Irish emigrants."
Dublin has so far provided over 3.1 million dollars to immigration groups this year as up to an estimated 50,000 Irish citizens living and working in the US face possible deportation for not having visas.
Dublin has been pressuring Washington to grant the so-called undocumented Irish legal status.
Dublin- A report in Thursday's Irish Times revealed more about the funding for the main lobby group that successfully campaigned for a "No" vote in Ireland's June referendum on the EU's Lisbon Treaty.
The founder of Libertas, Declan Ganley, told Ireland's Hot Press he had given the campaign a "personal loan" of 200,000 euros (300,000 dollars), the Irish Times report said.
Ganley said he had also set up a loan facility at the start of the campaign in case it needed more money. The campaign spent 800,000 euros, he said, out of a budget of 1.3 million.