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    Home - MarketForces News - Fitch Affirms Ireland at ‘AA’ with Stable Outlook
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    Fitch Affirms Ireland at ‘AA’ with Stable Outlook

    Anthony PersuaderBy Anthony PersuaderNovember 8, 2025Updated:November 8, 2025No Comments5 Mins Read
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    Fitch Affirms Ireland at 'AA' with Stable Outlook
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    Fitch Affirms Ireland at ‘AA’ with Stable Outlook

    Reflecting its strong credit fundamentals, Fitch Ratings has affirmed Ireland’s Long-Term Foreign-Currency Issuer Default Rating (IDR) at ‘AA’ with a stable outlook.

    According to the rating note, the Ireland’s ratings are supported by strong institutions and the second-highest GDP per capita in the Fitch-rated sovereign universe, even when adjusted for the large impact of multinational enterprises (MNE) on national accounts data.

    Ireland’s credit profile also benefits from very favourable governance indicators and the reserve currency status of the euro, the rating note stated.

    Fitch stated that these strengths are balanced by high GDP volatility, high concentration in the economy and sizeable exposure to US and global tax and regulatory changes affecting MNEs.

    US import tariffs and recent changes to tax legislation appears to have relatively limited impacts on Ireland, but there is still high uncertainty regarding the implementation and impact of US trade and tax policies.

    “Ireland is exposed to this risk, as 33% of goods exports went to the US, with pharmaceuticals at EUR44.4 billion (about 61% of US-bound goods) in 2024”.

    Under the EU-US framework, tariffs on EU-origin pharmaceuticals are capped at 15%, likely limiting the effect from the ongoing US Section 232 investigation related to national security.

    The impact from higher tariffs should gradually materialise (albeit the pace is uncertain) given inelastic demand, complex supply chains and capital-intensive production. Moreover, company-specific arrangements could soften near-term effects.

    Near-term effects from recent US tax legislation favouring domestically held intellectual property appear modest, implying limited immediate effects on information and communication technology (ICT) services and high-value employment.

    Ireland’s strong fundamentals, skilled labour, stable policy and regulatory environment, and access to the EU market should also support foreign investment resilience.

    Fitch said nevertheless, potential strategic shifts by US MNEs, including asset relocation, could weigh on investment, services exports, the tax base and the labour market as US firms employ roughly 8% of the labour force.

    Ireland’s underlying economy remains solid, with modified domestic demand up 3.8% yoy in 1H25, supported by lower inflation boosting real incomes, a strong labour market, higher government spending, and stronger private investment, including housing.

    Headline GDP rose 18.2% in 1H25, reflecting front-loaded US-bound exports ahead of tariffs. A preliminary estimate points to a -0.5% qoq fall in 3Q25, a series prone to sizeable revisions and consistent with some unwinding of earlier frontloading.

    “We forecast around 10% headline GDP growth in 2025 with upside risks from high MNE exports, while domestic demand remains solid”.

    Ratings analysts highlighted that key risks stem from tariff uncertainty and a sharper unwinding of frontloading, although consumption impacts appear contained.

    “We project GDP growth of 2.5% in 2026 and 3.5% in 2027, with headline volatility persisting amid changes in MNE dynamics”.

    National accounts are significantly inflated by MNE activity, much of it outside Ireland, now around half of GDP. The large gap between the domestic indicator (GNI*) and GDP distorts deficit and debt ratios.

    Based on its sovereign methodology, Fitch uses GDP-based indicators for the quantitative analysis as for all sovereigns globally but incorporates GNI*-based indicators in its qualitative assessment.

    External balances are strong in headline terms but materially influenced by MNE flows; modified measures also indicate a current account surplus.

    Ireland averaged fiscal surpluses of 1.5% of GDP in 2022-2024 (2.3% including the one-off 2024 Court of Justice of the EU ruling on revenue), outperforming the ‘AA’ median deficit of 2.0%.

    “We forecast a 1.4% surplus in 2025 as higher capital and social spending is balanced by robust corporation tax receipts”.

    The government estimates that around EUR17.6 billion of the projected EUR32 billion corporation tax receipts in 2025 will be a windfall not linked to activity in Ireland. Excluding windfalls, the balance would move to deficit, highlighting vulnerability to volatile MNE-linked receipts.

    The 2026 budget envisages an 8.2% rise in expenditure, with capital up 23.3%, aimed at reducing infrastructure gaps and housing pressures.

    With the government’s assumption of around EUR3 billion in OECD BEPS-related revenue, analysts forecast surpluses of about 0.9% in 2026 and 0.8% in 2027, while noting downside risk from MNE-related revenues and potential overspending.

    Ireland’s defence spending is the lowest in the EU at 0.2% of GDP, and we do not expect a material increase as a share of GDP over the forecast horizon due to its longstanding policy of neutrality.

    According to Fitch, Ireland’s reliance on corporate tax revenue from MNEs (linked to a small cohort of ICT and pharmaceutical companies) has increased, with corporation tax expected to contribute 31.8% of total tax receipts in 2025, up from around 18.4% in 2019.

    Moreover, concentration is high, with the top 10 groups contributing 57% of corporation tax and the top three around 40% according to the Fiscal Council, heightening vulnerability to changes in global tax policies, US tariffs and firm-specific strategies.

    The Irish government has set up the Future Ireland Fund and the Infrastructure, Climate and Nature Fund to build long-term fiscal resilience and support infrastructure/climate investment.

    Together they are projected to hold about EUR16.7 billion by end-2025. Separately, the Social Insurance Fund, which is not a long-term savings fund, is projected to reach EUR13.5 billion by end-2025.

    Public debt was 38.3% of GDP at end-2024, below the ‘AA’ median of 48.1%, and Fitch ratings analysts forecast a continued decline, approaching 30% of GDP in 2028.

    Debt management is supported by an average maturity of over 10 years, cash reserves of EUR33 billion at end-September 2025 and low refinancing needs. Meta, Nigeria to Agree Settlement Terms in $32.8m Data Breach Fine

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    Anthony Persuader
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    Financial Journalist with global coverage.

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