Showing posts with label Irish knowledge economy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Irish knowledge economy. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 7, 2017

7/2/17: There's Zero Growth in Irish Patentable Innovation & Research Outputs


In a recent post on Irish patents filings and applications with the EPO, I showed that:

  1. Irish R&D and innovation performance - as reflected by patents data - is hardly impressive, with the country ranking 14th in the sample of 50 countries as an origin for EPO Applications;
  2. There has been no material improvement in Irish standing in the data in recent years, compared to trends.
Some of the readers have taken me to task on the second point, despite the fact that my evidence (based on EPO data) shows no gains in Irish patenting activities with the EPO in terms of both applications and filings, and in comparative terms as a share of both in the total number of EPO applications and filings. 

So I took a different exercise, plotting a relationship between average levels of filings and applications (combined) across 2006-2008 period against the same for 2014-2015 data. 

Not surprisingly, Ireland comes smack in the middle of the distribution and right on the regression line, implying that:
  1. Ireland's patenting performance is to the upper range of the overall distribution of 50 countries, but it is at the bottom of this sub-group of top performing countries. In fact, Ireland's position is statistically indistinguishable from 'mediocre' or 'average' group of countries. 
  2. Ireland shows only tiny growth in applications between 2006-2008 period into 2014-2015 period (see Ireland's point position just slightly above 45 degree line), which is statistically indifferent from zero growth.
  3. Once we control for the factors that drive global trend in patents (blue regression line), Ireland shows no statistically identifiable growth (Ireland's point is bang on the regression line).
Yes, patents are not the only measure of innovation and R&D, but, being the core part of STEM-focused research, they are the main measure of innovation and R&D, because patents data omits only one form of innovation - that linked to software. Now, software innovation is important, and Ireland may or may not be doing well in this sub-sector, but STEM research is based not on software innovations, but on 'hard' patents. And Ireland does not brand itself as 'Software-only Innovation Hub'. In fact, Ireland spends (as a State and economy) more on STEM innovation than on software innovation, so the key focus on Irish policies is, once again, measurable via patents.

Until we get 2016 data to update the above analysis, I rest this topic discussion.

Sunday, February 5, 2017

5/2/17: European Patents and Ireland's 'Knowledge Economy' Myths

Irish policymakers are keen on promoting Ireland as a technology and R&D centre of excellence, often claiming the country is a ‘Knowledge Economy’, a ‘Data Island’, a ‘Europe’s Tech Capital’ and so on. While catchy, these tag lines are far from reality, and, in fact, represent an empirically dubious proposition. 

To establish this claim, consider the European Patent Office data on patent filings and approvals, with the latest data set covering the period of 2006-2015. 

As chart below clearly shows, Ireland is far from being a significant source of patent filing in Europe, despite the fact that many patents from Ireland are filed by the U.S. and other multinationals, including a score of foreign companies that choose to tax-invert into Ireland. The EPO data, in fact, fails to control for this distortion. Still, even with those companies filings counted as ‘Irish’ by origin, Ireland ranks 14th in a key metric of the rate of European Patent Applications per million of inhabitants. 


Worse, Irish rate of patent applications (119 per 1 million of inhabitants) is below the mean for the sub-sample of European states (including EU28 states and other countries within the EEA). Statistically, Irish rate of patent applications per inhabitant is not distinguishable from the rates filed by Italy and Slovenia, and is well below the rate recorded for France, Belgium, Austria, Germany, Denmark, Finland, Sweden and the Netherlands. Irish numbers are also statistically indistinguishable from the global average - the average that includes non-European states’ filings. It is worth noting that the data set includes other countries, that similar to Ireland serve as major tax optimnization locations for R&D and IP, e.g. Luxembourg and the Netherlands. However, even controlling for these states, Irish data does not shine beyond being average.

In absolute terms, Irish patent filings and applications with the EPO have trended up in 2006-2010 period, but have since flat-lined (on trend) for filings and declined (on trend) for applications. 


In addition to the chart above, combined filings and applications for EPO patents by Irish-origination stood at 1,325 in 2015, down on 1,364 in 2014 and down on 1,356 average for 2008-2011 period. While data can be interpreted in a number of ways, there is clearly no indication of an improving trend in either filings or applications over the recent years. This comes on foot of aggressive acceleration in tax inversions into Ireland in previous years - an acceleration that brought into Ireland a range of large R&D-intensive companies.

Consistent with the above, Ireland’s share of all European Patent Office filings and applications has declined, on trend, in recent years, as evidenced by data presented in the chart below:


As the chart above shows, Ireland accounts of just 0.266% of all EPO patent filings and 0.364% of all EPO patent applications. Separately reported data for patents approvals shows Irish share of all patents granted by EPO to be just 0.395%. The number is laughably negligible by Europe-wide standards and is massively out of line with Irish share of European GDP. However, these numbers are consistent with the simple fact, also highlighted by EPO data, that Ireland fails to register in the top tier of generators of patents in any of the sectors tracked by EPO. 

In summary, Ireland is far from being a powerhouse for R&D and knowledge economy activities as measured by a key research output measured by European authorities. 


Thursday, August 6, 2015

6/8/15: Irish Services Activity Index: June's Belated Sell-in-May


In previous post (link here) I covered Services PMI for Ireland for July.

To remind you: we are witnessing a massive boom (according to the PMI data) in Services, with overall sector activity readings at 108 and 109 months highs in June-July. In addition, based on quarterly averages, Services in Ireland should have been expanding at a break-neck speed non-stop from 2Q 2014 through 2Q 2015, with 2Q 2015 marking small acceleration in an already formidable speed on 1Q 2015. Effectively, over the last 3 quarters, PMIs have been signalling very high rate of growth in activity, with rate of growth being relatively stable over time.

Now, let's take a look at the latest quarterly data from CSO covering actual activity in the Services sector through June 2015.

Overall Services Sector activity index for 2Q 2015 rose 2.3% y/y, which is markedly down on 9.6% y/y growth recorded in 1Q 2015 and marks the slowest speed of Services sector expansion since 1Q 2014. This simply does not correspond to the PMI data readings. In fact, growth has been quite volatile over the last 5 quarters, and again, not consistent with the PMI signals.


As chart above indicates, Services sector growth fell sharply in 2Q 2015 falling below the period average (from 2Q 2014 on) and below the upper limit of statistical significance relative to the historical average rate. Contrary to the PMI signals, three out of six last quarters posted growth within historical averages and well below the period average when PMIs were hitting record highs.


Looking at the key sub-components of the index:

Domestic services sectors (Wholesale & Retail Trade, etc, Transportation & Storage, and Accommodation and Food, along with Administrative & Support services) posted an average rate of growth of 5.3% y/y in 2Q 2015, slower than both 4Q 2014 and 1Q 2015. Still, 2Q 2015 growth was the third fastest in 8 quarters. Over the last 6 months, domestic services managed to average expansion of 7.14% which is a major uptick on previous 6 months period when domestic services sub-sectors grew on average 5.40%.

Information and Communication services index posted a decline of 11.4% y/y in 2Q 2015, the first drop in the series since 4Q 2011 and the sharpest drop in the series on record. The sector is so skewed by activities of MNCs that not much can be determined out of these figures. Still, this drop brought past 6 months growth down to -1.8% against previous 6 months' growth of 6.5%.

In contrast to ICT sector, Professional, Scientific & Technical services sector posted a rise of 6.1% y/y in 2Q 2015, confirming yet again that there seems to be no serious correlation between activity in one side of our 'smart economy' and the other side of the same, despite endless droning on from our politicians and trade bodies about an alleged fabled link between the two sub-sectors through R&D and innovation.

It is worth noting that the sub-sector of Professional, Scientific & Technical services has been effectively whipped out by the crisis: over 2009, index of sub-sector activity averaged 118.88. This fell to 87.93 for the last four quarters - a decline of 26%. In a sense, our Professional, Scientific and Technical services 'did Greece', confirming yet again the deeply engrained culture of innovation and research in Irish economy. Of course, over the same period of time, Information and Communication services activity rose 35.1%. Go figure…


Despite all the issues highlighted above, the good news - as shown in the last chart - is that all three broadly-defined Services sectors have so-far been on a converging path prior to 2Q 2015 since roughly 1Q 2014 - as signalled by the compression of the period average lines. This, of course, reflects the belated return to growth in Professional, Scientific & Technical Services from 3Q 2014 on.

Saturday, June 20, 2015

20/6/15: Irish Employment by Sector: Latest Data


Here are the latest stats for Irish employment across sectors, based on the EHECS Earnings Hours and Employment Costs Survey Quarterly reported by CSO:


Overall, there were 1,574,800 people employed across all sectors of economy in 1Q 2015, which represents an increase of 2.67% y/y. In 4Q 2014 y/y rise was 2.33%. Current level of employment is 9.9% below 1Q 2008, but since 1Q 2011 (during the tenure of current Government) the economy added some 59,700 jobs - a rate of jobs creation of 14,925 per annum. The rate of jobs creation did accelerate in the last twelve months: between 1Q 2013 and Q1 2014, the economy added 26,800 jobs and between 1Q 2014 and 1Q 2015 it added 41,000 jobs. Nonetheless, compared to 1Q 2008 there were 192,400 fewer workers in the economy at the end of 1Q 2015.

Here is the summary of changes (%) between 2008 average (do note this), 1Q 2014 and 1Q 2015 by sector:


Our 'smart' and 'knowledge' economy currently operates at employment levels in Information & Communication sector of some 59,800 (quite low, surprisingly, given the hype about the sector growth). And this represents an increase of only 1,800 (+3.1%) y/y, and a drop on 1Q 2008 levels of 5,000 jobs. Another category of 'smart'/'knowledge' workers is Professional, scientific and technical activities. Here things are even worse. Total level of employment in this category at the end of 1Q 2015 stood at 79,000, which represents a drop of 5,100 y/y (-6.1%) and a decline of 2,600 on 1Q 2008.

This dovetails with the evidence on STEM-related employment presented here: http://trueeconomics.blogspot.ie/2015/06/20615-stem-to-bull-time-to-rethink.html

Overall, only two areas of activity have managed to post higher 1Q 2015 employment levels than 1Q 2015: Education (+3,900) as well as Human Health and Social Work (+19,000).



Wednesday, November 19, 2014

19/11/2014: Irish Patents Filings: Q3 2014


As a taster for my Friday presentation at the ICA, here's a slide from my deck on Ireland and our challenges and opportunities forward:


Note: data plotted is via @newmorningip .

And here is monthly data:


One major point to be made on the above data: Irish patent filings are still falling below 50% of all filings, while Irish acedemic filings are still running at around 8% of the total. The gap between foreign and domestic filings has fallen to 73:100 in Q3 2014 from 82:100 in Q2 2014.

Monday, February 10, 2014

10/2/2014: Data shows Irish R&D policy is not exactly producing...


Today, Grant Thornton published their review of the Irish R&D Tax Credits policy, available here: http://www.grantthornton.ie/db/Attachments/Review-of-RandD-tax-credit-regime.pdf?utm_content=buffer1e77c&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer

Top level conclusions:

  • "60% of the companies that responded to the survey were indigenous Irish companies with 40% multinationals"
  • "35% of companies conducting R&D activities engaged in joint research projects with other parties in 2011"
  • "with 19.5% being activities with higher education or institutes within Ireland and 8% outside Ireland"
  • "70% of claims are by companies with less than 50 employees"
  • "large companies with employees of more than 250 employees account for 10% of claims made. However they account for 45% of claims on a monetary basis"

"The credit is a largely positive scheme with real value being added to the economy from it."

My view: too much of subsidy to MNCs, too little evidence the scheme is not being used by SMEs to fund activity that would have been funded anyway and too little evidence the scheme is being used to fund genuine R&D rather than business development.

But aside from this, there is little evidence that funding is yielding any serious uptick in intellectual property generation. Here's the latest data from the NewMorningIP on patents filings in Ireland.


Based on quarterly aggregates, in Q4 2013, total number of Irish academic patents hit the lowest reading of 48 and the goal number of filed patents match this performance at 593. Irish inventions overall sunk to the lowest level of 236 (previous low was 252 for Q3 2012, imputed on incomplete data). Patents applications by non-academic filers stood at 188 - the lowest level in data series.

Overall, in 2013, there were 2561 patents applications, of which Irish total filings amounted to 1072 (41.9%) and of which Irish non-academic patents applications were just 860 (33.6%). This is hardly stellar and cannot be deemed sustainable for the economy that is allegedly based on innovation. It also makes clear that current system of R&D incentives and supports, including tax credit, is not working.

Saturday, February 8, 2014

8/2/2014: Irish Services Sector Activity: FY 2013


In the previous posts I covered:
Monthly data for Irish Services Index for December 2013: http://trueeconomics.blogspot.ie/2014/02/822014-services-index-monthly-series.html, and
Quarterly series:
http://trueeconomics.blogspot.ie/2014/02/822014-q4-2013-data-on-services.html

Now, time to update full year figures for 2013.

First, y/y changes between 2012 and 2013:


Main point - even with 5.7% annual growth in ICT services and 22.3% growth in Administrative and support services, overall services sectors expanded by only 0.9% in 2013. Do note, this is a value index, so inflation is factored in too.

But what about longer term growth? Sadly, we only have comparable data from 2009 on. So here are the changes between 2009 and 2013, cumulative:


And two main drivers in the above are ICT services (remember those MNCs that book activity taking place across Europe into Ireland, as if Irish operations produced them?) and Wholesale Trade services (now exhausted and falling 6% y/y in 2013). In other words, nothing really is growing over the long range.

And with this, over the last 4 years, cumulated growth in all services recorded was just 3.5%. Inflation alone exceeded this by almost double.

But things are getting better, right? Growth is returning? Right? Here's a chart comparing growth in 2012 compared to 2011 and in 2013 compared to 2012. The positive values are where growth conditions improved, negative - where they deteriorated:


No comment.

8/2/2014: Q4 2013 data on Services Activity in Ireland


In the previous post I covered some top-level data for Irish Services Index for December 2013: http://trueeconomics.blogspot.ie/2014/02/822014-services-index-monthly-series.html

As promised, we now shall take a look at the data on quarterly basis, stripping out some volatility in the monthly series. Note, all data below references seasonally-adjusted series.

In Q4 2013, compared to Q3 2014:

  • Wholesale Trade activity shrunk 1.71%, pushing y/y drop to 5.85% which is worse than the 4.54% annual drop recorded in Q3 2013. The sector reading is the lowest since Q4 2010.
  • Wholesale and Retail Trade, Repair of Motor Vehicles and Motorcycles sector activity fell 5.89% in Q4 2013 compared to Q3 2013, and there was an annual drop of 7.95% in Q4 2013, much worse than 0.19% decline recorded in Q3 2013. The sector is at the lowest reading for any quarter since Q3 2011.
  • Transportation & Storage sector activity fell 5.73% in Q4 2013 compared to Q3 2013, and there was an annual drop of 4.47% in Q4 2013, much worse than a rise of 1.34% recorded in Q3 2013.
  • Accommodation and Food Services sector activity rose 3.73% in Q4 2013 compared to Q3 2013, and there was an annual rise of 1.34% in Q4 2013, much better than a 3.6%% decline recorded in Q3 2013. The sector reading is at the highest level since Q3 2012
  • In the above, Food services sector activity rose 4.89% in Q4 2013 compared to Q3 2013, and there was an annual rise of 5.27% in Q4 2013, much better than 0.99% decline recorded in Q3 2013.
  • Also in  the above, Accommodation services activity rose 6.29% in Q4 2013 compared to Q3 2013, and there was an annual rise of 0.83% in Q4 2013, much better than 6.93% decline recorded in Q3 2013.



In the above chart:
  • ICT sector activity rose 1.96% in Q4 2013 compared to Q3 2013, and there was an annual rise of 1.96% in Q4 2013, much worse than 4.45% rise recorded in Q3 2013.
  • Professional, Scientific and Technical services sector activity fell 3.26% in Q4 2013 compared to Q3 2013, and there was an annual drop of 12.38% in Q4 2013, much worse than 5.16% decline recorded in Q3 2013. The sector hit its historical low in Q4 2013.
Now, to the last bit:
  • Administrative and support service activities sector rose 0.96% in Q4 2013 compared to Q3 2013, and there was an annual rise of 20.94% in Q4 2013, compared to 21.77% rise recorded in Q3 2013
  • Overall services activity fell 2.23% in Q4 2013 compared to Q3 2013, and there was an annual fall of 2.69% in Q4 2013, compared to a rise of 2.19% y/y recorded in Q3 2013.
And summary of q/q changes for Q4:


So decent news on Accommodation and Food sector side, poor growth on ICT services side and for Admin and backoffice side, and outright shrinking on all other sectors...

Annual data summary next.

8/2/2014: Services Index: Monthly Series December 2013


CSO released cheerful headlines for Irish Services Index, measuring activity in the largest part of the Irish economy.

Here's from the CSO release: "The seasonally adjusted monthly services value index increased by 1.3% in December 2013 when compared with November 2013 and there was an annual decrease of 1.5%."

Oops… things are up m/m and down y/y. But obviously the headline reads only the former, none of the latter.

"On a monthly basis, Information and Communication (+5.4%), Professional, Scientific and Technical Activities (+3.5%) and Administrative and Support Service Activities (+2.3%) showed increases when compared with November 2013.    Other Service Activities (-3.2%), Transportation and Storage (-1.6%), Accommodation and Food Service Activities (-1.1%) and Wholesale and Retail Trade (-1.0%), decreased when compared with November 2013."

Spot the problem? Controlling for ICT services (wait till Yahoo washes all its tax arbitrage through Dublin next) the only tangible, value-added activity that rose was Professional, Scientific and Technical Activities. We have no idea what drove this, but a rise here, excluding insolvency and mortgages arrears-related services and collection agencies would be helpful.

You really have to look at annual basis decomposition to see what is happening in the economy, though: "On an annual basis, Administrative and Support Service Activities (+27.7%), Information and Communication (+4.0%) and Accommodation and Food Service Activities (+2.4%) increased when compared with December 2012." That was is for increases: more paper pushing across tables, more back office supports and more adjoining ICT services. On the other hand, the rest of services are tanking: "Professional, Scientific and Technical Activities (-9.1%), Wholesale and Retail Trade (-8.2%), Transportation and Storage (-6.8%) and Other Service Activities (-6.5%) decreased when compared with December 2012."


So let's illustrate the above 'trends' in a few charts.




 Do keep in mind that, ex-ICT services, the Professional, Scientific and Technical Activities are our 'knowledge economy'. The trend here is down, down and down.

But now for the services sector overall:


The trend above is clearly showing a marked slowdown in activity in Q3-Q4 2013, just when we were being fed a steady diet of 'Things are Only Getting Better'. Am I missing something here? With all the ICT Services booming and all the Admin and Backoffice activities rising, we were supposed to get a strong retail season and a hopium-filled boost to domestic services too... But, apparently, we are having trouble recording these magnificent increases in the data?.. Oh, and do note, the data is in value terms, so inflation here is helping to push 'activity' up.

And the PMIs were booming too, for Services, just as the services activity was slipping?..


Next post will take a deeper look at the dynamics, controlling for monthly volatility. Stay tuned.

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

11/12/2013: Irish Patenting Activity: November 2013

Reading Pictet's latest monthly, covering the topic of Swiss competitiveness... it is awesome - with interviews from academics, watchmakers, artists, museums directors, company that makes engines for Mars rovers, biotech giant, and so on. And it reminded me to update the data set on Irish patenting activity from NewMorningIP for November.

Here are the results:


Monthly data shows that November 2013 patenting activity in Ireland fell to its third lowest level since the records maintained by NewMorningIP started in August 2012. At 183 patents filed, November 2013 is down on 197 a year ago. So far, Q4 2013 results are running at the lowest level for all quarterly results.

It is worth noting that the data can be throwing seasonal variation. We can't tell due to short nature of series.

Not spectacular numbers at any rate. Big overseas inventions fall-off to 100 in November, the third lowest month on record. Irish inventions are down also.

On annual basis, 2013 is shaping up to post around 2,600 patents, up on 2012. All increases are due to increased overseas patents activity, with Irish patents falling. We shall see how December plays out, however.

Thursday, December 5, 2013

5/12/2013: Irish Services Index, October 2013

So Services PMIs are booming… they are positively booming…


…while in the real world, per CSO:

"The seasonally adjusted monthly services value index decreased by 1.4 % in October 2013 when compared with September 2013 and there was an annual decrease of 1.2%."

M/m on September 2012:

  • Accommodation and Food Service Activities (+1.6%) 
  • Wholesale and Retail Trade (+0.8%) 
  • Professional, Scientific and Technical Activities (-6.0%), 
  • Other Services Activities (-3.5%), 
  • Transportation and Storage (-2.9%), 
  • Information and Communication (-2.5%) and 
  • Administrative and Support Service Activities (-0.3%) 

On an annual basis to October 2012:

  • Administrative and Support Service Activities (+15.4%) 
  • Information and Communication (+0.9%) 
  • Professional, Scientific and Technical Activities (-14.3%), 
  • Other Service Activities (-7.0%), 
  • Transportation and Storage (-3.0%), 
  • Accommodation and Food Service Activities (-2.0%) and 
  • Wholesale and Retail Trade (-0.8%)  

Oh, and do notice the 'Smart economy' bits... the Professional, Scientific and Technical Activities down -6.0% m/m and 14.3% y/y. And the area of growth in employment known as Accommodation and Food Service Activities down -2.0% y/y... this data is bizarre and will require confirmation once we have full quarter results to make any sense of... but one thing is clear: Irish Services PMI is just not that good at measuring anything that registers as Services sector in Ireland.

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

1/10/2013: Irish Patenting Activity Q3 2013


Data on patents and patent applications for Ireland was published today by New Morning IP. Here's their summary and couple of my comments:

"In summary for September 2013:

  • 192 published applications or patents issued to Irish applicants through USPTO, EPO and PCT.
  • Top three assignees: Zamtec, Accenture Global Services and Digital Optics
  • Academic institutions accounted for 14% of Irish invention published this month
  • 41% of publications were Irish-originating inventions"
Now, my look at the data:
  • There was an increase from previous levels for Irish academic institutions share of all patents filed to 13.0%. In Q4 2012 - Q2 2013 these ranged between 7.9% and 10.7%.
  • In Q3 2013 there were total of 84 Irish academic patents granted or applied for, against the total number of Irish inventions at 274 and overseas inventions at 371. 
  • Numbers of Irish inventions in total declined from 283 in Q2 2013 to 274 in Q3 2013 and now stand at the lowest level since full quarterly records begin (Q4 2012).
  • Number of all patents applied for or granted rose to 645 in Q3 2013 from 636 in Q2 2013. This represents the second lowest level of activity for the entire period since Q4 2012.
Charts:


Thursday, September 5, 2013

5/9/2013: Irish Services Sector Activity Index: July 2013

Monthly Services Activity Index from the cSO is out for July. Some interesting movements in the series.


  • Wholesale and retail trade sub-sector activity expanded m/m on seasonally adjusted basis by 2.46% in July 2013, having posted a m/m decline of 1.49% back in June 2013. 3mo MA through July 2013 was down 2.19% on 3mo MA through July 2012 and 6mo MA is down 4.21% y/y.
  • Transport and storage sub-sector posted a m/m expansion of 1.86% in July 2013, following a contraction in June 2013 of 2.08%. 3mo MA is up 3.84% y/y and 6mo MA is up 4.36%.

  • Accommodation and food services sub-sector activity contracted 0.76% in July 2013 m/m, having posted an expansion of 1.06% in June 2013. 3mo MA is now up just 0.32% y/y and 6mo MA is up 1.27% y/y.
  • Administrative and support services sub-sector activity shrunk 1.24% m/m in July 2013, having posted 5.25% growth in June 2013. 3mo MA is now up a massive 23.76% y/y and 6mo MA is up 22.04%.


  • Information and communication sub-sector activity shrunk 4.01% m/m in July 2013, having posted growth of 1.71% in June. 3mo MA is now up 8.01% y/y and 6mo MA is up 9.23% y/y.
  • Professional, scientific and technical activities sub-sector is down 4.68% m/m in July, having posted an 1.74% expansion in June. 3mo MA is down 6.64% y/y and 6mo MA is down 3.23% y/y. 


Lastly, overall index:
  • Services sector activity fell 0.82% m/m in July after posting growth of 0.37% m/m in June 2013.
  • 3mo MA through July 2013 was up 2.73% y/y against previous 3mo period MA growth of 2.09% y/y.
  • 6mo MA is up 2.41% y/y.


 Overall, still solid performance in the Services sector, with monthly (seasonally adjusted) changes not exactly stellar, but gains of the previous months continue to carry the sector to annual expansion.

Thursday, July 4, 2013

4/7/2013: Irish Services Sector Activity Index: May 2013

Irish Services Index for May was out today, so here are the updated trends.

Wholesale Trade activity rose from 114.7 to 116.7 between April and May 2013, with index up 1.74% m/m having posted a 7.9% rise m/m in April. 3mo average through May 2013 is down on 3mo average through May 2012 by some 7.45% and 6mo average through May 2013 is down 6.47% y/y. Thus, two last months' readings are encouraging, but not yet enough to reverse overall slower activity recorded y/y.

Wholesale and Retail Trade and Repair of Motor Vehicles etc sector activities also improved m/m in May 2013, rising 1.22% after posting a 3.61% rise m/m in April. 3mo average through May 2013 is down 5.27% y/y and 6mo average through May 2013 is down 4.22% y/y. Relative to historical max (history here references period from January 2009), the index is still down 4.27%

Transport and Storage sector is up 1.49% m/m in May 2013 having posted a 1.06% increase in April 2013. 3mo average through May 2013 is up 5.79% y/y and 6mo average is up 6.62% y/y. Relative to historical max, the index is down 5.84%.


Accommodation and Food services activity dipped 0.58% m/m in May, having recorded a 3.38% drop in April. 3mo average through May is still up 1.40% y/y and 6mo average is up 1.72% y/y. The sector is down 17.78% on peak for the period from January 2009.

Administrative & Support services activity rose 0.68% m/m in May, having recorded a 2.42% rise in April. 3mo average through May is still up 20.67% y/y and 6mo average is up 18.06% y/y. The sector is currently at a peak for the period from January 2009.


Information & Communication services activity dipped 3.23% m/m in May, having recorded a 2.11% drop in April. 3mo average through May is still up 10.31% y/y and 6mo average is up 7.72% y/y. The sector is down 5.28% on peak for the period from January 2009.

Professional, Scientific and Technical services activity dropped 4.40% m/m in May, having recorded a 0.11% decline in April. 3mo average through May is down 3.72% y/y and 6mo average is down 4.34% y/y. The sector is down 35.0% on peak for the period from January 2009.


Overall services sector activity declined 0.74% m/m in May, having recorded a 1.21% expansion in April. 3mo average through April 2013 was up 1.83% y/y and this improved to 2.31% growth for 3mo average through May 2013. 6mo average through May 2013 was up 1.72% y/y. Relative to peak, overall services activity is down 1.64%.


Tuesday, June 11, 2013

11/6/2013: Irish Services Index: April 2013

Good news is: on an annual basis, per CSO, in April 2013:

  • Administrative and Support Service Activities rose +21.3%, 
  • Information and Communication went up +15.4%, 
  • Other Service Activities +4.2%, 
  • Transportation and Storage +1.4% and 
  • Accommodation and Food Service Activities (+0.3%) increased 
On bad news front:
  • Wholesale and Retail Trade were down -4.2% and 
  • Professional, Scientific and Technical Activities fell -0.6%.
The seasonally adjusted monthly services value index increased by 1.2% in  April 2013 when compared with March 2013 and there was an annual increase of 4.1%.

As you would know, I am not covering Services PMIs anymore, as these are no longer being released in any useful data format (Markit has decided to exclude reporting of actual levels of sub-components for PMIs, preferring to practically give instead its analysts personal opinion about these levels). 

However, I will continue reporting CSO data.

So here's more detailed analysis:
  • Wholesale Trade sub-index rose from 106 in March to 114.1 in April, marking a 7.64% rise m/m and a decline of 4.68% y/y. 3mo MA through April 2013 stood at 110.23, down on 116.67 3mo MA through January 2013 and down sharply on 122.07 3mo MA through April 2012. 6mo MA through April 2013 is at 113.45, down on 121.10 6mo MA through April 2012.
  • Wholesale and Retail Trade, repair of vehicles sub-index improved from 102.3 in March 2013 to 105.7 in April 2013 (+3.32%), but the index is down 4.17% on April 2012. 3mo MA through April 2013 is at 104.3 against 3mo MA through April 2012 at 111.27; 6mo MA through April 2013 is at 106.32 against 6mo MA through April 2012 at 110.80.
  • Transport & Storage sub-index is at 113.4 in April 2013 up marginally (+0.62%) m/m and up 1.43% y/y. 3mo MA through April 2013 is at 111.83 up on year ago 3mo MA of 106.83. 6mo MA through April 2013 is at 111.18, up on 6mo MA through April 2012 at 106.73.


  • Accommodation & Food Services slipped from 105.9 in March 2013 to 102.7 in April 2013 (-3.02%) and the index is up only 0.29% y/y. 3mo MA through April 2013 is at 103.2, which is up on 3mo MA through April 2012 at 101.2. Similarly, 6mo MA through April 2013 is at 103.77 which is up on previous year level of 101.3.
  • Much of the improvements in the above sector was driven by rising value of food services, up 3.51% y/y. Accommodation services actually fell 1.35% y/y and were down 9.07% m/m.
  • Administrative and support services activity also improved m/m (+1.66%) and rose strongly by +21.31% y/y. Huge gains were recorded in the activity on 3mo MA basis y/y and 6mo MA y/y basis. I have no explanation to this other than possibly reclassification of some activities into this category, plus boom in on-line services centres in Dublin (much of google and other ICT services firms activities here relate to support and admin, rather than R&D or professional work).



  • ICT services continue to boom, rising 15.42% y/yin April, although slipping 1.59% m/m from the historical record-breaking levels in March 2013. on 3mo MA basis, April 2013 stood at 122.13 strongly up on previous year levels of 109.87. On 6mo MA basis, April 2013 came in at 120.42, up on 110.42 a year ago.
  • In contrast to ICT services and Admin services, Professional, scientific and technical activities index declined for the third month in a row, falling to 91.0 in April 2013 from 91.2 in March 2013 (-0.22%) and is marginally lower (-0.55%) y/y. 3mo MA through April 2013 is at 91.4 and it is virtually flat on 3mo MA through April 2012 (91.2). 6mo MA through April 2014 at 91.0 is down on 94.5 6mo MA through April 2012.



  • Overall Services sector activity index rose 1.21% m/m from 107.7 in March 2013 to 109.0 in April 2013, and is up 4.11% y/y. 3mo MA through April 2013 is at 107.63 which compares marginally positively against 105.4 3mo MA a year ago. 6mo MA through April 2013 is at 107.62, also marginally up on 105.47 6mo MA through April 2012. However, 3mo MA through April 2013 was identical to 3mo MA through January 2013, implying zero growth, and 6mo MA through April 2013 was slightly ahead of 6mo MA through October 2013 (107.6 relative to 105.9).


Tuesday, May 7, 2013

7/5/2013: Irish Services Index, Q1 2013 data

Irish Services Index is out today for Q1 2013 and here are some details (monthly data analysis to follow). Keep in mind, data only starts from Q1 2009, so when referencing current levels of activity to peak, that refers to peak from Q1 2009 and not relative to pre-crisis activity.

  • Value in Wholesale & Retail Trade, Repair of Motor Vehicles & Motorcycles sector declined in Q1 2013 to 105.2 q/q (down 3.22% from 108.7 in Q4 2012) and is down 5.40% y/y. Q4 2012 value index was down 1.36% y/y, so things are getting worse faster. Relative to peak (since 2009 Q1 data start) the index is now down 5.40%. 
  • Value index for Transportation and Storage sector slipped marginally from 110.5 in Q4 2012 to 110.0 in Q1 2013 (-0.45% q/q) and is up 5.97% y/y. However, rate of annual growth declined in Q1 2013 compared to Q4 2012 when it stood at 8.97%. Relative to peak the index is still down 9.39%.
  • Accommodation and food services activities index also slipped marginally from 104.7 in Q4 2012 to 104.3 in Q1 2013 (down 0.38% q/q). Y/y index is up 3.48% in Q1 2013 and this is a slight gain on 3.05% y/y growth in Q4 2012. However, relative to peak index reading is still down 14.86%.


  • Information and communication sector index remained practically flat in Q1 2013 in q/q terms at 116.6 which is only 0.09% up on 116.5 in Q4 2012. Y/y index is up 3.83% and this shows deceleration in growth from +8.47% growth posted in Q4 2012. Despite this, Q1 2013 marks the peak of activity in this sector for any quarter since Q1 2009.
  • In contrast with ICT sector activity, the knowledge economy core services sub-sector, Professional, scientific and technical activities index has suffered steep declines since 2009. In Q1 2013 the index stood at 91.2 (up 0.22% q/q) up only 0.55% y/y. This marks a minor reversal of a significant decline of -8.36% recorded in 12 month through Q4 2012. The index is down massive 29.14% on peak.



  • Administrative and support service activities index has been a surprising performer during the crisis. In Q4 2012 it stood at 104.7 and Q1 2013 this increased to 110.4 a gain of 5.44% q/q. Index is now up 20.92% y/y and this compounds 11.38% y/y growth recorded in Q4 2012. Q1 2013 marks the peak quarter on record for the sub-sector.
  • Overall services index slipped from 107.2 in Q4 2012 to 106.2 in Q1 2013 (-0.93% q/q), although activity is still up 0.85% y/y. Y/y growth in Q1 2013 marks a slowdown from 2.19% y/y expansion in Q4 2012. The index overall is 0.93% below the peak and is currently running slightly behind the level of activity recorded in Q1 2009.


Overall, quarterly data shows weakening in Services sectors performance, and stripping out the effects of ICT (dominated by tax transfers-booking MNCs), Services side of the economy is showing weaknesses that are alarming. Recall that exports of services growth in 2010-2012 acted to compensate for declines in domestic demand and weaker growth (turning negative) in exports of goods. Should Services activity continue to suffer even modest declines, our GDP and GNP growth will be impaired. 

To see more forward-looking data, read my analysis of Services PMI for April: http://trueeconomics.blogspot.ie/2013/05/352013-irish-services-pmi-april-2013.html

Sunday, April 7, 2013

7/4/2013: Irish Services Activity Index - February 2013


Irish Services activity fell in February 2013 per latest CSO data, marking second consecutive month of decline. In February 2013, Irish services index dropped 1.03% m/m and was down 0.45% y/y. The index 3mo MA is now at 106.43, only slightly ahead of 106.07 in 3mo period through November 2012, and still ahead of 105.43 3mo MA through February 2012. The same dynamics are repeated at the 6mo MA level.



Largest m/m declines were recorded in Wholesale Trade (-7.17% m/m and down 10.71% y/y), Accommodation & Food Services (-1.89% m/m and down 0.69% y/y). Largest m/m increases were in Administrative & Support Services (+2.95% m/m and up 15.74% y/y) and in Professional, Scientific & Technical Activities (+1.68% m/m and 2.02% y/y). 
In annualised terms, largest increases were recorded in Administrative & Support Services (+15.74% y/y), Accommodation Services (+6.92% y/y) and Transport & Storage (+5.61%).





One interesting point in terms of longer range analysis:


As chart above shows, the PMI data for Services Activity continues to bear no relations to the actual Services Activity Index measurements. Recall that in January and February, Services Activity Index posted two consecutive declines in activity. Over the same months, PMI for Services posted robust growth signals at 56.8 in january and 53.6 in February.

Monday, March 11, 2013

11/3/2013: Irish Services Activity: January 2013

In an earlier post I covered annual figures for Services Index for Ireland (link here). Today's release from CSO also provides data for January 2013 (monthly series) and here is the detailed analysis of shorter-term series.


  • Wholesale Trade activity index rose in January 10 118.8 from December 2012 level of 115.2 (+3.13% m/m). The index is down 1.49% y/y. 3mo average is at 117.23 up on previous 3mo average of 115.93, but down on 3mo average through January 2012 which stood at 120.47. 6mo average is 116.6 against previous 6mo average of 120.9 and a year ago 6mo average of 119.9. Thus, at 3mo average activity through January 2013 is slower than through January 2012. Ditto for 6mo average.
  • Wholesale & Retail Trade, Repair of Motor Vehicles and Motorcycles activity index increased to 108.9 in January 2013 - up 1.02% m/m, but down 1.27% y/y. 3mo average through January 2013 is static compared to 3mo average through October 2012 and is down on 3mo average through January 2012. 6mo average through January 2013 is down on 6mo average through July 2012 and down on 6mo average through January 2012. Slowdown in the broader category, therefore, is more pronounced and stretched over the last 12 months than in Wholesale Trade alone.
  • Transport & Storage services activity index dipped from 112.1 in December 2012 to 111.5 in January 2013, a decline of 0.54% m/m. However, the index is up 10.29% y/y. 3mo average is statistically indifferent in 3mo through January 2013 (111.3), as in 3 mo through October 2012 (111.9), but is significantly ahead of 3mo through January 2012 (101.2). 6mo average through January 2013 (111.62) is ahead of 6mo average through July 2012 and ahead of 6mo average through January 2012.
  • Accommodation & Food services index declined in January 2013 to 103.5, down 1.33% m/m and marked second consecutive monthly decline. The index is up 2.38% in y/y terms. 3mo average through January 2013 is at 104.6, which is lower than 3mo average though October 2012 (105.63) but above 3mo average through January 2012 (101.6). On 6mo average basis activity through January 2013 was ahead of activity through July 2012 which itself was ahead of activity in 6 months through January 2012.
  • Information & Communication services activity declined in January 2013 from 121.7 in December 2012 to 119.8 (decline of 1.56% m/m) although activity was strongly up (+11.76%) on January 2012. 3mo average through January 2013 was at 118.7, well above 3mo average through October 2012 (112.23) and 3mo average through January 2012 (108.43). Similar increases are traceable to 6mo averages.
  • Professional, Scientific & Technical activities index rose to 90.2 in January from 89.4 in December 2012 (+0.89% m/m) although the index is down 1.85% y/y. 3mo average through January 2013 is at 90.53, ahead of 3mo average through October 2012 (87.83), but behind 3mo average through January 2012 (98.13). Similar dynamics can be traced across 6mo averages.
  • Administrative & Support services index rose strongly from 100.7 in December 2012 to 104.2 in January 2013 (+3.48% m/m). The index is up incredible 19.63% y/y and I am at a loss as to how this can be explained given the current economic environment and fiscal consolidation. on 6mo average basis index is up from 91.88 average for 6mo through January 2012 to 102.63 average for 6mo through January 2013.
Charts to illustrate:



  • Total services activity inched up to 107.9 in January 2013 from 107.7 in December 2012. Year on year, the index clocked a rise of 4.35%. 3mo average through January 2013 was at 107.57 - ahead of 3mo average a year before (105.73).

Despite these above improvements, overall services activity remains below the long-term recovery trend, albeit, owing to the strength of Wholesale Trade and ICT sectors (see the annual data analysis for these) and to the surprise uptick in Admin & Support services, the sector is tracing a shallow U-shaped recovery path so far. From January 2009, it took the index 16 months to hit the bottom, and we are 32 months into the recovery now, with still 1.55% to go (1.86% on 3mo average basis) before regaining January 2009 levels of activity. We will, barring unexpected events, close this gap in the next 2-3 months, but do keep in mind that January 2009 was already 1 year into contracting services activity in the first place.