The Central Statistics Office (CSO) has published the Annual National Accounts 2024 which confirms that Gross National Income (GNI*), a key deglobalised measure of Ireland’s economic performance, increased by 4.8 percent last year. GDP grew by 2.6 percent, primarily driven by growth in sectors dominated by domestic activity.
In 2024, Modified Domestic Demand (MDD), a broad measure of underlying domestic activity that covers personal, government and investment spending, rose by 1.8 precent. Total exports grew by 8.6 percent, which was driven by an increase in services exports of 10.9 percent. Total imports grew by 2.7 percent last year.
Commenting on the publication, Minister for Finance Paschal Donohoe T.D. said:
“I welcome today’s data which confirm robust growth in the domestic economy last year. Inflation eased considerably throughout 2024, which boosted real incomes. As a result, consumer spending grew solidly by just under 3 per cent, supported by strong growth in employment. Overall, Modified Domestic Demand (MDD) increased by 1.8 per cent in 2024, while GNI* increased by almost 5 per cent.
From a policy perspective, we need to continue to calibrate economic and budgetary policies that recognise the changed external backdrop. In particular, this means focusing on boosting the competitiveness of the economy and continuing to build up our fiscal buffers. The government will set out its updated strategy in the Summer Economic Statement later this month”.