Top Stories

Bog off: Bord na Móna goes after unlawful third-party cutting on peatlands

The semi-state is tackling alleged unauthorised activity on seven bogs, with hundreds of thousands of euro worth of peat cut. It has taken legal action in one case and is weighing up more.

Apple is booking a €9bn cost to pay €13bn in Irish back taxes – but how?

The multinational has warned shareholders of a tax hit from today’s EU court decision against Ireland, but nowhere near the €13 billion set aside in an escrow account. US tax is coming into play.

Revenue targeted investors in a €200m offshore property fund. This is how it won

More than a decade after they pumped money into an offshore property fund, a string of well-heeled investors were hit with tax bills. This is the story of the tax authority's battle over the liquidation of the multi-million euro fund.

Unlocking the future of travel: How Ireland slots into Booking’s fintech ambitions

The online travel giant set up a fintech unit a few years ago and got a licence from the Central Bank of Ireland. Now it’s putting it to use.

Sweden’s Vimian scoops up Meath’s iM3 Dental for its animal medtech division

The deal sees the Stockholm-listed animal health group acquire the Meath-based company for an initial €84m with a further €60m dependent on targets.

Down to the core: Donegal council gears up for widespread defective blocks testing of social housing

New tender documents indicate 500 houses will be tested over the next eight months across five districts in the county. It is also setting its own standards for new social builds amid concerns national standards are flawed.

“Who cares if you fail? You learn by your failures. We’ve tried loads of things and failed”

Entrepreneur Mairead Mackle oversees a host of different businesses, from healthcare to housing, and from renewable energy to beef production. But as she explains, they are unified by her desire to have a positive social impact.

Brett Igoe: What Irish rugby can learn from the club structures and systems in France

Despite prioritising their domestic league, French clubs have recently dominated European competitions, winning the last four European Cups. Their success is largely attributed to their financial strength, but other factors also contribute.

Top Voices

Ian Kehoe: Ireland rightly lost the Apple case. But it remains the real winner

Ireland has spent the last 10 years fighting Europe on Apple while simultaneously rehabbing its reputation and helping rewrite global tax rules. It was a high-stakes approach, but one that has paid off handsomely.

Continuity, not radical change: Ronan Lyons on Sinn Féin’s housing policy

Ronan Lyons is an international expert on housing policy. Here, he argues that Sinn Féin’s policy document marks a continuation of current housing policy, rather than a radical shift.

Why LinkedIn’s founder thinks working nine to five in an office will be dead in a decade

The traditional pattern of employment is collapsing rapidly. Offices are clearing out, rents are falling and even the traditional CV is becoming irrelevant. These are just some of the trends identified by LinkedIn founder Reid Hoffman.

Are restaurants the canaries in the coal mine of the economy? Rewinding the week that was

With cost increases outpacing revenue growth, a string of restaurants are closing. Restaurants and insolvency professionals outline the issues in the sector and offer advice on navigating the problems.

In Thuringia, memory politics and the educational system are no longer bulwarks against right-wing extremism

Fergal Lenehan lives and works in the eastern German states of Thuringia and Saxony where the far right has made its first significant political gains. He assesses what the AfD win will mean for the rest of Germany and Europe.

Tom Lyons: A ring of silence that allowed a ring of abuse to go unchecked

It is hard not to believe that paedophile rings existed in Irish religious schools. The scale of abuse is simply too large, and the number of people involved is too high. But what of the people who suspected something was going on, and did nothing?

Peter Kinsella: Will Germany bend, or will it break?

If we take some altitude on the current impasse, it strikes me that Germany is possibly heading for a period of significant economic and political upheaval. Maybe, things need to break to be re-made.

Monzo faces a huge challenge in Ireland but its success will be measured in more ways than one

The London fintech is entering a market in dire need of competition but winning an Irish banking licence will be just as crucial to its international expansion plans.