5 February 2016 Focus Europe: Dark clouds. no storm yet Eurozone fEC,000mi0?. Mari. Ws; i Chief Economist (.44) 20 754.5708/ Ireland General Election 2016 Preview This article was published as a $igsfalfierat - 'Ireland General Election 2016 Preview' on 03 February 2016 • Ireland is broadly considered to be the success story of the euro debt crisis. Yet following elections on Friday 26 February, Ireland could be the latest of the peripheral euro area members to be left with a fragmented parliament and minority government. • The opinion polls and focus groups say that centre-right Fine Gael, the senior party in the outgoing coalition government with Labour, has the momentum. Voters have far more trust in Fine Gael's economic management than the second placed party (Fianna Fail). Yet despite the economic recovery, polls say the outgoing coalition is short of a majority. Moreover, if Labour underperforms, the party may choose a period of recuperation on the opposition benches, complicating Fine Gael's government formation task further still. • We view the risk of radical elements making their way into government in Ireland and having significant policy influence as relatively low. Pro- European policy continuity is highly likely, even with minority government. Nevertheless, Portugal shows that nothing should be taken for granted. There is a reasonable chance that populist Sinn Fein becomes the main opposition party in Dublin. That in combination with a Fine Gael-led minority government could cause a rise in risk premia and volatility. • A minority government or parliament with a large populist bloc in opposition may be less threatening in Ireland than in the other peripherals. The economy may not yet have fully rebalanced post-crisis, but unlike its peripheral peers, Ireland has already implemented the difficult policies required to put the economy on a path to sustainability. Benefits are in the pipeline. For example, the banks are