Joe Lynam
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Is that oversimplistic?
Yeah, well, we in Ireland will be watching it very carefully.
Obviously, we have a land border with Northern Ireland and a huge trading relationship with the UK as well.
Thank you very much for that, Chris.
That's Chris Beechamp, Chief Market Analyst with IG.
Breakfast Business with Enterprise Ireland on Newstalk.
Good morning and welcome to Breakfast Business and thank you to Shane Beattie.
It is Wednesday the 26th of November at 6.30.
Coming up on today's show we'll be talking to a company which helps you find lost stuff so St Anthony might be out of a job.
And we'll be looking at the UK budget and whether it can affect us and all the markets as usual.
Breakfast Business with Enterprise Ireland on Newstalk.
Breakfast Business with Enterprise Ireland on Newstalk.
Good morning and welcome to Breakfast Business and thank you to Shane Beattie.
It is Tuesday, the 25th of November at 6.30, coming up on today's show.
We'll be looking at length, chatting at length, excuse me, to the man behind the proposed radical changes to our infrastructure and planning system, Sean O'Driscoll, and all the markets as usual.
You can email us, business at newstalk.com.
But first, let's have a look at the main business stories in the newspapers and websites.
Dominic Coyle in the Irish Times reports that the state's new mandatory workplace pension scheme will cost the average business โฌ25,000 in additional employee-related costs when it comes into force next year, according to a survey by recruitment firm FRS.
Most of these businesses say that they will respond either by raising prices or by freezing hiring as the cost of auto enrolment hits profits.
From January, 750,000 Irish workers who are aged between 23 and 60, earning in excess of โฌ20,000 and not yet a member of a workplace pension scheme, will be automatically signed up to the state's My Future Fund.