I have been hearing for some time that religious observance, new priests, and self-identified Catholic identity and beliefs have all been taking a nosedive in the Republic of Ireland. So I poked around to see how Catholic baptisms and marriages have been doing. Evidently, most Irish people continue to show up at their parish a handful of times in life in order to observe the essential rites and then they do nothing more. Part of this has to do with family pressure, force of habit and so forth. But there is one other specific reason for why Irish people continue to be just about as likely to baptize their children Catholic as they ever were.
Evidently, well over 90% of state-funded schools in Ireland (and 90% of primary schools taken as a whole) are not truly public schools in any sense, as this vast majority of schools are run and operated by the Catholic Church. In order to maintain a certain Catholic identity, strong preferences are maintained for baptized and (if possible) observant Catholics on staff and in the process of enrolling students. There is a certain order to the list of priorities, with baptized Catholics at the top, unbaptized non-religious at the bottom, and a fair number of other types in between. Additionally, a half-hour out of each school day is set aside for specifically Catholic religious instruction, and there is no opt-out option for non-Catholic children on the occasion when a few of them are able to be there. Again, this happens at state-funded schools.