It proves that low paid workers are not on a free ride.
The top 1% of earners have roughly half the share of income as the bottom 50% but pay more than 5 times as much tax. That looks like a good deal for the bottom 50% of earners to me.
The proposal is to shift some of tax burden for the higher earners onto the lower earners. Do you think that is fair?
You must be my Landlord so as he lives next door. Lovely man.Purple you must be my next door neighbour; there can't be two people that fit that description
You can't just pull figures out of your... out of the sky and use them to make a point. What is the real income distribution?Yes, it does look like a good deal.
But ive just spent my evening showing you how such statistics can convey a distorted impression of a heavy burden on one sector over a different sector when the reality is somewhat different.
But to try hammer home the point, using your figures, if 50% of income earners equals 1,000,000 workers then 1% equals 20,000 (1% of 2,000,000).
If the bottom 50% have incomes worth, say, €40bn then, by your reckoning the 1% have somewhere close to €20bn between them.
So the average income of the bottom 50% would be €40,000 per worker (40bn / 1,000,000 workers)
The average income of the 1% would be (€20bn / 20,000) or €1m per worker.
So despite the assertion that the 1% pay fives times the tax of the bottom 50%, it can be shown that on average each worker in the 1% has 25 times the income of the average worker in the bottom 50%.
So if the average bottom 50% worker pays €2,000, thats €2bn in total. And if the 1% pay 5 times that, that is €10bn between 20,000. That is, on average, each €1m worker pays on average €500,000 leaving a disposable income of €500,000.
I dont know about you but I would still rather be the €1m earner than the €40,000 earner.
The proposal is to shift some of tax burden for the higher earners onto the lower earners. Do you think that is fair?
Right, which is what I effectively did. A marginal direct tax rate of ~50% along with indirect taxes of ~10% seemed like a waste of my time so instead I'm a contractor taking a salary of €33,800, making the maximum company pension contributions and taking plenty of time off.
It seems to amount to nothing more than higher earners earn a lot more than lower earners and therefore should pay a disproportionately larger amount of tax.
You keep implying that there is some distortion at play in simply presenting the distribution of the effective rates at which different cohorts of earners pay taxes. There really isn't.
You also don't seem to accept or understand that at some point higher earners will choose not to contribute (or continue to contribute) such high levels to our tax system - either by deliberately earning less or by taking themselves out of the tax net entirely. The disposable income of such a taxpayer has absolutely nothing to do with it.
You can't just pull figures out of your... out of the sky and use them to make a point. What is the real income distribution?
All reductions in tax should be, at the very least, equally spread as a proportion of the rate across all tax bands while at the same time bringing everyone back into the USC net until such time as it is phased out for everyone.But as is typical with these declarations, there are no concrete proposals as what to actually do about it.
So lets have some.
All reductions in tax should be, at the very least, equally spread as a proportion of the rate across all tax bands while at the same time bringing everyone back into the USC net until such time as it is phased out for everyone.
That means that if there is a 1% reduction in the lower rate there is a 2% reduction in the higher rate. Don't increase the thresholds at which different rates kick in, just reduce the rates. Over time that will balance things out and give a fairer and broader spread.
You seem blissfully aware that Ireland (unlike the UK for example) has had stringent general anti-tax avoidance legislation for donkey's years. As for land "hoarders", thankfully property ownership is a constitutional right in this country, so arbitary confiscation is off the cards.
The idea that tackling white collar crime, tax avoidance and land "hoarding" could raise enough money to dramatically cut Income Tax rates is laughable.
The figures were provided by Sarenco.
How exactly?
The top 1% of earners have roughly half the share of income as the bottom 50% but pay more than 5 times as much tax. That looks like a good deal for the bottom 50% of earners to me.
Then I don't really understand how you think it can be used to generate sufficient new revenue to finance general tax decreases?1. {Stringent anti-tax avoidance legislation} . I am fully aware we have said legislation and am glad we do have .
4. I don,t think anyone said that widening as per (hoarding) etc would (dramatically) cut Tax.
Maybe we could concentrate on the less obvious but serious thieves in the White Collar /Tax avoidance brigade in order to reduce taxes on most taxpayers.
1. {Stringent anti-tax avoidance legislation} . I am fully aware we have said legislation and am glad we do have .
2. "hoarders" should not (in my opinion) be permitted under a constitution to hold assets without some charge for the common good.
It is not reasonable to land hold without some checks and balances. In no way would I support (arbitary confiscation).
I do tire of the constitutional right to property being used as a mantra !
3. I would go further and apply land taxes ,so that those that hold land and avail of services like roads etc contribute whilst of course being permitted proper allowances etc.
Your figures, to which I agree I extrapolated. If your figures a fabrication then you are wasting everyones time.
I didn't say my figures were a fabrication. I said the figures you extrapolated from something I wrote were a fabrication.
In a nutshell. Do you think that is unfair?
You say I fabricated, I say you fabricated, who cares?
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