Brendan Burgess
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Clearly this shows a consistent pattern of the Irish rich getting richer and the Irish poor getting poorer.
Clearly this shows a consistent pattern of the Irish rich getting richer and the Irish poor getting poorer.
Surely the Credit Suisse report shows that the wealth of the top decile and percentile has actually remained flat since 2000. That's what the report states?
I'm missing something, I'm not sure weather it is the point being made or the joke.
can only look at the rich getting richer and of course rage sets in. David McWilliams programme just confirms that there is now less hope for many while others are swanning in easy acquired wealth.
He cannot allay any tax against his huge loss while the the rich can.
Asset distribution is driven by age more than anything else and this is entirely in keeping with the human condition even in a totally equal world. Thus the bottom 10% own practically zero net assets. This group of asset paupers will include a large number of young professionals who have a successful career ahead of them.
Hi Leper
None of that is really very relevant. Your friend bought a house in a remote village. That was always going to be risky. Who is he annoyed at? Himself? He could well be annoyed at David McWilliams for strongly advocating the bank guarantee where he and tax payers have bailed out wealthy depositors and bondholders. But he should be primarily annoyed at himself.
Did you look at the figures in the above tables? There is simply no evidence that the rich are getting richer. This is a slogan which has become an urban myth.
After calling for a guarantee, McWilliams called for Ireland to default on its national debt. He called for us to leave the Euro. He predicted that the mortgage crisis and, what he called the "tracker mortgage timebomb" would lead to civil unrest and massive defaults. While he was forecasting doom and creating a general loss off hope among the Irish , some Irish and international investors risked their money to buy assets in Ireland. Now that their judgement has been proven to be correct, he is complaining that they are getting richer. It's not common sense - it's nonsense.
But even if the rich are getting richer and even if that is unfair, McWilliams offered no solution to it. If you think that the people who invested during the crisis should be pulled back in now, you do that through increases in Capital Acquisition Tax and Capital Gains Tax and you introduce a Wealth Tax. An increase in Corporation Tax on these evil multinationals would have no effect on the distribution of wealth.
This type of allegation is without foundation and extremely annoying to those of us involved in managing an asset portfolio. In terms of the timing of asset sales the market back in 2010 - 2013 was at best volatile and at worst still in the process of bottoming out. many knowledgeable commentators were still forecasting further falls in property prices and there were very few buyers with available funds for the larger properties that needed to be sold. Yes, with the benefit of hindsight some of those properties should have been withheld from the market, but as a decision maker you are not in a position to take the risk of further drops in value on a signification portion of of your portfolio. Fair dues to the Comer brothers and others who had the funds available to take a punt in buying properties at a time when others had neither the risk appetite nor the funds to invest.how NAMA sold off quality assets at much too low prices to foreign funds , that man from glenamaddy galway ( who started as a plasterer and with his brother developed a property empire in the uk and germany ) more or less confirmed that discounts way beyond 60%
i think mc williams made fair points about how NAMA sold off quality assets at much too low prices
Seamus Coffey has a blogpost on wealth by age:
http://economic-incentives.blogspot.ie/2015/09/age-and-distribution-of-wealth.html
The median wealth for the over 65 households is €202,400. The middle household in the under 35 age bracket has 50 times less wealth than the middle household in the over 65 households. Do we want to make this gap smaller? If we want to do that how do we achieve it? Take wealth from the nearly retired and give it to the newly qualified? Would it not be better if this gap was even greater?
From what I've seen of the Comer brothers, you really have to admire what they've built up from very humble beginnings. The stories of the sheer volume of work they got through working their way up on building sites, regularly working into the small hours of the morning just to get up and repeat day after day.
They were shrewd, and held their ground when much of the rest of the country were leveraging themselves way beyond their capacity thinking we had the first bubble ever that wouldn't burst. Once it inevitably did burst, they had the capital available to invest in properties with potential, but particularly those like Kilternan that still required the kind of investment to finish that no bank was prepared to back.
They don't seem like the politically connected moguls the popular media like to typically portray as the beneficiaries of NAMA deals. But then, as a nation we seem to like to think there's some big conspiracy behind success stories like this, we don't like hearing it's down to hard work and intelligence.
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