The Horseman
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A six figure handout is not a disincentive to work. A worker will always work and those who don't won't to work won't work.33% is proportionate.
Is a 6-figure handout from a parent to a child not a disincentive to work/create wealth?
We can reward people by taxing their work less. Surely the right thing (both politically and economically) is to go and earn one's own income?
If someone wants a €110k tax relief on an inheritance from their parents when they are 60, fine.
But then let someone else claim their €110k tax relief against income in their 30s so they can buy a home.
Each person gets the benefit of the same tax relief, seems fair.
Where is the OP pulling the figure of €670,000 from.? Makes you wonder about the veracity of the entire post.
A six figure handout is not a disincentive to work. A worker will always work and those who don't won't to work won't work.
OK if you tax someone less in work how do you fund it?
I too have and continue to work since junior cert. The idea of the €100k is to go towards a property purchase? I would not take a year off and enjoy myself. I personally have worked hard and sacrificed to better myself exactly as my parents did before me.Like a lot of people, I have had a paying job in some form since before my junior cert. If someone gave me €100k for nothing, I would absolutely take a year off work and enjoy myself.
On the other hand, if I got a €100k tax credit to be used over 10 years I would maximise my earned income during that time therefore increasing the productivity of the economy.
Good question. How do we fund the current CAT breaks we give people?
That’s an argument for your parents paying less tax, retaining more of the fruits of their labour. It’s not an argument for someone else retaining the fruits of their labour.People did "earn" their inheritance. My Father was a truck driver driving long hours, my Mother was a homemaker and then a factory worker again working long hours.
We never had a foreign holiday, we were lucky to go camping in the summer.
Because of all the sacrifices my parents made and by extension my siblings and myself in not having holidays, branded clothing, branded food etc people are suggesting penalising prudence!
At what point do we actually reward people for doing the right thing and trying to fend for themselves rather than having a hand out to the State?
I too have and continue to work since junior cert. The idea of the €100k is to go towards a property purchase? I would not take a year off and enjoy myself. I personally have worked hard and sacrificed to better myself exactly as my parents did before me.
We don't fund the CAT as the tax from same has increased following the reduction in the threshold levels against the backdrop of rising property and investment/pensions etc.
Isn’t there a relief for business you are working in similar to farms?There will always be a strong desire of wealthy parents to take care of their children and there are multiple ways of doing this. Is it fair on others who do not have family wealth, no, but those parents have earned the right to do as they please with their money. This has & will always be the case.
Take for example a family business doing well, multiple family members in various functions, the ability to pass this down to the next generation and continue to trade, grow & create employment would be severely impacted by a large tax bill. Reliefs in place enable this to happen and when the business gets sold at some stage in the future the state will take a big share of the pie at that stage. Seems a lot fairer to me than taxing the business out of existence after one generation
I realise that you are thinking things out and don’t wish to rain on your parade, but this is a non-runner.
According to this report from the Tax Strategy Group:
CAT receipts for 2022 were 605m,
Group A yield for 2022 was €243m,
No of Group A cases was 7,357.
No of cases in Group B – 12,940 and Group C 4,875. Total B & C cases – 17,815
According to the report:
“Increasing the Group B (currently €32,500) and C (currently €16,250) thresholds to bring them into line with the Group A threshold (currently €335,000) would be costly, estimated at approximately €291 million per annum. This is because a significant portion of the yield from gifts and inheritances arises from the Group B threshold...”.
What, therefore, would be the cost to the exchequer of extending the monetary value of the Group A threshold to every taxpayer and what taxes would have to increase to recover the cost?
All the associated exemptions would need to be addressed as described in the link provided above.Are these not just the cases that breach the threshold? So there were also X number of inheritances below the €335,000 cut-off (and not captured in the report) where people got 100% relief on the CAT that would have been due. I don't know what that theoretical lost CAT revenue is but it would be millions.
The lifetime cost would be up to €110,000 per person. A huge sum. But it is the same cost as the taxpayer-funded tax write off given to anyone who gets €335k or more under the current system. Unlike the CAT relief, this allowance would have to be spread over time otherwise the country would be bankrupt.
We could, for example, give people the option to retain their Group A allowance for future use or to increase their income tax credits. Say anyone who has paid income tax in Ireland for a period of 3 years can choose to double their EITC for the following 10 years.
EITC costs about €300m a year. If everyone qualified and everyone opted in that would cost an extra €300m a year. The help-to-buy scheme costs about €200m a year and according to Mazars about 1/3 of that goes to people who don't require it. So it's not an outlandish amount of money.
Your children didn't pay any of that VAT or property tax or interest so why should they get your assets tax free?I paid stamp duty when I bought my house, I paid VAT on every item in the house, I paid VAT on every home improvement, I paid Property Tax on the house, I paid the mortgage & interest from taxed income, if I need care in the later part of my life, a % of my home will be taken.
I consider inheritance tax iniquitous; I should be able to give my property to anyone I like without them paying a penalty.
I agree but only if there is a corresponding reduction in income tax rates.All the associated exemptions would need to be addressed as described in the link provided above.
If we want to have a fairer society then the annual gift tax (3k) should be abolished…imagine rich families can legitimately give each child 6k (both parents) tax free per year for potentially 30+ years…add in another 6k to there partners and the grandchildren…that’s some wealth transfer!!
Should children going to college pay the full cost of there course and not the 3k fees per year…again college benefits the wealthy families and gives kids a better chance to earning more over their lifetime than non graduates!
Why should poorer families pay for the rich kids!
My parents along with others sacrificed so their children would not have to go through the difficulties they did in this instance leaving an inheritance. The tax breaks as you reference were not there to avail of.That’s an argument for your parents paying less tax, retaining more of the fruits of their labour. It’s not an argument for someone else retaining the fruits of their labour.
your point supports the proposal at the start of this thread. They did the sacrificing so they should get the tax break. Then, if they so chose, there would be more to leave to their children. Their children would then be taxed fully on that larger inheritance.
Remember, the people leaving the inheritance don’t pay any tax on it.
This begs the question should wealthy families subsidise the poor? If so to what level?All the associated exemptions would need to be addressed as described in the link provided above.
If we want to have a fairer society then the annual gift tax (3k) should be abolished…imagine rich families can legitimately give each child 6k (both parents) tax free per year for potentially 30+ years…add in another 6k to there partners and the grandchildren…that’s some wealth transfer!!
Should children going to college pay the full cost of there course and not the 3k fees per year…again college benefits the wealthy families and gives kids a better chance to earning more over their lifetime than non graduates!
Why should poorer families pay for the rich kids!
I pay well over €100,000 a year in income tax. I have considerable assets. Should the State provide me with more and better access to healthcare than the average person?My parents along with others sacrificed so their children would not have to go through the difficulties they did in this instance leaving an inheritance. The tax breaks as you reference were not there to avail of.
The fair deal scheme is a prime example of how the system is wrong. You have two identical people one with assets the other without yet both people receive exactly the same care but one has to pay for it and the other doesn't where is the fairness in that?
Do you want to live in a country where that entails making sure those children and grandchildren are well adjusted and well educated so that they can make their own way in life or that they just inherit a big lump of capital?Do most if not all parents try improve their children and grandchildren lives rather than a strangers one?
I suggest that the children and grandchildren who inherit tax free wealth aren't taking responsibility for where they are in life, rather they are simply beneficiaries of a wealth transfer.At what point do people take responsibility for where they are in life?
It is their decision.What they wish to do with their assets should be their decision not the States.
No, I want to reduce the tax burden on people who work hard. I want to see a corresponding increase in tax on those who will inherit the fruits of that hard work.I always find it ironic that people want to tax those who actually worked hard, sacrificed and earned their situation in life and rather than let them decide what they do with it they want to control them. Right up to the mid 1990's Ireland was not a wealthy country.
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