At least we've made massive strides in terms of addressing satellite dish deprivation (page 60)
Why use original income as your measure (apart from the ‘omg we are the worst’ impact)? Original income is a poor indicator if you are trying to discuss income inequality – it could just as easily (and probably is in the case of Ireland) be caused by a high unemployment rate and/or a generous benefits system. Original income is income excluding cash benefits – in Ireland’s case 53% of the bottom quintile’s total gross income is provided by cash benefits compared with an EU average of 24%. So in using original income as your measure, you are only looking at 47% of the bottom quintile’s total income – hardly fair.Seamus Coffey, UCC, has a good blog piece on the level of income inequality in Irl:
http://economic-incentives.blogspot.com/2012/04/distributional-effects-of-direct-taxes.html
Here is a quote:
"Ireland has by far and away the greatest level of inequality when it comes to original income. The level of original income in the bottom quintile is more than 15 times lower the level of original income in the top quintile. The next highest country is Lativa at 11.8 with a weighted EU average of 7.9."
So we have the most progressive tax system but overall we don’t pay enough – which just about sums up the big problem in the Irish income tax system – the rich pay their share but lower and/or middle income levels do not.
There is no such thing as a free lunch when government is doing the subsidising.
Is it not the case that some people are actually getting a free lunch but that someone else is paying for it? The free travel for pensioners in Ireland is free to them. The taxpayers are paying for it though.
Is it not the case that some people are actually getting a free lunch but that someone else is paying for it? The free travel for pensioners in Ireland is free to them. The taxpayers are paying for it though.
Loads of people pay zero income tax because their incomes are low.
Students, part-time workers, etc., earning 10k-15k.
Maybe income tax should kick in earlier, I'm not against that.
But people earning over 275k paying 28.9% seems too low to me.
Is that just income tax i.e. at the 20% or 41% rate?
Would you add 4% PRSI to that rate to bring it to 32.9%?
Is the USC included? If not it would bring the tax take to just under 40%
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