torblednam
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Why would you take account of PRDs when calculating the cost of pensions paid to retired public sector workers?
Why would anybody reference the social fund?
Neither PRDs nor the social fund have anything whatsoever to do with the current cost of pensions paid to public sector workers. Surely that's obvious?
The article suggests that the cost of these pensions to the exchquer will increase by €1billion - or close to 25% - in only four years.
Yes, I find that amazing.
There should be no defined benefit pensions and everyone should provide their own pension, funded by them on their own or with a contribution by their employer.I think that would be one for Paschal.
Are you in favour of appropriate fiscal policy or not?
The bottom line is, provision should be made for future liabilities as they accrue. This is just as appropriate for the private sector as for the public sector. Currently it is the State's version of the endowment mortgage!
The State pension (OAP) should operate in the same manner; you pay PRSI and it goes into your pension fund. If you can’t afford that then the State pays into a pension fund for you.
The problem I have with the PRD And public servants Pension contributions is it not saved and invested to provide for there future pension, same applies to public servants hired after 1995 with there Employers PRSI contributions which would be around 10.75 ,The article is about more than the €1bn that you're so amazed by (HINT: Look at the thread title).
I think coyote's point in the post above yours, is that the 29% figure quoted is very misleading, in circumstances where the PRD (which is progressive in nature) is not factored in, either as part of the employee contribution or by deducting it from the salary figure against which you're calculating your %. The PRD has, after all, been converted into a superannuation contribution from the start of 2019.
All valid questions; there is no easy solution. My starting point is that we have to stop mortgaging our children's future to pay for things we cannot afford today. We already stick them with the cost of the crash. We are still borrowing from them to pay wages, welfare and pensions today. We need to stop.Who would manage the fund? Would it be done on a market basis? What would the fees be? What would happen if the fund massively underperformed over the years?
These questions are very hard ones and usually ignored by enthusiasts for privatising everything.
You can indeed have massive state pension funds managed on an arms-length basis (common in some parts of Europe) but the state will always have to prop them up if they underperform due to poor management or high fees.
The contributory state pension is administratively very cheap to provide compared to many DC schemes.
The state already collects billions from workers public/ private in so call pension contributions let it be through public servants pension contributions PRD and PRSI public/private sector, most is used to pay benefits away higher than other EU states ,what I am looking for is some to be invested for the people in the public/private sector so they know it will be there when they retire ,@RETIRED2017
This is not really true. The state spends money on productive infrastructure which allows for future economic growth which, in turn, can be taxed.
If the state was investing nothing you would have a point but, the last time I checked, the state was investing something like 6% of GNI*.
This is not to defend pay-as-you-go. But if you privatised pensions you would have:
a) the state collecting billions in workers' wages and investing them on financial markets
b) the state then borrowing billions from financial markets to pay for infrastructure to be used by workers
PurpleThe projected shortfall is up to €20 billion a year by 2070.
That's 40% of what we take from all forms of taxation. Even index linked it is still a massive shortfall.
By 2050 it is €15 billion.
The reality is that we need to significantly increase social security payments from everyone with an income. We need to bring more people into the tax net and readjust our system so that contributions from low and middle income earners get closer to the EU average. In other words we need to broaden our tax base. Property tax, utility charges etc are all part of that picture. None of it will happen though as it is not populist.
The projected shortfall is up to €20 billion a year by 2070.
That's 40% of what we take from all forms of taxation. Even index linked it is still a massive shortfall.
By 2050 it is €15 billion.
The reality is that we need to significantly increase social security payments from everyone with an income. We need to bring more people into the tax net and readjust our system so that contributions from low and middle income earners get closer to the EU average. In other words we need to broaden our tax base. Property tax, utility charges etc are all part of that picture. None of it will happen though as it is not populist.
The projected shortfall is up to €20 billion a year by 2070.
That's 40% of what we take from all forms of taxation. Even index linked it is still a massive shortfall.
By 2050 it is €15 billion.
The reality is that we need to significantly increase social security payments from everyone with an income. We need to bring more people into the tax net and readjust our system so that contributions from low and middle income earners get closer to the EU average. In other words we need to broaden our tax base. Property tax, utility charges etc are all part of that picture. None of it will happen though as it is not populist.
I probably will end up only getting perhaps 20% after all taxes and charges.
I said increase social security payments, not taxes. By European standards the taxes paid by high earners are too high and the taxes paid by low and middle earners are too low. Too much of our taxes are levied on labour (wealth generation) and our welfare rates are far too high to be sustainable.I disagree with increasing taxes on everyone with an income.
In what universe are you getting an 80% effective tax rate on your state pension?
Don't worry; there probably won't be a State pension for anyone who isn't a State employee.I said I will probably end up with only 20% who knows what the tax rates will be in 20yrs time. I suspect they wont be decreasing.
I said increase social security payments, not taxes. By European standards the taxes paid by high earners are too high and the taxes paid by low and middle earners are too low. Too much of our taxes are levied on labour (wealth generation) and our welfare rates are far too high to be sustainable.
I think everyone who works should pay some tax (just like they did 20 years ago) and everyone should certainly pay social insurance on all of their personal income (just like they did 20 years ago).
I also think the marginal tax rate, including social insurance, should never exceed 45%.
Exactly 55 yrs of contributions with nothing to show for it. Isn't Ireland just a wonderful place.Don't worry; there probably won't be a State pension for anyone who isn't a State employee.
Well at the moment you get the same as someone who never worked a day in their life so...Exactly 55 yrs of contributions with nothing to show for it. Isn't Ireland just a wonderful place.
Yea; increase social security payments, make everyone pay the same percentage of their income in social insurance (i.e. pay it from the first euro earned) and reduce the higher marginal tax rate so that low and middle income earners start paying their fair share of income taxes. We can't keep expecting the rich to pay for everything, it ssimply isn't fair.How do you fund an increase in social security payments if you don't increase taxes. I must be missing something.
I agree with all of that. This is a big problem but it is a long term problem. Smallish changes now will make a big difference later. The changes to public sector pensions will have a very significant impact.No one should be too dogmatic about these numbers. These projections are very sensitive to small changes to assumptions in productivity, migration rates, etc. (I used to work on this many years ago).
There are lots of policy responses. In Japan people are working longer and more women have entered the workforce.
You can increase taxes or just let pensions increase below inflation in due course. By global standards, a 70-year old in Ireland with only state pension and other benefits has a very good standard of living.
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