Plenty of Irish pension products offer "international" funds.irish people should move there money to the best performing international funds
Plenty of Irish pension products offer "international" funds.
well if plenty offer international funds they obviously don't do too much about them because the average is still only 4%
When i mentioned international funds i mean the best ones operated outside ireland with the best international expertise
the irish ones are not properly diversified and are too focused on the iseq
"Plenty of Irish pension funds offer access to international fund managers, e.g. Fidelity, Threadneedle, Wilshire etc."
and they charge a fee for doing this, cut out the middle man and just go directly into these funds, its like using an irish broker to buy foreign stocks, they take a huge cut themselves, it is far cheaper and more efficient to use foreign brokers,
And if you do that, you lose tax relief of up to 41%, PRSI relief of up to 6% and tax-exempt gains, as to do this would be bypassing a pension structure.
Therefore the tax system is benefitting the irish pension funds industry, as i suspected
if the government were to open this up and allow people to access foreign funds with the same tax reliefs,
Incidentally - you say that "irish people should move there money to the best performing international funds"
Can you show us examples of a couple of such funds and how they have performed over the same 10-year period?
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