The idea that children should be raised by a stay at home mother in the relative isolation of a family home is a recent one. For most of the last few thousand years we have lived in agrarian societies were mothers worked full time and once babies were weaned they were kept in groups were older women and older children minded them.Children who are reared in their own home, by their own parents, are much better off than those reared by strangers. This is not borne out of prejudice, as you say, but from significant evidence, evidence that children reared by strangers lose out by the lack of contact from their own parents Individualisation has eased their consience, it hasn't improved the quality of like of their children.
Most children are minded in the grey economy be sisters, grandmothers, aunts or neighbours. These people are not strangers.
And for many it is an economic necessity.For many working mothers it's a purely selfish move to go out to work, sometimes for practically very little extra monetary reqard.
What leads you to that conclusion?Individualisation of tax allowances has created a culture of greed, where childrens' needs are definitely lowered in priority.
So you think that people who’s children live outside Ireland (and so do not use resources in out health or educational services despite that fact that their parents taxes pay for those services) should not have the same rights as those who’s children live in Ireland? If they pay their taxes here why should they not receive the same benefits? I’m afraid you show your biases quite clearly with your last comment.(Giving the same benefit to children living outside Ireland, whose parent(s) are employed here, is a complete joke.)
For the record I agree 100% with Darag’s comments.
I also agree that child benefit should be means tested (in which case Ms Purple and I would not get it).