Here's some interesting stats:
Income tax target from 2010 Book of Estimates = 11,979m
Average Wage Q1 2010 (CSO) = 35,634 per annum
No. of tax payers in country (Revenue Annual Report) = 2,496,762
Doing the maths, it means that if we had a flat rate tax, the 2010 rate would be: 13.5%
Whats encouraging is that we can easily increase our tax take by 25-30% (i.e. to c.18% flat rate tax) without much difficulty.
Flat rate is the way to go.
Agreed.It's completely contradictory, but I'd go for a flat rate tax on income only, then look at a limited amount of sales, rates, etc taxes to support that.
Here's some interesting stats:
Income tax target from 2010 Book of Estimates = 11,979m
Average Wage Q1 2010 (CSO) = 35,634 per annum
No. of tax payers in country (Revenue Annual Report) = 2,496,762
Doing the maths, it means that if we had a flat rate tax, the 2010 rate would be: 13.5%
Whats encouraging is that we can easily increase our tax take by 25-30% (i.e. to c.18% flat rate tax) without much difficulty.
Flat rate is the way to go.
But look at it this way. 13.5% tax takes in 12bn, we have a shortfall of 20bn, so we will have to increase income tax to 30% to balance the books.
Interesting stats.
The problem is if the goverment introduced a 13.5% flat rate on all income tomorrow, high earners would pay less tax and lower earners more tax. For example someone on 20K would pay 2.7K in income tax. I suspect this is substantially more than what is paid at the moment.
I like the idea of a flat rate. Easy to administer and calculate future tax yields. I also think it is fairer that when someone gets a pay rise they will pay the same rate of tax on the extra money, not the 60% they pay now.
A recipe for major social unrest I would have thought ?
The most perceptive post yet.
No Government is going to introduce a tax system whereby those on lower incomes are brought into the tax net while higher earners pay less tax than they are currently paying.
A recipe for major social unrest I would have thought ?
The middle income earners are the backbone of society.
leave the low paid alone, and dont think of lowering social welfare rates! you are no doubht one of those lucky to have a job.Bringing low paid workers into the tax net (which I aggree with), should be done in conjunction with lower social welfare rates. Otherwise it is going to make it unattractive for people to return to the workforce.
dont take me wrong, but i assume you have a job! try living on the other side of the street for a while.Do you disagree in principle with the low paid contributing something, no matter how small?
I think everyone should contribute something, and the plain fact is that some low paid pay no tax, and actually receive from the system (like childrens benefits and FIS).
Everyone should be putting something in. Unfortunately when you do that, you have to reduce welfare a little too so as not to disincentivise work.
Good point, but, there are some political advantages to flat rate tax that could be real vote getters i.e.
- means that high earners cannot reduce/eliminate their tax bill with various tax schemes. Whether perception or reality, the prospect of rich people paying their fair share is something that the electorate would be pleased with.
- while low paid workers will pay some tax, political research suggests that the low paid and unemployed dont vote and many arent even registered to vote, so from a cynical political point of view increasing taxes for the low paid will not lose votes.
- The big winners in a flat rate tax system will be middle income earners who are currently overburdened with tax. These people vote in large numbers at elections.
- the system is simple and fair.
I think you get civil unrest when the ordinary average joe citizen gets hit hard. The middle income earners are the backbone of society. If they are getting a fair deal, you wont have civil unrest.
dont take me wrong, but i assume you have a job! try living on the other side of the street for a while.
Doing the maths, it means that if we had a flat rate tax, the 2010 rate would be: 13.5%
Whats encouraging is that we can easily increase our tax take by 25-30% (i.e. to c.18% flat rate tax) without much difficulty.
This is a myth. Ever heard of VAT?and the plain fact is that some low paid pay no tax,
if life were only so simple!Sorted then. Lets do it !!
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