Sophrosyne
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Potential default at the time was very little to do with current spending and all to do with a 30% collapse in tax revenues and huge bank bailouts.
But we did not default.
According to the Controller & Auditor General (C&AG) taxpayers paid a net cost of €45.7 billion up to the end of last 2021 to bail out banks during the financial crisis.
But as @NoRegretsCoyote mentioned, there was also the spill over into the general economy .
The link I posted to the Pension Commission was to the Executive Summary, but the actual report is extensive. You can view the Full Report and the Technical Working Papers here.The state will need to provide a minimum level of income to the poorest. There is only so big the social welfare budget can get. They cannot cut the non- contributory pension. Something will have to give . There is an argument that means tested approach is a more progressive approach that allowing it to decrease in real terms by increasing with inflation.
Therefore the idea that the state can renege on its promise to pay a state pension to those who have paid prsi and taxes all their lives is preposterous and unacceptable and will not be accepted. If the state finds itself in such a financial crisis it will have to cut all benefits equally .
And they'll be retired for close the same amount of time. That's crazy. Nobody should get a full state pension if they've only worked for 30 years. It should be 40 years at an absolute minimum.It maybe the case that the prsi contributions do not fully fund the state pension in the future but people that have worked all their lives have also paid tax for 30+ years.
Yep, stupid idea.It also has to be remembered that the state increased considerably the entitlement to a state pension to people that don't have a full prsi record.
Everybody's been paying tax all their lives. Low and middle income earners pay way less income tax than their Northern European counterparts. Our ridiculously high tax free allowances mean that low and middle income earners are under taxed in this country, though marginal income tax rates are too high. There is also a large social transfer to working people on low incomes. As a cohort the bottom 70% of earners are net recipients from the State.Middle income earners, the majority also hit the high tax bracket much earlier than most other countries. Those people have been paying higher taxes all their lives
Nobody's been paying PRSI all their lives and the State hasn't made any promises to pay anything to anyone. It certainly hasn't made promises to pay very generous pensions to people who pay low income taxes.Therefore the idea that the state can renege on its promise to pay a state pension to those who have paid prsi and taxes all their lives is preposterous and unacceptable and will not be accepted. If the state finds itself in such a financial crisis it will have to cut all benefits equally . Even I Greece during the financial crisis this never happened.
The troika aren't socialists, they determine how much money should be spent and raised in taxation, it's upto governments to do the gory details and sell it to their populations.Or the Troika will determine spending. And they won't see the logic of paying Contributory Pensions to people who have enough income already
Boss your OP asked do we have an issue with the 359bn unfunded COAP obligations. I saw this as two questions really. Do you have an issue with the level of the COAP? Do you have an issue that it is unfunded? I have given my answers but you have made the questions rhetorically. Do you yourself have either of these issues?Why did we not default?
Because we were bailed out!
We might not be bailed out the next time.
Brendan
Do you have an issue with the level of the COAP?
The focus should be taken away from this present value amount. I think the report says current social protection spending is 7.9bn or about 2%-3% of GDP. Can we afford that? Can we afford quadrupling it? Let's look down the line, can we afford where it is going and if not should we start doing something about it? These are the valid ways to look at the issues. IMHO the bandying about of an 80 year discounted figure of 359bn which is heavily caveated by sensitivities running to over 100bn is not helpful.Hi Duke
You have explained well why the COAP should not be funded. I am not sure of this but I see your point. What I don't understand is if you see no problem with €359 bn unfunded COAP, does that mean that there is no problem with a €1,359 bn COAP? Where does it stop? Or does it stop?
Ah Boss! I must be missing your point put that sounds very nigh eve. For a start countries are, for planning purposes anyway, immortal. It is reasonable to project its current PAYG capabilities continuing to grow indefinitely assuming no "life changing" shifts in its condition. The human condition for most individuals is that they will be income earning for say 40 years and then they will need to live off any assets they have accumulated and/or any social protection. So of course individuals have to fund for those dramatic changes in their economic productivity/dependence.Why do we bother contributing to private pensions? Surely we could stop doing so and get an OAP of €50,000 a year each. And not bother funding it. It seems to me that both positions are extreme. I don't know where the right answer lies.
I agree that the rules are riddled with anomalies but I am a big picture man and like to stay out of the weedsYes, definitely.
Self-employed pay 4% a year and get the full COAP. That is wrong. They should not be getting it at all or getting 4/15th of the general level.
Someone who has paid Employers and Employees PRSI on a salary of €100k a year should be getting more than someone who paid 4% on €20,000 a year.
But on the other hand, it's likely that the person on €100k a year will have more other income so won't need it.
There's that "unfunded" word again. These are all sustainable if the nation's current PAYG capabilities keep on a growth course. But sure there are risks. A certain amount of prudence and rainy day funds is probably justified but it is delusion that we can put ourselves in a position that we are bullet proof to whatever is coming down the line. We saw in the crisis that we had to take steps like cutting public service pay that would have been thought impossible.If you look at the COAP in isolation, maybe it's affordable. But what with €200 bn of national debt and rising interest rates and a potential fall in tax revenues, and the unfunded public sector pensions, when do we get worried?
Yes, these are big judgement calls. I would certainly be against building up massive contingency funds. Our biggest parachute is that we are credit worthy. We got bailed out of the awful Bertie mess. We proved that our credit is good. I shudder to think where we would be if we had followed Fierce Doherty and burnt the bondholders.So people seem to be suggesting that we should pay this very large pension to everyone while we can afford it and when we run out of credit, stop paying it. I am probably more financially conservative and would build up a lot of resilience in the public finances so that we could handle most of what will be thrown at us.
Brendan
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