Paul O Mahoney
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Don't think there's a solution, there is a growing discussion that western democracy doesn't work on most levels.The biggest problem I think is that politicians do not get rewarded for doing the right thing, i.e. Governments not getting re-elected. That leads to overspending/tax -cuts in order to 'buy' votes. I don't know how we get around that.
So what, we are still borrowing to fund current public expenditure, or do you think we shouldn't build any roads or schools or hospitals?
...We need a structural solution to this political problem. We should give the Irish Fiscal Advisory Council, or some new statutory body, the power to manage the public finances for the long-term. Take it out of the hands of politicians. It would decide whether a surplus or deficit were appropriate, and the government of the day could make choices on spending and taxation within those limits. If the government wanted to increase public expenditure, then they would have to increase taxes. If they wanted to cut taxes, they would have to cut public expenditure. But they couldn’t cut taxes and increase public expenditure unless the IFAC decided that running a deficit was the correct strategy at that time....
No, no, and no. Pooling our resources via taxes is an exercise in collective action, and it needs clear lines of accountability to those who contribute and benefit. Handing this over to an unelected body takes the power to far away from the people.
We should give the Irish Fiscal Advisory Council, or some new statutory body, the power to manage the public finances for the long-term.
I seem to remember it was outside Department of Finance and was and RTE interview and the surplus running up to the budget was €4bn , It was George Lee's report and interview.Charlie McCreevy was berated for the opposition for not spending enough.
Just as Paschal Donohoe is now.
Both claimed to be managing the finances prudently. Charlie wasn't and Paschal isn't either.
Apparently what Charlie actually said was "When I have the money I will spend it, but when I don't, I won't."
Although no one seems to be able to find the original source of the quote.
Brendan
I quoted you in full!You highlighted only half of what I said. Did you not see the first half?
I don't follow it closely enough any more to have a strong opinion. What I would say is that it is notoriously difficult to tell the difference in Ireland between temporary and permanent tax revenue.Are you suggesting that the current government is managing the public finances well? Do you think that they are right in blowing the artificially high tax take and the artificially low cost of servicing the government debt?
The problem with saying "family finances and public finances are different" is that people say that it's ok for the government to run up massive spending as later generations will pay it off.
It was George Lee's report and interview.
Ireland's boom-bust cycle is partially natural in origin due to an extremely open labour market.But it just doesn't work well in Ireland. We go from boom to bust. We had austerity when it would have been better if we could have afforded to spend. We are spending like crazy now, when we should be cutting back.
No, I got that but which we choose to borrow for is just an accountancy issue. We could just as easily say that we are not borrowing for Capital expenditure but are for Current expenditure and allocate our resources that way.Hi Purple
I think you might have misunderstood Coyote's figures?
He is saying the opposite.
At the moment, we are not borrowing for current expenditure. We are borrowing for capital expenditure.
I think we are all agreed that borrowing for appropriate capital expenditure is ok.
Brendan
Very important point.The second is just as important, as in Ireland there is a complete lack of accountability for delivery in our "permanent government", which rarely is called out. Why politicians put up with this I'm not quite sure, as they take on all the risk when outlining their grand plans, which they then have little ability to ultimately control.
But we're not doing that. The shortcomings in our health service are structural in nature. We are paying people more and hiring more people without addressing those shortcomings. We are also increasing pensions and other social transfers. That doesn't improve the social infrastructure for future generations, in fact it will probably do the opposite.Of course it's okay. Sovereigns are perpetual, households are not. We are borrowing today so that future generations will have better public infrastructure. This will allow more economic activity to service the debt. In my experience accounting training can make it harder to understand this point as you end up looking at individuals and enterprises all the time and not at the big picture.
There is also the fact that on the demand side the financial system needs trillions in safe assets. Real interest rates are still negative. It would be a crazy government that would turn away free money to generate better public services in the pursuit of parsimony for its own sake.
If you don't give the teachers a pay rise you'll have to borrow less money to build the M50.Sorry, I don't follow that at all.
It is not just an accountancy issue.
There is a huge difference between borrowing money to build the M50 and borrowing money to give teachers a salary increase.
Brendan
Ireland will spend about 5% of national income this year on capital infrastructure. The government will run an overall small surplus so none of that 5% will be borrowed.There is a huge difference between borrowing money to build the M50 and borrowing money to give teachers a salary increase.
Ireland will spend about 5% of national income this year on capital infrastructure. The government will run an overall small surplus so none of that 5% will be borrowed.
I am perfectly happy with borrowing for capital investment.It assumes that we should not borrow to build the M50.
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