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Originally Posted by noodler
If you give somebody a wage which they don't deserve then fair enough, if you give everyone a wage they don't deserve then we will become remarkably uncompetitive and far less attractive to foreign companies who employ a relatively high number of our workforce (of course this already happened to a degree in the 2000s).
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During the 2000s the people working for the foreign companies were in general on low wages. The salt of the earth type Irish people saw those jobs beneath them. And they mostly worked for outrageous high pay in the bildin trade. 19 year-old plasterers were earning over 70k. I knew someone working as an unskilled sweeper on sites - and he was taking home 750 euros a week.
You're not going to find a manly man, used to wearing a hi-vis jacket and driving a 4x4 working a customer service desk job for Pay Pal. That would be beneath him.
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*Don't deserve = what I mean here is a wage which their economic output does not justify.
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There's no connection between pay and economic output. Or true economic value.
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Wealthy people are generally wealthy because of their incomes (accumulated over many years in some cases perhaps).
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Property flipping through the boom years.
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Such incomes are already taxed at around 50% (41% income tax + USC + PRSI) on the margin.
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In a lot of cases they pay nothing like that.
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Many lower paid workers don't have to pay any income tax nor any USC.
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You'd want to be on extremely low pay to be out of the tax net. And with VAT - the poor man is made pay as much as the rich man.
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I can't remember Brian Lenihan's Budget 2010 quote exactly but around half of all income tax in Ireland is paid by the top paid by the top 5% earners.
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Which shows the inequality of income. the 95% are expected to tighten their belts - they can't have any of the cream as it would cause inflation - to it's safer just to let 5% - the party boys keep their money safe for them.
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I only list the above examples to highlight the fact that we are very much a welfare state with transfers from rich to poor already.
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This is the Ayn Rand, the rich carrying the poor around on their back tripe.
This isn't what has been happening. Inequality has been increasing, in real terms most wages have been stagnant or falling. In the last 20 years the wealthy have seen their share of the wealth double. This a transfer from the poor to the rich.
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So moving onto wealth: It is a tough one, many people's wealth is simply accumulated income on which tax has already been paid i.e. should my savings which I spent 10 years accumulating be subject to a wealth tax?
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If those "savings" came from anything to do with property they should be taxed at 100%. Actually 150%, or 200% considering the interest the rest of us are having to pay for your property flipping.
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EDIT: One more point which may seem harsh, but why should a compnay share its profits with a worker whose contribution is fairly minimal and has skills which are not unique and could be replaced without much effort?
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Why shouldn't they?..........Something tells me that you see people - at least poor people - as cattle or something.