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What cuts/tax increases would you accept?

  • 19-04-2012 07:00PM
    #1
    Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 138 ✭✭


    People have been very vocal on what cuts and tax increases they feel are unacceptable and on where they think those adjustments should be made. The criticism I have heard in response to a lot of these (quite valid) suggestions is that people only want adjustments that don't affect them.

    It would be interesting to hear what cuts or tax increases people would make that would affect them directly.

    Personally I would understand if Child Benefit was cut. I don't budget for it because I don't want to rely on something that can be reduced or withdrawn due to factors largely outside my control. That is probably what will happen should means testing be introduced.


«1

Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,456 ✭✭✭Icepick


    Taxes:
    Get rid off certain tax credits - Age Credit and Service Charges (all) - and make married credit the same as single person credit.
    Cuts:
    Across the board cuts in Public Service and Welfare. But the welfare system needs to be rebuilt. Jobseeker's allowance should be based on people's PRSI payments and should go down rapidly after 6 and 12 months.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,219 ✭✭✭woodoo


    I'm OK with a property tax and water charges. But i would not like to see the exemption net spread too wide. Only the bare minimum should be exempt. Road tax needs to be sensible and not too high (as it is for some pre-08 cars). This is especially important with the introduction of Property tax and water charges.

    As a Public Servant i would be willing to have the pension levy converted to a direct paycut.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,909 ✭✭✭sarumite


    Property tax and water charges seem a more stable tax base. An introduction of third level fees, although use most of the money for greater investment in universities, especially for STEM subjects. Bring in a charge for medical card holders.


    On the cuts side, I would like to see a a more sensible approach to social welfare. A person who has been recently laid off should receive more than a person who has spent long periods on social welfare. Benchmarking within the Public sector should have already happened (the unions already agreed to two rounds of benchmarking) and an end to the de-facto automatic incremental payrises. I would actually like to see a reversal in the cuts to capital projects. University grants should be geared towards courses that offer better value to the economy.


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators, Paid Member Posts: 9,839 Mod ✭✭✭✭Manach


    Cut both. Taxes to incentivise workers and benefits/public sector wages to cut down government overreach and trim the entitlement culture. The home tax that is being introduced is going to divorce the government even more from reality and will not reflect the working income that people have earned.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,125 ✭✭✭RichardAnd


    From the point of view of the example of humanity that I've seen demonstrated upon this board far too often, allow me to answer. . .

    I want to see cuts in services I don't use and a tax hike on everyone but me.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,848 ✭✭✭bleg


    Definitely a charge for the medical card. The amount it entitles you to is unbelievable. It's not just free healthcare.

    I'd like to see money taken out of people's hands and it put into services. For example, reduce child benefit for kids 4+ but route the money into providing school books and breakfasts in schools.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,849 ✭✭✭Brussels Sprout


    bleg wrote: »
    Definitely a charge for the medical card. The amount it entitles you to is unbelievable. It's not just free healthcare.

    I'd like to see money taken out of people's hands and it put into services. For example, reduce child benefit for kids 4+ but route the money into providing school books and breakfasts in schools.

    Do you have a medical card or 4+ children?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2, Paid Member Posts: 24,651 ✭✭✭✭Cookie_Monster


    Rates: Need to be in the region of 1-1.5k a year for an average sized house. Removal of tv, household charge and bin costs as a result.

    I'd love to see a flat rate income tax brought in, remove all credits, prsi, levy etc and have to pay say 15% or 20% of all your income. Yes it'll mean a tax increase but it'd be so so much fairer. Everyone can understand their tax payments, huge amount of admin removed.

    I'd also like to see child benefit removed for more than one child, there's no need to be encouraging people to have kids by paying them for it.

    Water charges: no different to elec and gas, need to be paid for based on use and money returned to the infrastructure and maintenance of supply.

    Dole needs to be reformed so that it allows for sliding scales the longer you're on it, much like many EU countries practice.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,219 ✭✭✭woodoo


    bleg wrote: »
    Definitely a charge for the medical card..

    I agree. €5 per visit for Medical Card holders, €10 per visit for G.P Visit card holders. That should allow the doctors to reduce the cost for private patients to a fairer €30 or so.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,848 ✭✭✭bleg


    Do you have a medical card or 4+ children?



    Nope but I have seen the wastage that happens with medical card patients.

    They come into the pharmacy with a pain somewhere. I offer paracetamol (24 for €2.32) or ibuprofen (24 for €3). They say no thanks and come back 2 hours later with a GMS prescription. Ridiculous.


    Also I meant children over the age of 4.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,848 ✭✭✭bleg



    I'd love to see a flat rate income tax brought in, remove all credits, prsi, levy etc and have to pay say 15% or 20% of all your income. Yes it'll mean a tax increase but it'd be so so much fairer. Everyone can understand their tax payments, huge amount of admin removed.

    Is there really that much admin involved in a two tier tax system though? Any examples of this. I'm just wondering, not trying to get into an argument.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,849 ✭✭✭Brussels Sprout


    bleg wrote: »
    Nope but I have seen the wastage that happens with medical card patients.

    They come into the pharmacy with a pain somewhere. I offer paracetamol (24 for €2.32) or ibuprofen (24 for €3). They say no thanks and come back 2 hours later with a GMS prescription. Ridiculous.


    Also I meant children over the age of 4.


    The whole point of the thread is the bolded piece below. Otherwise it's just another "cut everything that I don't personally like and doesn't afffect me!" thread
    OP wrote: »
    It would be interesting to hear what cuts or tax increases people would make that would affect them directly.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,314 ✭✭✭BOHtox


    There's a few off the top of my head but with Labour in Government it won't happen.
    1. Only give Child Benefit to those who really need it. There's no need for people in the middle or high income brackets to get it. I know they'd like the extra €30 a month but we're losing 15billion a year. This would probably save close to €1b
    2. Abolish the Senate. It's pointless and has no powers. We're employing 60 useless politicians and their advisors etc. which you don't need.
    3. Scrap the Croke Park Agreement and sack useless Public Sector workers and abolish a lot of quangos.
    4. Completely reform the increments system.
    5. A reduction in the number of councillors. Maybe only have 60% of the number of councillors we have now.
    6. Scrap the communion allowance altogether.
    That would probably save 2.5b which is the most of the adjustments needed for this year. The rest will be made up from a proper household and Water Charge generating the 3.8 billion required for this budget.
    Edit: I almost forgot. Abolish foreign aid! Saving €1 billion euro bringing savings to 4.8 billion.

    I would also get rid of a lot of red tape which may save money or it may not. A reduction in tax is needed however to help increase spending.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2, Paid Member Posts: 24,651 ✭✭✭✭Cookie_Monster


    bleg wrote: »
    Is there really that much admin involved in a two tier tax system though? Any examples of this. I'm just wondering, not trying to get into an argument.

    it's not the two tiers, it's the huge amounts of credit and qualifications for such credits and the paperwork processing to apply for such and seek refunds and change between partners and so forth.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,219 ✭✭✭woodoo


    BOHtox wrote: »
    There's a few off the top of my head but with Labour in Government it won't happen.
    1. Only give Child Benefit to those who really need it. There's no need for people in the middle or high income brackets to get it. I know they'd like the extra €30 a month but we're losing 15billion a year. This would probably save close to €1b
    2. Abolish the Senate. It's pointless and has no powers. We're employing 60 useless politicians and their advisors etc. which you don't need.
    3. Scrap the Croke Park Agreement and sack useless Public Sector workers and abolish a lot of quangos.
    4. Completely reform the increments system.
    5. A reduction in the number of councillors. Maybe only have 60% of the number of councillors we have now.
    6. Scrap the communion allowance altogether.
    That would probably save 2.5b which is the most of the adjustments needed for this year. The rest will be made up from a proper household and Water Charge generating the 3.8 billion required for this budget.
    Edit: I almost forgot. Abolish foreign aid! Saving €1 billion euro bringing savings to 4.8 billion.

    I would also get rid of a lot of red tape which may save money or it may not. A reduction in tax is needed however to help increase spending.

    The question is what cuts would you accept? Plenty in there about other people


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,314 ✭✭✭BOHtox


    woodoo wrote: »
    The question is what cuts would you accept? Plenty in there about other people
    1 & 4 would affect my family

    BOHtox wrote: »
    There's a few off the top of my head but with Labour in Government it won't happen.
    1. Only give Child Benefit to those who really need it. There's no need for people in the middle or high income brackets to get it. I know they'd like the extra €30 a month but we're losing 15billion a year. This would probably save close to €1b
    2. Abolish the Senate. It's pointless and has no powers. We're employing 60 useless politicians and their advisors etc. which you don't need.
    3. Scrap the Croke Park Agreement and sack useless Public Sector workers and abolish a lot of quangos.
    4. Completely reform the increments system.
    5. A reduction in the number of councillors. Maybe only have 60% of the number of councillors we have now.
    6. Scrap the communion allowance altogether.
    That would probably save 2.5b which is the most of the adjustments needed for this year. The rest will be made up from a proper household and Water Charge generating the 3.8 billion required for this budget.
    Edit: I almost forgot. Abolish foreign aid! Saving €1 billion euro bringing savings to 4.8 billion.

    I would also get rid of a lot of red tape which may save money or it may not. A reduction in tax is needed however to help increase spending.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,164 ✭✭✭relax carry on


    bleg wrote: »
    Is there really that much admin involved in a two tier tax system though? Any examples of this. I'm just wondering, not trying to get into an argument.

    it's not the two tiers, it's the huge amounts of credit and qualifications for such credits and the paperwork processing to apply for such and seek refunds and change between partners and so forth.

    The bulk of which can now be done online. PAYE Anytime or ROS anyone?

    http://www.revenue.ie/en/online/index.html


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,164 ✭✭✭relax carry on


    Icepick wrote: »
    Taxes:
    Get rid off certain tax credits - Age Credit and Service Charges (all) - and make married credit the same as single person credit.
    Cuts:
    Across the board cuts in Public Service and Welfare. Nut the welfare system needs to be rebuilt. Jobseeker's allowance should be based on people's PRSI payments and should go down rapidly after 6 and 12 months.

    Service charges are gone since 2011. Not sure what you are on about with the married tax credit? All it is, is the combination of two single credits in a joint assessed case which is only of benefit if one of the couple is on very low income, say less than 8250 euro a year.

    http://www.revenue.ie/en/tax/it/leaflets/it2.html#section4

    Jobseekers benefit is already based on PRSI contributions; Jobseekers allowance is means tested?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 43,316 ✭✭✭✭K-9


    People have been very vocal on what cuts and tax increases they feel are unacceptable and on where they think those adjustments should be made. The criticism I have heard in response to a lot of these (quite valid) suggestions is that people only want adjustments that don't affect them.

    It would be interesting to hear what cuts or tax increases people would make that would affect them directly.

    Personally I would understand if Child Benefit was cut. I don't budget for it because I don't want to rely on something that can be reduced or withdrawn due to factors largely outside my control. That is probably what will happen should means testing be introduced.

    The OP is very clear.

    This is about cuts or taxes that would affect posters personally.

    E.g. Saying cutting Public Service pay and you don't work there is off topic!

    Please include in your reply how the cuts and taxes would effect you personally. Plenty of other threads to post what you think should be done generally.

    Mad Men's Don Draper : What you call love was invented by guys like me, to sell nylons.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,991 ✭✭✭n97 mini


    bleg wrote: »
    They come into the pharmacy with a pain somewhere. I offer paracetamol (24 for €2.32) or ibuprofen (24 for €3)
    Which is a complete rip-off. 16 paracetamol for 16p in Tesco, and 16 ibuprofen for 16p in Asda.


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  • Moderators, Technology & Internet Moderators, Regional North East Moderators Posts: 10,886 Mod ✭✭✭✭PauloMN


    People have been very vocal on what cuts and tax increases they feel are unacceptable and on where they think those adjustments should be made. The criticism I have heard in response to a lot of these (quite valid) suggestions is that people only want adjustments that don't affect them.

    It would be interesting to hear what cuts or tax increases people would make that would affect them directly.

    Personally I would understand if Child Benefit was cut. I don't budget for it because I don't want to rely on something that can be reduced or withdrawn due to factors largely outside my control. That is probably what will happen should means testing be introduced.

    Child benefit is the one that would affect me. If it was to be reduced, I would accept it reluctantly. Wouldn't be happy obviously, but we are absolutely screwed as a country, so if it needs to happen, so be it.

    As for means testing, they'd need to be very careful how the manage the means testing. You hear these terms "low-paid", "middle-income" and "rich" etc., but what do they mean? We're in the lucky position of having two incomes (one full, one part-time) in our house, but we don't have much left after paying for everything and I'd regard us as being very prudent with money. Reducing - or even worse, taking away our child benefit would put a big dent in what we have left over at the end of a month.

    The big concern to me about child benefit is that if you cut it, a lot of jobs in childcare will go with it. Believe it or not, people do spend their child benefit on their kids. These kids are VAT generators big time, and that should be remembered by the government when they consider cutting this benefit from working families. Working families get precious little else in terms of benefits.

    As for cuts in general, I think everything should be on the table. I'm sick of this idea of certain groups being protected from cuts to their entitlements. Everyone should take a hit, in proportion to their incomes. That includes dole recipients, pensioners, the low income, the middle income, the rich - everyone. Not a popular view I know, but that's my opinion. The only groups I would single out for possible exemption from cuts would be very specific groups like carers (who save the state a fortune), individuals with special needs, disabilities and the like. But general cuts across all groups need to be made.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,236 ✭✭✭Dannyboy83


    I don't receive any transfers and have only standard tax credits, so only thing which could really affect me would be taxation.

    That's also the fairest way to do it in my view.
    I would accept increases in income tax.
    That would also be a way to tackle the croke park agreement...people who earn more, pay more.

    I would like to see Vat heavily reduced, fuel duty heavily reduced etc.
    We're an island - half of these things don't even make much sense for an island nation.

    Simplify the whole thing, deduct the money at source, increase social transfers to people who need it if required.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,104 ✭✭✭✭djpbarry


    I don't live in Ireland anymore, so no cuts or tax increases are going to affect me directly. However, both of my parents have been unemployed in Ireland for some time now. I can't actually remember how long my Dad's been unemployed, but he has made absolutely no attempt to find a new job since he lost his last one in what must have been around about 2005. As far as he's concerned, he's retired, even though he is still some way off retirement age (57). Granted, he worked very hard up until he lost his job - he often did a 7-day week in the 80's and early 90's. But the idea that he can retire in his early 50's, while complaining about the "the bastards" in the Dail taking away his money through welfare cuts, is absolutely ludicrous.

    My mother is of a similar mindset. She went back to work in the late 90's having been out of the workforce since the early 80's. She lost her job in late 2009 and did initially make a concerted effort to find another position. However, when it became clear that she would most likely have to retrain to some extent (nothing major, just brush up on computer skills and the like, something she could even have done at home in her own time with the help of family), she gradually lost interest - I don't think she's made a serious attempt to find a job in about 18 months.

    The problem is that both of them can live quite comfortably on €190 per week (even though my mother is now means tested, I think her weekly allowance has only been slightly reduced). I can see absolutely no reason why this allowance cannot be reduced quite considerably. For example, both of them spend considerable amounts on alcohol and tobacco every week - taxpayers should not be funding such expenditure.

    While I don't agree with the general consensus that current welfare levels mean there is no incentive for many unemployed people to find work (personally I believe there is always an incentive to find work), I do think it makes it very easy to sink into a rut.

    So Ireland, tell your local representatives to cut welfare. Drastically.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,058 ✭✭✭Gurgle


    Taking it to a personal level, its a difficult question to answer.

    What extra taxes would I accept: It doesn't actually matter what headline they put on the tax bill, as a middle income PAYE worker with a house, car and family I'm going to have to pay it. Water tax, household charge, window tax, gravity tax, air tax... all means the same to me.

    What cuts in services: When it comes down to it, what services am I getting in exchange for the tax bill?
    Education: I guess there's room to cut teacher - student ratios. There also seem to be a huge number of non-classroom staff in schools these days (admin, SNAs, home-school liason etc), plenty of room for streamlining.

    Roads: I rarely see a proper road, but I guess that's a symptom of Dublin Empire government. They could cut the roads / transport budget by 100% and I wouldn't notice for a month.

    Law and Order: I think there's plenty of room to save money without a reduction in service. If the court system could be made to actually work, the Gardaì would have less to do.

    Health is private, water soon will be... what other services does the government / state actually provide?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 246 ✭✭KIERAN1


    Broadband tax is acceptable to me. A tax that could replace the household charge, but a tax that will bring fibre and cable internet to rural areas, thus help stimulate the economy. Obviously the government has to pay back some of the debts and bills they owe so some money from that broadband tax will have to go towards paying the public accounts.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,104 ✭✭✭✭djpbarry


    Gurgle wrote: »
    I rarely see a proper road...
    Ah, come on now - the roads in Ireland are excellent relative to what they were like 20 years ago.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,058 ✭✭✭Gurgle


    djpbarry wrote: »
    Ah, come on now - the roads in Ireland are excellent relative to what they were like 20 years ago.
    The main roads to and from Dublin, yes. The country roads are largely unchanged.

    Actually, I cross the N3, M3, N2, M1. They're very nice.
    I particularly like the way the M3 looks so tidy, hardly any cars to ruin the view of tarmac.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,226 ✭✭✭creedp


    Gurgle wrote: »
    The main roads to and from Dublin, yes. The country roads are largely unchanged.

    Actually, I cross the N3, M3, N2, M1. They're very nice.
    I particularly like the way the M3 looks so tidy, hardly any cars to ruin the view of tarmac.


    Blame the tolls for that.


  • Moderators, Technology & Internet Moderators, Regional North East Moderators Posts: 10,886 Mod ✭✭✭✭PauloMN


    KIERAN1 wrote: »
    Broadband tax is acceptable to me. A tax that could replace the household charge, but a tax that will bring fibre and cable internet to rural areas, thus help stimulate the economy. Obviously the government has to pay back some of the debts and bills they owe so some money from that broadband tax will have to go towards paying the public accounts.

    :eek:

    It's already taxed!

    How could it replace the household tax? Local services still have to be paid for.

    Taxing something like broadband even more would be a retrograde step imo. Our broadband is already very expensive for what you get. Broadband is essential to people trying to get back to work, and to those at work. More tax on it and you'll force people into dropping it, or dropping their packages.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,241 ✭✭✭The_Honeybadger


    I'd accept a reduction in child benefit and a reduction in tax credits. Both will effect me directly and make life more difficult but i accept it needs to be done. Also I support a pay by usage water charge. Don't own a house so property tax won't hit me directly but I hope to own a house at some point in the future and would have no difficulty with a property tax in principle as long as there isn't exemptions for everybody except those who actually already contribute to the tax system. Everybody needs to pay something to help the country back on it's feet ASAP. I'd also be in favour of reducing the tax reliefs on a phased basis if necessary on things like mortgage interest and pension contributions.


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