Kristopherus wrote: » You got a PAY RISE of €24K a year and you're unhappy:(. Do you realise that that there are thousands and thousands of employees working for €24000 and all you can do is complain:rolleyes:.
Chris Martin wrote: » Huge +1 <snip> Water tax is there to improve water services, motor tax for roads and to atone for pollution emitted, what the hell is inheritance tax for?
relax carry on wrote: » So forget about what it's spent on etc. What is the level of direct taxation people feel is the right amount to pay on earned income? Keep in mind if you are reducing the level of tax intake from direct taxation you need to either increase it somewhere else or reduce state spending to match.
Cortina_MK_IV wrote: » You really believe that?
So forget about what it's spent on etc. What is the level of direct taxation people feel is the right amount to pay on earned income? Keep in mind if you are reducing the level of tax intake from direct taxation you need to either increase it somewhere else or reduce state spending to match.
KwackerJack wrote: » Not only Irish but eastern European, Pakistani, Chinese and the rest who just seem to roll in and milk the system!! ****To get onto ireland you should speak fluent English and have a trade or minimum qualification relating to an industry in Ireland, if not piss off!!****
holyhead wrote: » Inheritance tax is another load of nonsense. It's like a double taxation as the money used to build up the inheritance was subject to tax in the first place.
Noddy Nangle wrote: » Why is it that I seem to work my boll*x off but yet I have nothing. The middle working class pay too much tax and being honest a political party needs to be formed to look after our needs and not the needs of the many wasters in this country. A Donald Trump like figure if you like ( maybe Michael O Leary). Imagine a country where if you work hard you get rewarded and live a decent lifestyle where you might even have a few quid in your pocket.
KindOfIrish wrote: » A single person on €50k p.a. pays maximum €14K in all direct taxes. It's 28% of gross earnings. Where in the first world countries can you find lower rate?
[Deleted User] wrote: » Agree 100 percent with OP> Meanwhile, certain people I know sit on their arse, breed as many kids as they feel like, and get 'paid' each week. Seriously, I heard one of then saying she would buy her new shoes when she gets 'paid' I said I thought you had to earn money to be paid. She didn't get it ..
KwackerJack wrote: » I don't think its the actual amount that anyone is concerned about as such. Its the fact that if you fork out 14k in tax and you are getting nothing for it......crap health system, unreliable transport network, crap roads, no dental or doctor's fees included So please tell me what does my tax actually do for me??
Deleted User wrote: » Agree 100 percent with OP> I got my Christmas bonus too , liss than half in my pocket to take home. For this I get up at 5:45 am each day, work a nine hour day and run a house with 2 kids. Meanwhile, certain people I know sit on their arse, breed as many kids as they feel like, and get 'paid' each week. Seriously, I heard one of then saying she would buy her new shoes when she gets 'paid' I said I thought you had to earn money to be paid. She didn't get it .. Here's what I would do straight off if I was 'in charge' of Ireland Inc Finances: child benefit, free medical card etc only for first 2 kids, the rest are at your own expense single parent allowance only paid if you declare father of child, and he then gets an attachment to his earnings (or his social welfare payment) you breed em, you pay for em. unemployment benefit cut off after one year UNLESS you are sick, disabled etc. Plenty of jobs out there now oh and that's just for starters.... I honestly think the mood in the country 1would back such measures, But there is no political party with the backbone to introduce such radical change
Richard Hillman wrote: » The problem is that there are so many lobby groups and sob story peddlers that taxation is only going to go one way. The government may whip 1% of your income tax but will find another way of getting that 1% and then some back off you. If you are on minimum wage in 2016 and 2017, you were €1 a week better of than the previous year. But with the time value of money and the increase in the cost of living, you are actually worse off than the previous year. And that is without the snakey little taxes like the increase in cigarettes, sugar tax and their alcohol minimum prices. Then you have the eroding middle classes. You work hard in school, you go to college, you get a good job but for what? You can't afford a house, you can't afford a car, you live in a shoebox apartment for €1300 a month, it costs €110 a month just to get to work on a bus which takes up 3 hours of your day on a return journey which should be half of that. When you pay your rent and bills, you're being told that you better be saving for a pension because there won't be any money left when you retire at 70. You also better have medical insurance because all the money being spend from your taxes on health is for somebody else. Every single year this gap is tightening, without fail, without address. Where will we be in 20 years time? We will be facing full blown Socialism. Where everybody is the same amount of poor
KindOfIrish wrote: » We have functioning public services, free education, generous social welfare, state pensions and Irish roads and health system are not that bad. If you don't use all that at the moment, there is no guarantee you won't need it in the future.
The Draugan wrote: » For me it's not so much the actual amount of tax taken it's what you get in return ... i lived in the UK for a while , tax is pretty similar but you don't pay for a GP your rates cover things like bins (at least they did in the area of Birmingham i was) , the NHS includes GP services roads are in top condition, public transport is efficient plentiful and not overpriced, you have top quality broadcasters like the BBC , etc... Here USC is to pay bank debt nothing else , LPT is to pay bank Debt nothing else ,on top of that you have to pay Bin charges , the roads are sh!t for the most part, The HSE doesn't cover the GP , neither even does your private health insurance which is really only useful for skipping ridiculously long queues , Public transport sucks in Dublin and is pretty much non existent outside , the rail network is limited , old and slow, RTE as a broadcaster is awful other then the late late toy show once a year, the odd Irish away international and the Sunday game would never watch it , wouldn't be arsed with the radio at all , but we do have one of the most generous social welfare systems in Europe not that that's much use.
L1011 wrote: » Your home which requires council provided services to be of any value. Not going to sell without a road, for starters.