Muahahaha wrote: » Id be more concerned about how our taxes are spent than the actual level of taxation itself, there is a lot of waste in the system.
theguzman wrote: » I am not a believer in Ireland being a low tax economy and I think we are punitively taxed here, considering what we receive from the Government in return it very bad value in my own honest opinion.
Mad_maxx wrote: » dunno about the OP but personally id like a flat tax for everyone including corporations around 20% would be about right IMO
Wanderer78 wrote: » ...again growing deficits are relatively fine, public debt can be rolled over indefinitely, without it causing any significant issues, this is common across the globe, as long as the debts are serviceable, everything is fine. the issue with pensions is the fact, living costs are continually rising, particularly in relation to property and land, therefore preventing younger generations from getting involved with pension funds earlier
landofthetree wrote: » No party in Dail wanted to cut any of these taxes if you read their manifestos for the last election. We get what we vote for.
Beasty wrote: » It's only going to get worse in the short and medium term. We've a pandemic to pay for (although I suspect it may be our children and grandchildren that ultimately pay for most of that). We also have a relatively young population. That will change over time resulting in increasing pension costs.
sameoldname wrote: » Can the OP give us a country that has the taxation and spending policies he'd like us to emulate? That way we can actually have a proper discussion without having to deal with abstract numbers divorced from their effects.
riclad wrote: » Taxs pay for roads. Bridges infrastructure, the civil service, hospitals, Gardai etc if you don't like it maybe move to another country like the USA Some states have low taxs, but you better have good health insurance health insurance is expensive property taxs are higher than 1000 euro in most states 1000s of people go bankrupt if they need expensive medical treatment due to a sudden illness I think the Irish system is more fair than the American system So drugs in America have gone up 10x in one year because company x owns the patent on that drug The healthcare system in America is in some way a tax because you have to pay for expensive health insurance I think in general the tax rates in Ireland are in line with most western countrys
SpacialNeeds wrote: » the various punitive financial measures against anyone who returns from emigrating.
theguzman wrote: » I full understand the difference between both, however a charge which is proactically unavoidable is still money I'm pumping into the exchequer. A gun and dog licence obviously, a TV licence maybe, electricity charges and bank levies less so however unless you become a hermit living in a teepee.
My name is URL wrote: » Guess it was only a matter of time before a taxation thread appeared here. Every other libertarian talking point has been done to death already
wiggle16 wrote: » Or all the credits which can be set against it. But I don't think I'd bother, as he doesn't seem to understand the difference between a tax and a charge in the first place (or that CGT is not CAT) but has decided he pays too much all the same.
Deleted User wrote: » Its awful hard to take any attempt at analysis seriously that states income tax as either the 20 or 40 % rates without an acknowledgement that neither rate kicks in until a certain threshold which is significantly above zero Id start by rectifyin that if you want a serious discussion
theguzman wrote: » I am not a believer in Ireland being a low tax economy and I think we are punitively taxed here, considering what we receive from the Government in return it very bad value in my own honest opinion. Lets discuss it here. I am adding in all the taxes from the top of my head immediately.Income Tax of 20 or 40% depending on income or circumstancesUniversal Service Charge of 0.5% to 11% typically around 4.5%PRSI 4% but can varyVAT 0% to 9% to 23% (21% currently but raising back to the 23% rate soon)Road Tolls, varies from €0 for some rural dwellers to €1,000+ per year for a daily commuter passing a tollgate.Excise Duty of 50%+ on Hydrocarbon fuels, alcohol, and tobaccoCarbon tax €33.50 per tonne of fossil fuel or 9c per litre of fuel.VRT, Vechicle Registration Tax on new and used carsMotorTax €100 to €2,500 per year (average of €250 per modern car or less).CGT Inheritance Tax 33% of what you will inherit, this was money previously taxed. This is one of the biggest for some and for others does not effect them.Local Property Tax €90 to €1,000+ per yearStamp Duty 1% for first time buyers for homes under €1m and 2% for above €2m 7.5% for Commercial property and farmlandD.I.R.T 33% this was once a serious tax, however since bank's don't any interest now it is nearly gone now. Probably costs more to collect than it raises now.Plastic Bag Levy, 22c per plastic bag, one of the few taxes I supportCovid Test €100 to leave the country, as it is a govt mandated directive it is a from of tax as far as I'm concerned.Dog Licence €20 for your madraGun licence €80 for 3 years, there is over 300k+ people holding guns in Ireland, many with multiple weapons.Driving Licence €55 per decadePassport €90+ per decadeNCT €55per 1 or 2 years depending on car age, typically €85 per year for a 10+ year car needing a retest.Water Charges exceed 145L of water per day per person for a family of 4 and you will get charged. Small minority of people effected usually. Contentious issue.Parking Charges varies, depends on usageTV Licence: €160 per year to fund RTEElectricity majority of your electric bill consists of taxations from PSO Levies and Carbon taxes We are far from a low tax economy and I would love to do a simulation of a typical person, from cradle to grave he will pay somewhere above 70% of all monies he will earn back to the state in all the varies taxes. What tax am I missing?
jimmycrackcorm wrote: » I don't know anyone paying for text messages. I pay for unlimited data on my phone. Ordinary calls and text messages are a bonus.
boldrevolt wrote: » Condoms are a tax on sex. Sugar tax. and most people don't know that due to the nature of how a text message is sent it actually costs mobile operators nothing to let you do this. so one could also argue charging for text messages are a scam oh and you left out all the money people offer up to the catholic church.