Deseras wrote: » Europe is printing money due to Covid soon there will be hyper inflation
listermint wrote: » Finland are paying for our banks. That's a new one. Go on.. I'm intrigued.
mcsean2163 wrote: » Are you kidding? The EU bailed out our banks. We're part of a common currency union. We keep borrowing and never paying it back. The fiscally responsible states are supporting us. We're probably the biggest beggars in Europe since 2008, likely worse than the Greeks.
View wrote: » That’s not correct. We “bailed out” our banks largely using money we borrowed on the international bond markets. The money that was subsequently loaned by the Troika after the above was already a fait accompli was used to cover normal budgetary expenditures (ie paying for public services such as schools, hospitals, social welfare etc with, at its peak, us paying for roughly 1 in every 4 Euro we were spending on such public services using money borrowed from the Troika).
mcsean2163 wrote: » Without dwelling on it, this is not a what happened in Ireland during GFC thread, the fiscally responsible countries such as Finland have been bailing us out for a long time. Every year we take their food and don't pay it back. If every country in EU responded as we did for covid19 the EU would be even more worse off. So surely countries like Finland must look at our relatively low numbers, pup etc and say wtf are they doing? Why are we paying for it? .
mcsean2163 wrote: » the fiscally responsible countries such as Finland have been bailing us out for a long time. Every year we take their food and don't pay it back..
mcsean2163 wrote: » I'm just going to ignore your name calling. You're obviously some sort of untermensch and don't want to turn this into a personal attack thread.
FreudianSlippers wrote: » Please stop thinking about national debt like you think about personal debt. This populist approach to government expenditure is why we have such awful infrastructure. There is no such thing as too much debt as long as we can service it. Why? IMF already has multi-currency reserve. The USD has historically been one of the most stable currencies and nothing has changed there. US debt is largely short-term, so we'd need to see a massive depression in the US which didn't materially impact other countries to see a realistic reason to move away from the USD as the main currency reserve; but as I said, there are already other reserve currencies. If we're talking hypothetical in the longer term, maybe crypto could potentially be a new reserve... that's about as realistic as a massive move away from USD in the foreseeable future.
eire4 wrote: » Very important point about not looking at national debt in the same way a person can look at their own personal or family debt. It simply is apples to oranges.
mcsean2163 wrote: People losing patience with tax haven Ireland.
mcsean2163 wrote: » People losing patience with tax haven Ireland.https://euobserver.com/opinion/151169#:~:text=Ireland%20is%20a%20tax%20haven&text=The%20standard%20corporate%20income%20tax,expenditure%20by%20the%20international%20corporations.
Geuze wrote: So the issue is with the tax laws of the USA.
View wrote: » There’s a simple solution to this, namely raise the CT rate to, let’s say, 15% and “ring fence” the additional monies raised. These would be in a fund to be spent, with joint input from the MNC, either on infrastructure that would directly benefit the MNC (eg roads near its offices) or on joint university-MNC R&D programmes with the university and MNC getting to split the profits (somehow) on the fruits of any successful R&D. In both cases the MNC gains a benefit for itself from the additional taxes it would pay.
Wanderer78 wrote: » There's clearly issues with our tax rates, we 're clearly a tax haven for mnc's, and it's always important to bare in mind, our sme's are in fact our biggest employer, but pay far higher tax rates than these mnc's
moon2 wrote: » Out of curiosity did you head the article linked by the comment you responded to? It goes to great lengths to provide actual data which refutes the position you're taking. Do you have data to prove your point?
Wanderer78 wrote: » yup, i think 15 is a very good starting point, but id take the new difference in stocks and shares, and use sovereign wealth funds from there to put it to work, for all, including for future fdi
View wrote: What I was trying to get at is that the extra monies raised in taxes would be spent on stuff that it would be beneficial for the MNCs. Better infrastructure helps them do business more easily. Better university/industry research in areas that they are interested in could benefit them directly and massively boost our post-grad research profile.