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The Case For Flat Tax In Ireland

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Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,397 ✭✭✭✭FreudianSlippers


    This post has been deleted.
    You seem to be having an abreaction to a suggestion that child benefit is excessive. Given the negative tax makes everyone better off, I don't see the need to pay an additional child benefit on top of that - I simply argued that we shouldn't subsidise people having excessive amounts of children, or do I feel it is appropriate for people to believe they are entitled to money from the government for having children.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 26,708 ✭✭✭✭Peregrinus


    Is this a roundabout concession, Freudian Slippers, that the class of people made worse off by your reforms will include people on low incoomes (but in excess of 12K) who are currently in receipt of children's allowance?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,397 ✭✭✭✭FreudianSlippers


    Peregrinus wrote: »
    Is this a roundabout concession, Freudian Slippers, that the class of people made worse off by your reforms will include people on low incoomes (but in excess of 12K) who are currently in receipt of children's allowance?
    I don't see how one could arrive at that conclusion given:

    A person making €10,000 would receive €8,000 = €18k/p.a. after tax
    A person making €20,000 would receive €4,000 = € 24k/p.a. after tax
    A person making €30,000 would receive €0 and pay €0 tax = €30k/p.a. after tax

    These people are all manifestly better off on this system than they currently are with child benefit.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 26,708 ✭✭✭✭Peregrinus


    Well, then, are you accepting that your system must cost considerably more than the 9.3 bn estimated initially?

    I don't want to seem unduly critical, but your initial universal basic income was costed at 9.3 bn, but would have meant many people being signficantly worse off, while the negative income tax may leave fewer or no people worse off but hasn't been costed and may involve no savings at all over the current SW system, or may even be more expensive than the current SW system.

    (Yes, I've seen the costings for the negative income tax in Greyian's post, but they assume that each tax return represents just one taxpayer, which it doesn't, and - as Greyian himself points out in a later post - they ignore the cost of providing negative income tax to the (large) class of people who currently do not make a tax return, but undoubtedly will if it means they will get a payment under the negative income tax system.)


  • Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 3,372 Mod ✭✭✭✭andrew



    These people are all manifestly better off on this system than they currently are with child benefit.

    Here's a list of all of the benefits which the Dept. Social protection provides, at least the ones they list on their website anyway:

    Child Benefit
    After School Child Care Scheme
    Family income supplement
    One parent family payment
    Adoptive Benefit
    Maternity Benefit
    Health and Safety Benefit
    Guardian's Payments
    Back to School Clothing and Footwear Allowance
    School meals scheme
    Carer's Allowance
    Carer's Benefit
    Respite Care Grant
    Domiciliary Care Allowance
    Illness benefit
    Disability Allowance
    Invalidity Pension
    Blind pension
    Partial Capacity Benefit
    Workplace Supports
    Occupational injuries benefit Scheme
    State pension scheme
    Homemakes scheme
    Pre-Retirement allowance
    Househouse benefits (electricity, gas, TV)
    Widow's/surviving partner pension
    Widoe's/surviving partner grant
    Death benefit
    Funeral Expense assistance
    Funeral Grant
    Free travel
    Fuel allowance
    Social Welfare (various jobseekers benefit)
    Supplementary Welfare Allowance
    Water conservation grant
    Various Job promotion/job activation programmes (e.g. 'Jobpath' and 'Jobseeker Pack')
    Various initiatives aimed at employers

    Some people who currently get those services get more than €12,000 a year worth. So, people in receipt of at least some of the above services will be worse off under your proposal. They must be, because you're spending €8bn less.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,397 ✭✭✭✭FreudianSlippers


    andrew wrote: »
    Here's a list of all of the benefits which the Dept. Social protection provides, at least the ones they list on their website anyway:

    Child Benefit
    After School Child Care Scheme
    Family income supplement
    One parent family payment
    Adoptive Benefit
    Maternity Benefit
    Health and Safety Benefit
    Guardian's Payments
    Back to School Clothing and Footwear Allowance
    School meals scheme
    Carer's Allowance
    Carer's Benefit
    Respite Care Grant
    Domiciliary Care Allowance
    Illness benefit
    Disability Allowance
    Invalidity Pension
    Blind pension
    Partial Capacity Benefit
    Workplace Supports
    Occupational injuries benefit Scheme
    State pension scheme
    Homemakes scheme
    Pre-Retirement allowance
    Househouse benefits (electricity, gas, TV)
    Widow's/surviving partner pension
    Widoe's/surviving partner grant
    Death benefit
    Funeral Expense assistance
    Funeral Grant
    Free travel
    Fuel allowance
    Social Welfare (various jobseekers benefit)
    Supplementary Welfare Allowance
    Water conservation grant
    Various Job promotion/job activation programmes (e.g. 'Jobpath' and 'Jobseeker Pack')
    Various initiatives aimed at employers

    Some people who currently get those services get more than €12,000 a year worth. So, people in receipt of at least some of the above services will be worse off under your proposal. They must be, because you're spending €8bn less.
    I linked a full list in the OP; I'm not hiding that there are many cuts, however, I reject your premise that there are many people getting over €12k/p.a. in benefits from the state at present.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,397 ✭✭✭✭FreudianSlippers


    Peregrinus wrote: »
    Well, then, are you accepting that your system must cost considerably more than the 9.3 bn estimated initially?

    I don't want to seem unduly critical, but your initial universal basic income was costed at 9.3 bn, but would have meant many people being signficantly worse off, while the negative income tax may leave fewer or no people worse off but hasn't been costed and may involve no savings at all over the current SW system, or may even be more expensive than the current SW system.

    (Yes, I've seen the costings for the negative income tax in Greyian's post, but they assume that each tax return represents just one taxpayer, which it doesn't, and - as Greyian himself points out in a later post - they ignore the cost of providing negative income tax to the (large) class of people who currently do not make a tax return, but undoubtedly will if it means they will get a payment under the negative income tax system.)
    I haven't had an opportunity to run the numbers myself, but I still stand over the contention that even at a net wash whereby there is no savings to the government vis-a-vis tax intake/expenditure, a flat tax with negative income tax keeps more disposable income in circulation and has a net general benefit to the vast majority of people.

    Will some people be worse off? Perhaps, but I've yet to see any examples of people who make over €12k/year in SW receipts. A significant portion of those benefits are frankly ridiculous as well.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 26,708 ✭✭✭✭Peregrinus


    andrew wrote: »
    Here's a list of all of the benefits which the Dept. Social protection provides, at least the ones they list on their website anyway . . . Some people who currently get those services get more than €12,000 a year worth. So, people in receipt of at least some of the above services will be worse off under your proposal. They must be, because you're spending €8bn less.
    I think he's no longer spending $8bn less. The initial proposal for a universal basic income was estimated to cost $8bn less, but that has been replaced with a proposal for a negative income tax which Greyian has suggested will cost more or less the same as the current SW system. But for reasons already mentioned I think Greyian's estimates probably understate the cost of the negative income tax; it will likely cost more than the current SW system.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 21,727 ✭✭✭✭Godge


    I haven't had an opportunity to run the numbers myself, but I still stand over the contention that even at a net wash whereby there is no savings to the government vis-a-vis tax intake/expenditure, a flat tax with negative income tax keeps more disposable income in circulation and has a net general benefit to the vast majority of people.

    Will some people be worse off? Perhaps, but I've yet to see any examples of people who make over €12k/year in SW receipts. A significant portion of those benefits are frankly ridiculous as well.

    Even if they are worse off, there is the general question of a cap on social welfare benefits as in the UK.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,397 ✭✭✭✭FreudianSlippers


    Peregrinus wrote: »
    I think he's no longer spending $8bn less. The initial proposal for a universal basic income was estimated to cost $8bn less, but that has been replaced with a proposal for a negative income tax which Greyian has suggested will cost more or less the same as the current SW system. But for reasons already mentioned I think Greyian's estimates probably understate the cost of the negative income tax; it will likely cost more than the current SW system.
    I don't think that the status quo is working nor is it fair to the vast majority of taxpayers in this country. I'm interested to understand your desire to retain same?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 26,708 ✭✭✭✭Peregrinus


    I'm not particularly committed to retaining it; I'm just suspicious of magic solutions that appear to fix it with great simplicity and no cost. I quite like the idea of a negative income tax replacing social welfare, but I think if it's to be cost neutral and to have a "pivot" at 30k then the tax rate above 30k has to be significantly higher than 40%. And since lower tax rates on higher earners seems to be the main attraction of your proposal I think that's a problem.

    Maybe we fix that by chosing different positive and negative tax rates, or a different pivot, or both. An interesting exercise would be to try to devise a system which would overall be cost neutral and then to investigate who would be the winners, and who the losers, under such a system.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,655 ✭✭✭draiochtanois


    This post has been deleted.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,397 ✭✭✭✭FreudianSlippers


    Peregrinus wrote: »
    I'm not particularly committed to retaining it; I'm just suspicious of magic solutions that appear to fix it with great simplicity and no cost. I quite like the idea of a negative income tax replacing social welfare, but I think if it's to be cost neutral and to have a "pivot" at 30k then the tax rate above 30k has to be significantly higher than 40%. And since lower tax rates on higher earners seems to be the main attraction of your proposal I think that's a problem.

    Maybe we fix that by chosing different positive and negative tax rates, or a different pivot, or both. An interesting exercise would be to try to devise a system which would overall be cost neutral and then to investigate who would be the winners, and who the losers, under such a system.
    Fine - as I said, I took some time to come up with the OP and when I realised that universal income would not work, I did a quick run on negative income tax. When I have an opportunity I will study those numbers more closely. At first glance, I do not agree though with the contention that there will be any significant number of people who are worse off under the mooted flat tax / negative income tax system.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,655 ✭✭✭draiochtanois


    This post has been deleted.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,397 ✭✭✭✭FreudianSlippers


    This post has been deleted.
    Given each of those people would get €12,000/year, without child benefit they would have a household income of €24,000/year under the mooted system.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,397 ✭✭✭✭FreudianSlippers


    This post has been deleted.
    That's insane. Why!?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,655 ✭✭✭draiochtanois


    This post has been deleted.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,655 ✭✭✭draiochtanois


    This post has been deleted.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 21,727 ✭✭✭✭Godge


    This post has been deleted.

    Link the abolition of child benefit to direct provision of school books, after-school care for working parents, second year of pre-school etc. and you create an incentive to work.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,137 ✭✭✭323


    Just stumbles on these OP, which you may or may not have seen.

    My local independant TD posting applauding Unite having a bash at Renua's proposals for a flat tax "Renewa's Canival Ride Back to Boom-and-Bust"
    Personally, seeing Unite coming out against it makes me think its worth having a closer look at.

    Bruton is for it too, but only for foreign emigrants and folks returning from abroad. Bruton wants 30pc emigrant tax to 'lure highly skilled back to Ireland'
    Cant really see that working on equality grounds, but it does give some hope that they are actually waking up to the huge shortage of qualified/skilled & experienced personnel many industries are facing in the country and the huge detrimental effect it is going to have on the economy.

    “Follow the trend lines, not the headlines,”



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 26,708 ✭✭✭✭Peregrinus


    Fine - as I said, I took some time to come up with the OP and when I realised that universal income would not work, I did a quick run on negative income tax. When I have an opportunity I will study those numbers more closely. At first glance, I do not agree though with the contention that there will be any significant number of people who are worse off under the mooted flat tax / negative income tax system.
    Overall, on Greyian's figures, it's more or less line ball - there'll be some winners and some losers, but the gross amount of income redistributed is about 20bn under both systems.

    As I say, I think Greyian's figures underestimate the true cost, so the the negative income tax will redistribute more income than the current SW system does. That calls into question the affordability of the scheme, but it does probably reduce the number of losers in the change.

    But I do expect that there will be losers. What you are essentially proposing is to abolish most SW allowances, entitlement to which depends on a variety of personal circumstances, insurance contributions, etc, and replace them with a negative income tax, entitlement to which depends simply on how much you earn. The big losers in this will be people currently receiving insured benefits who also have other earnings, of whom retirees who also have private savings or employer-sponsored pension schemes or both are likely to form a large part. The other big losers will be people who currently qualify for benefits on any grounds other than low income - boardies have already mentioned the recipients of children's allowances.

    You can argue that we should withdraw benefits from pensioners who have private savings or a pension from their jobs, or from workers with children and an income too high to benefit under the negative income tax. But at the very least we have to identify those (and other) groups as losers. And we can expect resistance from them and their families.

    A couple of other thoughts occur to me:

    1. Your system is crude. You propose a uniform "pivot" (currently 30k) for all taxpayers, regardless of circumstances - the pivot pays no attention, for example, to how many dependents a taxpayer has, whether they live alone or in a household with other adults, whether they have a disabilitym and therefore it's not related to any assessment of what someone in their situation needs to avoid being in poverty. You do propose to retain a number of circumstance-related SW benefits (e.g. disability benefit) which will partly ameliorate the effects of this, but overall your system is going to be much less responsive to individual circumstances than the current SW system is. That may be a good thing or a bad thing, but it's at least a thing whose policy implications need to be considered.

    2. There's a transitional problem; where people have already paid social insurance contributions, they can argue strongly that this is a done deal; you cannot withdraw the entitlement that they have already secured through their SI contributions. So there may be a long transitional period when, out of political expediency and/or the demands of justice, you have to continue paying insured benefits to people who have already paid the contributions which secure them.

    3 And there's also a funding issue; if you are withdrawing most or all insured benefits, then logically you have to stop collecting the PRSI contributions which fund them and give entitlement to them. So the cost of your system is not only the reduced income tax take, but also the reduction or abolition of social insurance contributions. That needs to be factored in.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,655 ✭✭✭draiochtanois


    This post has been deleted.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,397 ✭✭✭✭FreudianSlippers


    Peregrinus wrote: »
    Overall, on Greyian's figures, it's more or less line ball - there'll be some winners and some losers, but the gross amount of income redistributed is about 20bn under both systems.

    As I say, I think Greyian's figures underestimate the true cost, so the the negative income tax will redistribute more income than the current SW system does. That calls into question the affordability of the scheme, but it does probably reduce the number of losers in the change.

    But I do expect that there will be losers. What you are essentially proposing is to abolish most SW allowances, entitlement to which depends on a variety of personal circumstances, insurance contributions, etc, and replace them with a negative income tax, entitlement to which depends simply on how much you earn. The big losers in this will be people currently receiving insured benefits who also have other earnings, of whom retirees who also have private savings or employer-sponsored pension schemes or both are likely to form a large part. The other big losers will be people who currently qualify for benefits on any grounds other than low income - boardies have already mentioned the recipients of children's allowances.
    Again, my argument would be that even if the exchequer breaks even, having more disposable income in the pockets of the vast majority of the country would be better as it would increase indirect taxation figures.
    You can argue that we should withdraw benefits from pensioners who have private savings or a pension from their jobs, or from workers with children and an income too high to benefit under the negative income tax. But at the very least we have to identify those (and other) groups as losers. And we can expect resistance from them and their families.
    Firstly, I never said we should abolish private savings or pensions - that's a ridiculous proposition!

    Secondly, I still argue there are very few losers under the system of flat tax and negative income tax. It has been identified that potentially people with no income and a number of children in excess of 3 could potentially lose out - however, I would argue that these people are excessively remunerated under the present system and they are not losing out on a significant amount of money. The proposed system encourages these people to obtain some level of part-time employment; given if they earned even €10k/year gross, they would be significantly better off than they would be under the present system.
    A couple of other thoughts occur to me:

    1. Your system is crude. You propose a uniform "pivot" (currently 30k) for all taxpayers, regardless of circumstances - the pivot pays no attention, for example, to how many dependents a taxpayer has, whether they live alone or in a household with other adults, whether they have a disabilitym and therefore it's not related to any assessment of what someone in their situation needs to avoid being in poverty. You do propose to retain a number of circumstance-related SW benefits (e.g. disability benefit) which will partly ameliorate the effects of this, but overall your system is going to be much less responsive to individual circumstances than the current SW system is. That may be a good thing or a bad thing, but it's at least a thing whose policy implications need to be considered.
    I welcome calculations as to how it could work and systems which you feel should be incorporated rather than sheer dismissal - I don't believe it is the most constructive form of discussion.

    Firstly, the system is based fully on individuals - I would argue that credits simply for being married are archaic.

    Secondly, I have clearly indicated that the present level of disability allowance (and other similar allowances) would remain. I do not understand how this could be said to have not been calculated in? Unless you are arguing that there are people benefiting from social welfare payments (which are lower than proposed under this system) - the argument doesn't make sense; perhaps a specific example would clarify your point, but at present it doesn't make sense to me.
    2. There's a transitional problem; where people have already paid social insurance contributions, they can argue strongly that this is a done deal; you cannot withdraw the entitlement that they have already secured through their SI contributions. So there may be a long transitional period when, out of political expediency and/or the demands of justice, you have to continue paying insured benefits to people who have already paid the contributions which secure them.
    There may certainly be an argument for contributory social insurance going forward, but this would be optional and above the proposed system. However, it is worth noting that is not how SW works at present, one does not pay into a system for future savings; it goes to paying current recipients. It would be a difficult argument for people to make to say they should continue on their lower amounts of SW when they are in the vast majority of cases going to be given more money.
    3 And there's also a funding issue; if you are withdrawing most or all insured benefits, then logically you have to stop collecting the PRSI contributions which fund them and give entitlement to them. So the cost of your system is not only the reduced income tax take, but also the reduction or abolition of social insurance contributions. That needs to be factored in.
    If you're referring to employers' contribution, I don't see why you would not be able to implement a flat employers contribution tax per employee which could be distributed via the negative taxation pool to those who are recipients of same.
    For personal contributions, this obviously is again covered by the negative tax; entitlements retained which are not could easily be distributed by other existing departments (particularly HSE).


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,397 ✭✭✭✭FreudianSlippers


    This post has been deleted.
    Maybe I'm missing something, but I don't see how scrapping the SW and giving a negative tax doesn't do this?


  • Registered Users Posts: 986 ✭✭✭Greyian


    Again, my argument would be that even if the exchequer breaks even, having more disposable income in the pockets of the vast majority of the country would be better as it would increase indirect taxation figures.

    That doesn't really compute. We've shown that the overall expense of the system will be similar to the existing system. For the exchequer to break even, that means that the tax take from the new system is going to have to be very similar to the existing system.
    So we're going to have to take the same amount of money off people, yet we will somehow also have "more disposable income in the pockets of the vast majority of the country". That simply cannot be. You cannot take the same amount of money off people, yet somehow also having them with increased disposable income.
    If anything, this proposition (which really needs to be re-costed) is going to cost higher-income earners more than the existing system.

    Currently, you say we have 775,000 people unemployed/receiving pensions. Under your system, we're going to have to support those people and anyone earning under €30,000. This means our tax take from those earning €30,000 or less is going to be lower than the current system (we'll actually be paying money out to these people, instead of collecting taxes from them). If the tax take on those earning €30,000 or less is lower, and the overall amount of tax we have to take in has to stay broadly in line with current income tax receipts, the only way that is possible is to make the tax rate on people earning €30,000+ is for them to pay higher taxes than they currently are. You can't lower taxes for those under €30,000, and lower taxes for those over €30,000, and somehow end up with more tax income. It's impossible.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 26,708 ✭✭✭✭Peregrinus


    Again, my argument would be that even if the exchequer breaks even, having more disposable income in the pockets of the vast majority of the country would be better as it would increase indirect taxation figures.
    If the Exchequer breaks even - i.e. if the negative income tax pays out more or less what the abolished SW benefits pay out - then there won’t be “more disposable income in the pockets of the vast majority of the country”. The total amount of disposable income in the nations pockets will be the same. Some individuals will have more; other less. If there is a small number of losers who lose relatively large amounts and a large number of winners who win relatively small amount then it will be true to say that the majority have more money. But I don’t see how that will improve indirect tax receipts, since the amount they spend will be fully offset by the amount the losers stop spending.
    Firstly, I never said we should abolish private savings or pensions - that's a ridiculous proposition!
    You misunderstand me (and perhaps I have badly expressed myself). I do not think you are suggesting abolishing private savings or pensions. I am just pointing out that there are large numbers of people receiving the insured retirement pension who also have private savings and pensions. Depending on how much private savings and pensions they have they may get less, or nothing , under a negative income tax. Unless you keep paying their benefits - which I discuss below - they are significant losers under your system. And there are a lot of them. And they (and their adult children) are a fairly politically influential class.
    I welcome calculations as to how it could work and systems which you feel should be incorporated rather than sheer dismissal - I don't believe it is the most constructive form of discussion.
    I’m not trying to be dismissive; I’m trying to be constructive, suggesting directions in which your system could be improved. The problem is that the current SW system is responsive to a variety of needs, whereas your negative income tax is responsive only to having an income below an apparently arbitrary level - a level which, for a single individual with no dependents may be quite generous but for someone differently situated may not be generous at all. You could possibly address this by having a pivot which is responsive to personal circumstances - a higher pivot if you have dependants or a disability, a lower pivot if you have none of these things, or if you have access to significant capital (we want to encourage people to use their capital productively, don’t we?). Basically, any factor which is currently taken into account in determining entitlement to any SW benefit, you could at least consider whether it is socially desirable to take that factor into account in determining an individual’s pivot point in the negative income tax system.
    Firstly, the system is based fully on individuals - I would argue that credits simply for being married are archaic.
    See, I think this is a problem. If the negative income tax side of your arrangement is an attempt to alleviate poverty, then I don’t think you can ignore the fact that whether people are in poverty or not depends on more than the level of their income; it depends on the demands made on their income. Being married may not, in itself, mean very much, but being in a stable conjugal arrangement definitely makes your income stretch further, so that’s relevant to assessing what’s a poverty-level income for married couples or cohabitees versus singletons. Whether you have dependants is another factor - the more dependents you have, the higher the level of income needed to keep you and your dependents out of poverty. I don’t think it’s either efficient or realistic to try to frame policy for ensuring a decent basic minimum standard of living for people which ignores the circumstances in which they live.
    Secondly, I have clearly indicated that the present level of disability allowance (and other similar allowances) would remain. I do not understand how this could be said to have not been calculated in? Unless you are arguing that there are people benefiting from social welfare payments (which are lower than proposed under this system) - the argument doesn't make sense; perhaps a specific example would clarify your point, but at present it doesn't make sense to me.
    Sorry, I’m not putting my point very well. The bottom line is that if you are distributing the same 20bn or so but allocating it differently, it is inevitable that there will be winners and losers. Therefore we can say with confidence that you are proposing to reduce the incomes of some people, even before we have identified those people. And I think it’s fair to say that if you’re advancing a proposal to reduce their income, the onus really is on you to identify who they are and to satisfy us that reducing their income is fair and is good policy. My concerns aren’t adressed merely because I can’t point to the individuals who will lose out. I can be certain that there are such individuals, and that’s enough.

    (As it happens, I think I have identified at least some of those whose income will be reduced - those in receipt of non-means-tested benefits, some of whom will have incomes in excess (and possibly well in excess) of 12k, and some of whom may indeed have incomes in excess of 30k.)
    There may certainly be an argument for contributory social insurance going forward, but this would be optional and above the proposed system. However, it is worth noting that is not how SW works at present, one does not pay into a system for future savings; it goes to paying current recipients.
    Yes, I know. That’s my point. People already in receipt of contributory old age pensions or just about to qualify for them will argue that you have to keep paying them regardless of their other income, because they have earned them with the contributions they paid in previous decades. But in order to keep paying them, are you going to keep collecting PRSI contributions from current workers? That won’t be acceptable unless you’re promising them, too, a contributory old age pension in years to come. Assuming you don’t want to do that, there’lll be a transitional period (of several decades) during which you have to pay social insurance benefits already earned by contributions paid in the years up to 2015 and you’re going to have to fund that out of general taxation, because you won’t have PRSI contributions any more.

    OK, you can offset it against any amount which people would get under the negative income tax, but because these benefits are not means-tested a fair chunk of them are payable to people who will get not very much, or nothing at all, under the negative income tax.

    So I think think there will still be a largish insured benefit liablity that you will have to meet, with no PRSI contribution stream to meet it.

    So, all other things being equal, this is going to require you to increase your tax receipts from those who earn over 30k over and above the tax receipts you are currently getting (or find some other source of revenue to pay accrued social insurance obligations).


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,031 ✭✭✭✭murphaph


    This post has been deleted.
    In that case they'd probably be in receipt of some not insignificant housing payment too, which would need to be added. Whether those payments are justified is another matter.

    I generally like the idea of welfare recipients getting x and being told to make do. It is, at the end of the day exactly what those receiving no welfare payments have to do. You get your fixed salary each month and have to live within it, even if the boiler breaks down or the kids need new shoes. I don't have a problem at all with applying the same principle to welfare payments. However as I said above, some special cases do have to be considered (severe disability of a child would be one-both tax system and/or welfare system has to help people coping with such things IMO).

    Eliminating all the little loopholes and whatnot would guarantee to reduce fraud as well, as there would be nothing to defraud (or less, at least). This goes for both the tax and welfare systems. Simplifying these structures brings this side benefit.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,655 ✭✭✭draiochtanois


    This post has been deleted.


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


    I don't see how one could arrive at that conclusion given:

    A person making €10,000 would receive €8,000 = €18k/p.a. after tax
    A person making €20,000 would receive €4,000 = € 24k/p.a. after tax
    A person making €30,000 would receive €0 and pay €0 tax = €30k/p.a. after tax

    These people are all manifestly better off on this system than they currently are with child benefit.

    If an employer pays an employee €10,000 per annum. What's the incentive for the employer to give them a 10% pay rise? If, regardless, the money is going to come from the state? Surely this scheme incentives lowering wages of small firms because €12,000 is guaranteed from the state anyway? If there a solution to this problem?


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,138 ✭✭✭realitykeeper


    Even though I am not a high earner, I have always been of the view that a flat rate of tax is fundamentally more fair than more than one tax band. One thing I do have an issue with is civil servants/public sector people being paid high salaries. That is stealing. Civil servants should not jealously seek parity of pay with the captains of industry because real world people do a lot of good for this country whereas civil servants are akin to the nobles in the court of Louis VIX.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 26,708 ✭✭✭✭Peregrinus


    BOHtox wrote: »
    If an employer pays an employee €10,000 per annum. What's the incentive for the employer to give them a 10% pay rise? If, regardless, the money is going to come from the state? Surely this scheme incentives lowering wages of small firms because €12,000 is guaranteed from the state anyway? If there a solution to this problem?

    If the employer pays a salary of €10,000 then, under the proposed scheme, the worker's total income is €10,000 + ((€30,000-€10,000) x 40%) = €18,000.

    If the employer raises the salary to €11,000 the the worker's total income becomes €11,000 + ((€30,000-€11,000) x 40%) = €18,600.

    In other words, of the extra €1,000, €600 ends up in the worker's pocket and the other €400 flows to the state as a reduction in negative income tax payments. It's an effective tax rate of 40%, in other words. And you might say that's a pretty hefty tax rate to apply to somebody who's on a pretty thin income to start with.

    But that's how a flat tax works. Everybody pays tax at the same rate. If you don't think that's a good idea then, basically, the scheme we are discussing is holed below the waterline.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,397 ✭✭✭✭FreudianSlippers


    Peregrinus wrote: »

    If the employer raises the salary to €11,000 the the worker's total income becomes €11,000 + ((€30,000-€11,000) x 40%) = €18,600.

    In other words, of the extra €1,000, €600 ends up in the worker's pocket and the other €400 flows to the state as a reduction in negative income tax payments. It's an effective tax rate of 40%, in other words. And you might say that's a pretty hefty tax rate to apply to somebody who's on a pretty thin income to start with.
    I want to take you at face value as being genuine, but this is either lacking in reality or disingenuous right?

    Although the extra €1,000 is being taxed at 40%, the worker on €11,000 is still benefiting from the negative taxation and is therefore only €7,600 better off as opposed to being €8,000 better off.

    Either way, it's hardly unfair to the employee being given money!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 26,708 ✭✭✭✭Peregrinus


    I'm not saying it's unfair. I'm saying it's an effective marginal tax rate of 40% being applied to a low earner and if somebody thinks that's unfair then that somebody will not favour a flat tax.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,397 ✭✭✭✭FreudianSlippers


    Peregrinus wrote: »
    I'm not saying it's unfair. I'm saying it's an effective marginal tax rate of 40% being applied to a low earner and if somebody thinks that's unfair then that somebody will not favour a flat tax.
    That's simply not correct; it is a -31% income tax being applied to a worker on €11k gross.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 26,708 ✭✭✭✭Peregrinus


    The marginal rate of tax is effectively 40%. He gets an extra 1,000, but his take-home goes up by 600.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,397 ✭✭✭✭FreudianSlippers


    Peregrinus wrote: »
    The marginal rate of tax is effectively 40%. He gets an extra 1,000, but his take-home goes up by 600.
    That's disingenuous. The effective marginal tax rate is -31%.

    Under the current system, an increase from €10k to €11k means you are €1k better off as your take-home pay is respectively €10k / €11k.

    Under the proposed system, technically the increase from €10k to €11k nets you an extra €600/year, but your take-home pay is respectively €18k / €18.6k.

    Are you seriously arguing that the person is at a disadvantage compared to the current system? I know I'd rather have €18,600 in my pocket every year after tax than €11,000. Under the proposed system, the person on €11k gross is €7,600 better off than they would be - it's almost ludicrous that someone would complain about the fact that they pay a higher "marginal" tax (technically I suppose there is no true marginal tax under a flat tax system) when their EMTR is still net negative.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 26,708 ✭✭✭✭Peregrinus


    FS, I have never said that the person on 10k would be worse off under your system. I have said that the person on 10k under your system who gets a 1k increase pays an effective marginal rate of tax of 40%. That's unsurprising and I would have thought uncontroversial; you have billed your proposed system as a flat tax system, and pretty much the defining condition of a flat tax system is that the same marginal rate is paid at all points. The taxpayer whose income goes up from 10k to 11k should pay the same marinal rate as the taxpayer whose income goes up from 110k to 111k. Is that not exactly what you are aiming for?

    As for whether the person on 10k under your system is better off than the person on 10k under the present system, that depends. Your comparison takes account of the negative income tax that would be paid under your system, but ignores all social welfare supports that would or might be paid under the present system. To know whether he would be better off under your system we'd need to know more about his situation and entitlements under the present system.

    In the right circumstances it might be that he would be better off under your system than under the present system. That doesn't change the fact, though, that under your system he would pay a marginal rate of 40% - i.e. for every extra euro he earned, his net income would go up by 60 cents.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,397 ✭✭✭✭FreudianSlippers


    Peregrinus wrote: »
    FS, I have never said that the person on 10k would be worse off under your system. I have said that the person on 10k under your system who gets a 1k increase pays an effective marginal rate of tax of 40%. That's unsurprising and I would have thought uncontroversial; you have billed your proposed system as a flat tax system, and pretty much the defining condition of a flat tax system is that the same marginal rate is paid at all points. The taxpayer whose income goes up from 10k to 11k should pay the same marinal rate as the taxpayer whose income goes up from 110k to 111k. Is that not exactly what you are aiming for?
    When viewed in isolation of the negative tax I would agree, but I don't think one can do that because marginal is irrelevant; effective marginal is relevant.
    As for whether the person on 10k under your system is better off than the person on 10k under the present system, that depends. Your comparison takes account of the negative income tax that would be paid under your system, but ignores all social welfare supports that would or might be paid under the present system. To know whether he would be better off under your system we'd need to know more about his situation and entitlements under the present system.
    I've addressed this on a few occasions now and other than a 2-adult household with over 3 children on no income, this has not proven to be correct.

    I totally welcome evidence of people who would be worse off and finding ways to either justify making them worse off or financing a way to ensure they are not worse off. But hypothetical people (excluding the aforementioned) is all we have at the moment.

    In the right circumstances it might be that he would be better off under your system than under the present system. That doesn't change the fact, though, that under your system he would pay a marginal rate of 40% - i.e. for every extra euro he earned, his net income would go up by 60 cents.
    I think we're going around in circles here particularly given this is a moot conversation as it will never happen - but as I have said, the effective marginal tax rate with the flat tax and negative income tax is -31%.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 26,708 ✭✭✭✭Peregrinus


    I think we're going around in circles here particularly given this is a moot conversation as it will never happen - but as I have said, the effective marginal tax rate with the flat tax and negative income tax is -31%.
    Can you show me the calculation on that? I don't see where you're getting, or how it's anything other than 40%.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,397 ✭✭✭✭FreudianSlippers


    Peregrinus wrote: »
    Can you show me the calculation on that? I don't see where you're getting, or how it's anything other than 40%.
    €11,000 gross to €18,600 (for lack of a better word) net is a -41% tax (apologies for the error of -31% earlier).

    I don't see how it can be anything other than that percentage as you net more money than you grossed?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 26,708 ✭✭✭✭Peregrinus


    The "marginal tax rate", FS, is the additional tax you will pay on any extra element of income that you earn, over and above the income that you are earning now. In your system the effective marginal tax rate is 40% at every point. (Yes, I know, the guy on 11k isn't actually paying any tax on the extra he earns; he's just getting less negative tax paid to him. But in terms of how that affects his pocket, and his incentive to earn more money, that's the same thing.)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,397 ✭✭✭✭FreudianSlippers


    Peregrinus wrote: »
    The "marginal tax rate", FS, is the additional tax you will pay on any extra element of income that you earn, over and above the income that you are earning now. In your system the effective marginal tax rate is 40% at every point. (Yes, I know, the guy on 11k isn't actually paying any tax on the extra he earns; he's just getting less negative tax paid to him. But in terms of how that affects his pocket, and his incentive to earn more money, that's the same thing.)
    By definition effective marginal tax rate includes social welfare contributions etc. and would therefore include negative taxation.

    Maybe my brain is just a bit soaked with booze from the rugby at the weekend, but isn't marginal tax moot without considering the negative income tax when the person is net better off?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 26,708 ✭✭✭✭Peregrinus


    The reason marginal income tax rates are signficant is basically this. Suppose I am earning X euros. By working longer hours, gaining extra qualifications, or whatever, I can increase this to X + Y euros. If I choose to do that, national productivity has gone up by Y euros, which is a good thing.

    But I'm going to pay tax at my marginal rate on the extra Y euros that I earn, and this will affect my willingness to do the difficult or unpleasant things I need to do to earn the extra Y euros. If my marginal tax rate is only 5%, it will have very little impact on my decision; if I would do these things for 100 euros, I will probably also do them for just 95 euros. On the other hand, if my marginal rate is 95%, I almost certainly won't; I am not prepared to do these things for just 5 euros.

    Right. In your system, the marginal tax rate is 40% at every point. Under the present system, everyone earning less than 33,800 euros, and many people earning between 33,800 and 42,800, face a significantly lower marginal rate than that.

    One result of introducing your system therefore, is for those earning less than (let's split the difference) about 38,000 euros you are increasing the disincentive to earn more money. That may be a price worth paying to achieve the attractions of your system, but you do need to recognize that it is a price, and it will be paid. Relative to the present system, your system reduces the incentives for those earning less than about 38k to improve their earnings, and we should expect them to respond accordingly (i.e. by being more reluctant to do whatever they need to do to increase their earnings).


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 21,727 ✭✭✭✭Godge


    Peregrinus wrote: »
    The reason marginal income tax rates are signficant is basically this. Suppose I am earning X euros. By working longer hours, gaining extra qualifications, or whatever, I can increase this to X + Y euros. If I choose to do that, national productivity has gone up by Y euros, which is a good thing.

    But I'm going to pay tax at my marginal rate on the extra Y euros that I earn, and this will affect my willingness to do the difficult or unpleasant things I need to do to earn the extra Y euros. If my marginal tax rate is only 5%, it will have very little impact on my decision; if I would do these things for 100 euros, I will probably also do them for just 95 euros. On the other hand, if my marginal rate is 95%, I almost certainly won't; I am not prepared to do these things for just 5 euros.

    Right. In your system, the marginal tax rate is 40% at every point. Under the present system, everyone earning less than 33,800 euros, and many people earning between 33,800 and 42,800, face a significantly lower marginal rate than that.

    One result of introducing your system therefore, is for those earning less than (let's split the difference) about 38,000 euros you are increasing the disincentive to earn more money. That may be a price worth paying to achieve the attractions of your system, but you do need to recognize that it is a price, and it will be paid. Relative to the present system, your system reduces the incentives for those earning less than about 38k to improve their earnings, and we should expect them to respond accordingly (i.e. by being more reluctant to do whatever they need to do to increase their earnings).



    http://www.tasc.ie/download/pdf/tasc_preserving_the_41_per_cent_tax_rate.pdf

    This paper suggests that the marginal tax rate is 52% at those levels and that people on lower incomes pay little tax

    " On the contrary, it is because people on low
    earnings levels do not pay much tax or social
    insurance compared to their counterparts in other
    countries. Although USC is unpopular in Ireland
    because it affects people on low incomes, people on
    low wages do pay more social insurance and tax in
    many other European countries (and receive a
    wider range of public services or risk protection
    through health care services and social welfare)"

    A flat tax of 20% on income up to 25k, no credits, a flat tax of 30% on earnings up to 100k and 40% thereafter would probably be the way to go. Add in an increase in the minimum wage.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 26,708 ✭✭✭✭Peregrinus


    Godge wrote: »
    This paper suggests that the marginal tax rate is 52% at those levels. . .
    No, the TASC paper pretty much confirms what I said. I said that under the present system, anyone earning less than "about 38k" faces a marginal rate of less than 40%. The TASC paper confirms this for anyone earning less than 37.5k.
    Godge wrote: »
    A flat tax of 20% on income up to 25k, no credits, a flat tax of 30% on earnings up to 100k and 40% thereafter would probably be the way to go. Add in an increase in the minimum wage.
    OK, not to pick nits or anything, but that's not actually a flat tax; it's a progressive tax.

    Leaving the terminolgy aside, your proposed structure would result in much higher taxes for your low range earners (up to 25k) than at present, somewhat higher taxes for earners between 25k and about 35k, and lower taxes for everyone earning above that amount. So your proposal, while not actually flat, is flatter than FS's.

    It's obviously very hard on low earners, compared to FS's proposal. Under FS's proposal, a single person on 11k would get a payment to bring his income up to 18,600. Under the current system, per the TASC he pays 2.2% income tax, bringing his income down to 10,750, plus whatever supports he gets from the social welfare system. Under your proposal, he would pay 20% tax, bringing his income down to 8,800, and you don't say whether you would increase, reduce, abolish or make no change at all to his social welfare payments, although obviously there'd be pressure to increase them.

    You also haven't costed your system, but at a glance it looks set to produce a substantial drop in tax revenues. Slightly less than half of all taxpayers will pay more tax under your system, and more than half will pay less tax. But the ones paying less tax are the higher earners, and reductions in their tax rates will result in a much bigger fall in revenue than increases in rates for the low paid will produce a rise.

    So, in brief, your system looks designed to impoverish low earners, increase pressure on social welfare and reduce the tax revenues from which social welfare could be funded. I'm not sure why you think it's a good idea.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,432 ✭✭✭hju6


    Godge wrote: »
    http://www.tasc.ie/download/pdf/tasc_preserving_the_41_per_cent_tax_rate.pdf

    This paper suggests that the marginal tax rate is 52% at those levels and that people on lower incomes pay little tax

    " On the contrary, it is because people on low
    earnings levels do not pay much tax or social
    insurance compared to their counterparts in other
    countries. Although USC is unpopular in Ireland
    because it affects people on low incomes, people on
    low wages do pay more social insurance and tax in
    many other European countries (and receive a
    wider range of public services or risk protection
    through health care services and social welfare)"

    A flat tax of 20% on income up to 25k, no credits, a flat tax of 30% on earnings up to 100k and 40% thereafter would probably be the way to go. Add in an increase in the minimum wage.

    If you earn a load of money pay a load of tax
    If you earn a little money pay a little tax

    Simples,

    Aspire to paying a load of tax, and you will have a load of money.

    Aspire to paying a little tax, and .........


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,397 ✭✭✭✭FreudianSlippers


    Some of the perceived inequality may be solved by, instead of deviating from the flat tax, reducing the level of exemption for those above a certain gross income should ensure the system is more ‘regressive’ (although I maintain regressive/progressive is moot where there is any negative income tax).

    So let’s consider a flat tax with negative income tax on the following assumptions:
    • Flat income tax of 40%;
    • Tax exemption is €30,000 up to €99,999;
    • Tax exemption is €25,000 up to €199,999;
    • Tax exemption is €20,000 over €200,000;
    • The subsidy rate is 40% (equal to flat tax rate).

    Table below is based on the following presumptions:
    • “Low” = all earners make bottom of the range;
    • “Mid” = all earners make middle of the range;
    • All calculations over €80k gross are calculated at all earners making bottom of the range to avoid skewing the figures;
    • All negative amounts rounded up to nearest million;
    • All positive amounts rounded down to the nearest million.

    Range of Gross Income € Number of Income Earners Low Tax Take (m) Mid Tax Take (m)
    0 to 9,000 368,585 (4,423) (3,760)
    9,001 to 12,000 107,297 (901) (837)
    12,001 to 15,000 116,836 (841) (771)
    15,001 to 20,000 213,112 (1,278) (1,066)
    20,001 to 25,000 216,626 (867) (650)
    25,001 to 30,000 201,085 (402) (201)
    30,001 to 40,000 324,506 0 649
    40,001 to 50,000 229,709 919 1,378
    50,001 to 60,000 157,805 1,262 1,578
    60,001 to 70,000 107,045 1,284 1,498
    70,001 to 80,000 77,378 1,238 1,392
    80,001 to 100,000 91,301 1,826 1,826
    100,001 to 120,000 47,956 1,438 1,438
    120,001 to 150,000 34,809 1,322 1,322
    150,001 to 200,000 22,512 1,125 1,125
    Over 200,001 24,642 1,774 1,774
    Total 2,341,203 3,476 6,695


    Carrying over my various SW payments from the OP at a cost of €2.42bn and carrying over the current cost of child benefit of €1.9bn (http://www.publicpolicy.ie/a-survey-of-the-benefit-system-in-ireland/) for a total of €4.32bn, means that on the low estimate the exchequer would be €844m in deficit. I would argue this isn’t so bad on income tax take alone given this is a low estimate where everyone makes the bottom of their gross income range above. If we calculate on the mid-range though, the exchequer runs a €2.375bn surplus. I would certainly argue that at its worst, we would be looking somewhere between these figures or about €765m surplus.

    I would go on to argue that we should only give child benefit under the flat tax with negative income tax system to those earning less than €9,001 gross above – after negative income tax they take home a minimum of €12,000 – which would mean our maximum child benefit cost to the exchequer would be about €1.145bn (using the €1.9bn above going to 611,366 people = €3,108/person * 368,858 = €1.145bn). That means the total figure is (€1.145bn + €2.42bn) €3.565bn or only €89m in the red based on the ‘Low’ figures.

    How does this look in reality for a family with 2 unemployed adults and 3 children?
    Each adult earns €0 before negative income tax and €12,000 after same is applied, or €24,000/year plus €3,108/year for their 3 kids in child benefit to give an annual total of €27,108. Given the example here (http://www.boards.ie/vbulletin/showpost.php?p=97283770&postcount=63 I believe there is an error where although 2 children are stated, 3 were included in the calculation) this family is about €1,500 better off.


  • Registered Users Posts: 986 ✭✭✭Greyian


    How does this look in reality for a family with 2 unemployed adults and 3 children?
    Each adult earns €0 before negative income tax and €12,000 after same is applied, or €24,000/year plus €3,108/year for their 3 kids in child benefit to give an annual total of €27,108. Given the example here (http://www.boards.ie/vbulletin/showp...0&postcount=63 I believe there is an error where although 2 children are stated, 3 were included in the calculation) this family is about €1,500 better off.

    Your figures don't account for rent allowance, so anyone who currently gets rent allowance would be worse off.
    • Flat income tax of 40%;
    • Tax exemption is €30,000 up to €99,999;
    • Tax exemption is €25,000 up to €199,999;
    • Tax exemption is €20,000 over €200,000;
    • The subsidy rate is 40% (equal to flat tax rate).

    As for tax exemptions...so someone earning €100,000 gross would take home €70,000 (€100,000-((€100,000-€25,000)*40%)), while someone on €99,000 would take home €71,400 (€99,000-((€99,000-€30,000)*40%)).
    Why should someone on a lower wage have a higher take-home amount?

    The system still doesn't deal with the issue that at lower wages, there is a reduced incentive to work.
    If I can just sit on my arse all day and get €12,000, what is the incentive to work 20 hours per week (at €8.65/hour), when it will only actually see my take-home jump by €5,400 (meaning I'm getting just €5.20 per hour worked)? That doesn't even factor in the cost associated with working (transport to/from work, lunches etc).

    At the end of the day, you're also still not accounting for the fact that you're slashing the social welfare budget massively. You keep saying that everyone will be better off, yet that is impossible if you're cutting the spend on social welfare by up to 50%.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,397 ✭✭✭✭FreudianSlippers


    Greyian wrote: »
    Your figures don't account for rent allowance, so anyone who currently gets rent allowance would be worse off.
    Good. If you're getting the guts of €30k from the state for doing nothing you don't need more. See your own quote below.

    As for tax exemptions...so someone earning €100,000 gross would take home €70,000 (€100,000-((€100,000-€25,000)*40%)), while someone on €99,000 would take home €71,400 (€99,000-((€99,000-€30,000)*40%)).
    Why should someone on a lower wage have a higher take-home amount?
    Because a previous poster wanted to ensure we stick with Irish tradition and penalise those who earn more money.
    The system still doesn't deal with the issue that at lower wages, there is a reduced incentive to work.
    If I can just sit on my arse all day and get €12,000, what is the incentive to work 20 hours per week (at €8.65/hour), when it will only actually see my take-home jump by €5,400 (meaning I'm getting just €5.20 per hour worked)? That doesn't even factor in the cost associated with working (transport to/from work, lunches etc).
    I take it you believe the current system does? I'm removing the stigma of being on the dole and queueing for your handouts whilst giving everyone in the state additional disposable income.

    It does create incentive to work and declare such work as well. If you only earn €5,000 you're still better off by €3,000 under this system than you were if you earned €0.

    It means a person who goes out and does odd jobs or part-time work and brings in a bit of money is actually seeing that money in their pocket. Earn €10k a year; take home €18k and still get your child benefit.
    At the end of the day, you're also still not accounting for the fact that you're slashing the social welfare budget massively. You keep saying that everyone will be better off, yet that is impossible if you're cutting the spend on social welfare by up to 50%.
    A significant amount of this is covered by the increase of negative income for all people. Yes, there are some aspects that are cut - but look at the list of items, most are ridiculous in the first place and a significant portion is spent on administration.


  • Registered Users Posts: 986 ✭✭✭Greyian


    Good. If you're getting the guts of €30k from the state for doing nothing you don't need more. See your own quote below.

    So basically, you're saying that nobody is worse off....but then you admit there will actually be people worse off, but that's a good thing, because they don't deserve what you're getting?
    You can be of the opinion that social welfare is excessive as it stands, but you still have to admit and accept that under your system there will be people worse off, sometimes considerably so.
    Because a previous poster wanted to ensure we stick with Irish tradition and penalise those who earn more money.

    But what you're suggesting here goes far further than what we even have in place.
    Currently, the more you earn, the less you get to keep of the extra (i.e. someone earning €100,000 will take home more than someone on €99,000, but not the full €1,000).
    What you have suggested actually penalises people for earning more money. You'll actually have people who get a raise, yet end up with less money in their net salary. This only happens in Ireland at very low salary levels (i.e. when you start to enough to enough to begin paying USC/PRSI).
    I take it you believe the current system does? I'm removing the stigma of being on the dole and queueing for your handouts whilst giving everyone in the state additional disposable income.

    It does create incentive to work and declare such work as well. If you only earn €5,000 you're still better off by €3,000 under this system than you were if you earned €0.

    You can not possibly give 'everyone in the state' extra disposable income. Someone has to pay for what you're giving, in some way.

    Under the current system, someone on €20,000 a year will get an increase of €690 for each €1,000 raise they get (€705 per €1,000 from next year, due to the changes in the USC rates). Under your system, they would see €600 of it. At lower wage levels, the marginal rate of your system provides less, not more, encouragement to work.
    It means a person who goes out and does odd jobs or part-time work and brings in a bit of money is actually seeing that money in their pocket. Earn €10k a year; take home €18k and still get your child benefit.

    But you said you'd remove child benefit for people earning over €9,001 gross?
    I would go on to argue that we should only give child benefit under the flat tax with negative income tax system to those earning less than €9,001 gross.

    So under your system, 2 parents/3 children with no income would get €27,108 (your figure). If they each get jobs paying €10,000, what happens? Do they lose to child benefit completely? In which case, they'd be getting a total of €36,000. So despite earning €20,000 through work, they are less than €9,000/year better off. That's a marginal tax rate of over 55%. Where's the incentive to work. If that is minimum wage, you're looking at a combined total of 2312 hours worked per year, for €8,892. That's €3.85/hour.
    Where is this incentive?
    A significant amount of this is covered by the increase of negative income for all people. Yes, there are some aspects that are cut - but look at the list of items, most are ridiculous in the first place and a significant portion is spent on administration.

    No, based on the earlier costing, the halving of the social welfare budget includes the negative income tax. The government total outlay on child benefit, disability allowance, carer's allowances etc. plus the negative income tax came to roughly half the current SW spend. So you're basically saying that, as it stands, half of our social welfare spend is ridiculous?

    You quite simply cannot slash welfare spending by 50% and claim the vast majority of people will be better off. It is mathematically impossible.


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