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Do we pay too much tax for crappy services?

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Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,864 ✭✭✭✭markodaly


    Geuze wrote: »
    Our overall taxes are not high.

    They are below the EU average.

    PRSI in particular, is very low.

    Hundreds of thousands of earners pay 0% income tax on their earnings.

    However, our top MTR starts at a very low point, approx 35k. This may lead to the mistaken perception that our overall taxes are very high.

    Taking my parents as an anecdotal example, they pay 8-10% direct income tax on income of 50k approx, and in return they get:

    two medical cards
    two free travel passes
    free TV licence
    35 pm / 420pa off their electricity bill.

    No country in Europe is as generous.

    The tax take is directly aimed at taking money away from middle and higher income owners and distributing it to those who vote in large numbers, that is the older folks among us.


  • Moderators, Politics Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 24,269 Mod ✭✭✭✭Chips Lovell


    When it comes to taxation, it's quite tricky to compare like with like. There's tendency to focus on just income tax rates without taking into account allowances, credits and, the big one, social security contributions. We've a relatively high rate of income tax compared to a lot of countries, but PRSI contributions are fairly low.

    According to the latest OECD figures, the tax wedge for the average Irish worker is well below the OECD average.

    And that's just the tax on wages. We get off fairly lightly in terms of property and municipal taxes here:

    figure-1-web-full.PNG


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,382 ✭✭✭facehugger99


    That's the way it should be.
    What use has someone with a great salary for emergency housing, (although the time will come)? What use have they for food banks or welfare? Of course some benefit more than others. From cycling a bike and not paying road tax to subsidising museums even if you've no interest.
    The whole point is that workers pay taxes to provide services for society and the more you earn the more you pay. It's a great idea IMO.

    You do get that is not what most taxes go on?

    Health, Education, Infrastructure. These are the areas where investment should be prioritised and which would benefit all citizens equally.

    Sticking an extra €5 into the old age pension or caving into PS pay demands is unsustainable and nothing more than vote-buying exercises.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,013 ✭✭✭✭James Brown


    You do get that is not what most taxes go on?

    Health, Education, Infrastructure. These are the areas where investment should be prioritised and which would benefit all citizens equally.

    Sticking an extra €5 into the old age pension or caving into PS pay demands is unsustainable and nothing more than vote-buying exercises.

    Just pointing out that some need avail of tax funded services more than others. I wouldn't put that down as losing out or not getting as much back.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 410 ✭✭Dog Man Star


    I live in Australia. My income tax is about 35% on average. With that we get free healthcare, free home visits if kids are ill (just dial a number anytime). Public transport is expensive, but great and policed. Rates are ok, nothing is expensive, as my salary is high. All public areas have gardeners on a weekly basis. There is no litter and no graffiti (WA). It is a beautiful place to live for families.

    When I lived in Ireland (and UK), there is a different attitude to some of these things. No money ever invested in playgrounds. In UK regularly encounter broken glass all over playground. No transport police in UK nor Ireland. If something happens to you, tough. We will catch them with CCTV.

    Healthcare in the UK good, not as good as Australia. but 20 minute wait at best. In Ireland, truly dreadful. Visit to GP was 50 eur no matter what.A&E total nightmare.

    The Irish attitude of "it could be worse" or "why don't you move" works, but the people who say that are kidding themselves. The Luas is a decent service, but it's reach is pathetic compared to Manchester's Metro. The DART is good, but again pathetic compared to most rail in Britain. Irish people need to stop this "it's grand" policy and start to stand up for themselves.

    But hey, I live in Australia, so I am a quitter! And a very smug quitter at that, life is too short to live in Ireland. Visit, yes....don't live there.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,438 ✭✭✭j8wk2feszrnpao


    But hey, I live in Australia, so I am a quitter! And a very smug quitter at that, life is too short to live in Ireland. Visit, yes....don't live there.
    What a load of bollox. Ireland has issues, but generally speaking, it's a great county in comparison to most places in the World. Even better with the smug quitters out of the place :)


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,398 ✭✭✭Franz Von Peppercorn II


    When it comes to taxation, it's quite tricky to compare like with like. There's tendency to focus on just income tax rates without taking into account allowances, credits and, the big one, social security contributions. We've a relatively high rate of income tax compared to a lot of countries, but PRSI contributions are fairly low.

    According to the latest OECD figures, the tax wedge for the average Irish worker is well below the OECD average.

    And that's just the tax on wages. We get off fairly lightly in terms of property and municipal taxes here:

    figure-1-web-full.PNG

    The average Irish income tax is lowered by the fact that very little tax is paid by low income earners. People pay tax on minimum wage in Denmark.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 28,319 ✭✭✭✭blanch152


    The average Irish income tax is lowered by the fact that very little tax is paid by low income earners. People pay tax on minimum wage in Denmark.


    You are correct. There was a more in-depth comparison a couple of years ago which looked at something like 70% of average income, average income, and 120% of average income, and we went from nearly the lowest to nearly the highest as we changed categories.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 28,319 ✭✭✭✭blanch152


    Indeed, those who are paying most are arguably receiving the worst value.

    We have set up our taxation and welfare systems to achieve a very high income distribution. In fact we have one of the highest income distribution systems in Europe.

    https://www.irishexaminer.com/breakingnews/business/ireland-has-one-of-best-rates-of-income-distribution-in-eu-841074.html

    I don't have an issue with the model in principle, but in reality it leads to all kinds of negative knock on effects.
    Our tax-base to too narrow for a start and we are very vulnerable to downturns.
    We have a bloated PS set up to re-distribute taxes which again is a huge drag in a downturn - the borrowing during the recession to pay for day to day running of the PS and Welfare made the banking bailout look like the Teddy Bear's picnic.
    We have also created a class of welfare junkies that are disincentivsed to find work.

    There's been no national conversation about this either - it's something that every major political party seems to adhere to and the only opposition to it are the hard-left, that would like to do even more of it.

    The public service is not that big compared to other countries.

    The problem is more in the services provided relative to welfare spend.

    In other countries, they don't spend as much on child benefit, but they spend an awful lot more on state-supported child-minding, school uniform and school books for all, school meals etc.

    So, in the round, we spend a similar amount, but by handing the money directly to parents, it can be spent on ski holidays, car loans, or just drank and injected.


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


    Geuze wrote: »
    We don't have very high taxes, but what we do have is very high prices.

    This is caused by:

    excessive profit margins
    high energy, legal and medical costs
    high insurance costs / crazy awards by Judges
    massive rents

    Legal costs have absolutely nothing to do with the taxpayer... the vast majority are private costs and in comparison to like jurisdictions (UK, USA, Canada) legal fees here are much lower.


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


    I live in Australia. My income tax is about 35% on average. With that we get free healthcare, free home visits if kids are ill (just dial a number anytime). Public transport is expensive, but great and policed. Rates are ok, nothing is expensive, as my salary is high. All public areas have gardeners on a weekly basis. There is no litter and no graffiti (WA). It is a beautiful place to live for families.

    Australia also has property tax and water charges. We need to burn the Irish tax system to the ground and start over entirely, but Ireland could implement lower marginal tax and deliver those services if the taxation system was changed.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,435 ✭✭✭weemcd


    Yes, but almost everywhere does...


  • Moderators, Entertainment Moderators, Politics Moderators Posts: 14,535 Mod ✭✭✭✭johnnyskeleton


    blanch152 wrote: »
    You are correct. There was a more in-depth comparison a couple of years ago which looked at something like 70% of average income, average income, and 120% of average income, and we went from nearly the lowest to nearly the highest as we changed categories.

    Can you recall who did this study or where it was published by any chance?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,382 ✭✭✭facehugger99


    blanch152 wrote: »
    In other countries, they don't spend as much on child benefit, but they spend an awful lot more on state-supported child-minding, school uniform and school books for all, school meals etc.
    .

    To me the whole 'child benefit' model is indicative of the type of poor services that the Government provide. People my age are probably the first generation where it was very common for both parents to work. As soon as we started popping out kids in the early noughties it was clear that there was going to be an issue - who was going to look after the kids?

    There could have been so much done from increasing the length of state-paid maternity leave, introducing paternity leave and all of the measures you have mentioned - we had the money to do something about it.

    Instead FF took the (usual) easy path of shoveling money at people and hoping the problem would go away by increasing CB dramatically.

    In a microcosm, it sums up everything wrong with the lack of imagination and short-term fixes we routinely get (and accept) from Govt.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,738 ✭✭✭✭Geuze


    Legal costs have absolutely nothing to do with the taxpayer... the vast majority are private costs and in comparison to like jurisdictions (UK, USA, Canada) legal fees here are much lower.

    https://www.independent.ie/irish-news/caveat-emptor-the-soaring-cost-of-legal-services-36222383.html


    The Medical Protection Society (MPS), which provides indemnity cover for most Irish hospital consultants, told Review it had encountered cases where barristers' brief fees in Ireland were twice those in the UK.

    It cited one short trial where a brief fee of €30,000 was charged, double the amount a queen's counsel would seek in England.

    The MPS also said it had been involved in cases where the award made was dwarfed by the legal fees charged.

    "For example, in a recent case relating to a misdiagnosis of malignant sarcoma where damages settled at €100,000, legal costs of €268,885 were sought," said MPS director of claims policy Emma Hallinan. "In another case relating to a delayed diagnosis of osteoarthritis where damages settled at €17,500, legal costs of €46,159 were sought. This is simply not right."


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,738 ✭✭✭✭Geuze


    Legal costs have absolutely nothing to do with the taxpayer... the vast majority are private costs and in comparison to like jurisdictions (UK, USA, Canada) legal fees here are much lower.


    https://www.irishtimes.com/news/health/legal-costs-in-ireland-are-now-highest-in-western-world-1.2053218



    The UK-based Medical Protection Society (MPS), which provides indemnity cover for most Irish consultants, says Irish legal costs are far higher than anywhere else in the western world.

    The society, which is pressing for legal changes to limit the rising cost of medical negligence, has drawn up a report which contains many examples of what it claims is excess billing by lawyers.

    These include: A recent case where general damages for unsatisfactory plastic surgery were assessed at €200,000, when the appropriate award for a similar injury in England would be €50,000- €101,000.

    A case where a judge ordered general damages of €300,000 when the MPS was “reasonably advised” they should have been assessed at €150,000


    In one recent case, involving a settlement of €1.1 million, legal costs came to €630,000 when, according to John Tiernan of the MPS, its estimate of the true costs was €350,000.

    In another case in which liability was admitted from the start, costs came to €160,000, rather than the €90,000 estimated. The MPS’s own costs amounted to €30,000.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 28,319 ✭✭✭✭blanch152


    Can you recall who did this study or where it was published by any chance?

    It was an OECD study, I think.


    Edit: It is actually the full study produced earlier. The earlier link was from a summary brochure of the study. There is a fuller study with many more tables.

    Take this part of it:

    https://read.oecd-ilibrary.org/taxation/taxing-wages-2019_5ac3e02f-en#page14

    Look at Tables 6.9 and 6.11 for comparison purposes.

    There are only four countries which have a higher tax burden on those earning 167% of average wage, while there are 14 which have a higher tax burden on those earning 67% of average wage, which indicates the issue clearly - there is little scope for tax increases on higher earners.


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


    Geuze wrote: »
    https://www.independent.ie/irish-news/caveat-emptor-the-soaring-cost-of-legal-services-36222383.html


    The Medical Protection Society (MPS), which provides indemnity cover for most Irish hospital consultants, told Review it had encountered cases where barristers' brief fees in Ireland were twice those in the UK.

    It cited one short trial where a brief fee of €30,000 was charged, double the amount a queen's counsel would seek in England.

    The MPS also said it had been involved in cases where the award made was dwarfed by the legal fees charged.

    "For example, in a recent case relating to a misdiagnosis of malignant sarcoma where damages settled at €100,000, legal costs of €268,885 were sought," said MPS director of claims policy Emma Hallinan. "In another case relating to a delayed diagnosis of osteoarthritis where damages settled at €17,500, legal costs of €46,159 were sought. This is simply not right."
    Geuze wrote: »
    https://www.irishtimes.com/news/health/legal-costs-in-ireland-are-now-highest-in-western-world-1.2053218



    The UK-based Medical Protection Society (MPS), which provides indemnity cover for most Irish consultants, says Irish legal costs are far higher than anywhere else in the western world.

    The society, which is pressing for legal changes to limit the rising cost of medical negligence, has drawn up a report which contains many examples of what it claims is excess billing by lawyers.

    These include: A recent case where general damages for unsatisfactory plastic surgery were assessed at €200,000, when the appropriate award for a similar injury in England would be €50,000- €101,000.

    A case where a judge ordered general damages of €300,000 when the MPS was “reasonably advised” they should have been assessed at €150,000


    In one recent case, involving a settlement of €1.1 million, legal costs came to €630,000 when, according to John Tiernan of the MPS, its estimate of the true costs was €350,000.

    In another case in which liability was admitted from the start, costs came to €160,000, rather than the €90,000 estimated. The MPS’s own costs amounted to €30,000.

    MPS are a lobby group who are cherry-picking some isolated examples and aren't telling the whole story.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 17,853 ✭✭✭✭Idbatterim


    mid to high earners paying a good chunk at the marginal rate are paying wayyyyyyy too much! So that huge amounts of the population contribute nothing or virtually nothing in income taxes. Virtually no property tax...


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,435 ✭✭✭mandrake04


    Australia also has property tax and water charges.

    Property tax? I pay council rates which is like LPT that’s about $2100 per year or 0.14% compared to the 0.18%/0.25% LPT in Ireland. But like Dog man Star said if you live in a good area with great amenities you get great value from that.

    Water charges in Australia are not that much, water is a valued source I pay $170/Qtr on a large 5BR house. On the upside my electricity bill is roughly at most $104 per Qtr due to renewable energy.


    Over all I agree with Dog man Star the effective tax is not that much, on $160K a year the effective total tax including Medicare you pay is roughly 31%... if you are smart it’s possible to pay less...I pay about 26%. I work in the health industry and public system is well resourced, it’s probably 10-15 years ahead of Ireland. I do have private health insurance that’s about $3000 per year for a family of 4 that includes ambulance, optical, dental, Private hospital etc you don’t really need but if your household income is over $180K (or single income over $90K) you are up for an extra 1% Medicare levy surcharge which works out the same anyway.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 196 ✭✭A Shropshire Lad


    I honestly dont get why people continiously moan about the tax and ****ty services in Ireland but at election time vote for the status quo.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,172 ✭✭✭screamer


    No we pay too much tax to pay for welfare and pensions and there’s nothing much left for services, hence they’re ****ty...


  • Registered Users Posts: 196 ✭✭A Shropshire Lad


    screamer wrote: »
    No we pay too much tax to pay for welfare and pensions and there’s nothing much left for services, hence they’re ****ty...


    We do pay too much for welfare and all the programs we have going on. But the reason services are crappy is not just because theres no money left. Theres plenty of money, its just wasted, with zero accountability on how its wasted


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 28,319 ✭✭✭✭blanch152


    screamer wrote: »
    No we pay too much tax to pay for welfare and pensions and there’s nothing much left for services, hence they’re ****ty...

    This is the crunch of the issue, though I would add a third reason to welfare and pensions, and that is health.

    We have one of the youngest populations in Europe, yet we have one of the highest spends on health. We have one of the highest nurse to population ratios, yet we are always short of nurses.

    Everyone involved in the health service from the CEO of the HSE to the ordinary nurse, together with the vested interests such as the INMO, the consultants groups and the private health insurers share the blame for this.

    Our health services are well-staffed and well-resourced, but they are not delivering.

    The consequence of these three factors - welfare, pensions and health - taking up too much of the expenditure budget is that other areas such as security, education, defence and most importantly, capital expenditure are severely affected as a result and are under-resourced.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,382 ✭✭✭facehugger99


    blanch152 wrote: »
    The consequence of these three factors - welfare, pensions and health - taking up too much of the expenditure budget is that other areas such as security, education, defence and most importantly, capital expenditure are severely affected as a result and are under-resourced.

    Plus the cyclical nature of the way we collect and spend tax exacerbates the issue. Welfare spending goes up during a recession, it is not politically possible to reduce pension spending nor practical to reduce health spending. Public Sector pay is nigh on impossible to cut which means the capital spend, which is already under-resourced is cut to bejaysus during any downturn.

    Housing, transportation, water and sewage are all creaking from decades of chronic under-investment.

    It's a sad state of affairs and is not improving any time soon.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,013 ✭✭✭✭James Brown


    It's funny how spends on welfare always come up as a drain when talking on state financials. The welfare spends, (rental aid, low income assistance etc.) are all symptoms of a poor economic system IMO. 'We'd have more money to spend if we didn't have to look after those worse off, (including working taxpayers)'. An idea might be to work towards less people depending on welfare/state aid. If we're creating them, we have to continue to support them.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,382 ✭✭✭facehugger99


    An idea might be to work towards less people depending on welfare/state aid. If we're creating them, we have to continue to support them.

    That's not 'an idea' - it's a meaningless platitude.

    Do you have any actual proposals for how we end up having less people depending on social welfare?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,013 ✭✭✭✭James Brown


    That's not 'an idea' - it's a meaningless platitude.

    Do you have any actual proposals for how we end up having less people depending on social welfare?

    Pointless to try get a dig in chief, commenting broadly here, nobody is posting a budgeted and costed plan to run the state, unless you have one, or will you hide behind what we have as an economic beacon?
    Yes, social housing, affordable housing, decent wages. You know actual policies designed to share the wealth beyond the trickle down myth.
    Creating issues which require people to seek welfare, so cut welfare? How would that pan out in the long run?
    How would you like to see things change, less money to welfare so we can build roads? Can you expand on that 'idea'?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,382 ✭✭✭facehugger99


    How would you like to see things change, less money to welfare so we can build roads? Can you expand on that 'idea'?

    It's not a terribly complicated idea. If you're actually interested in counter-cyclical economic policies and why they work, there's plenty of literature out there on it for you to read up on.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,013 ✭✭✭✭James Brown


    It's not a terribly complicated idea. If you're actually interested in counter-cyclical economic policies and why they work, there's plenty of literature out there on it for you to read up on.

    I'm pointing out that curtailing treatment of a symptom won't stop the problem. If you had everyone living on a tin of beans in cargo containers we'd still have more to add to the number year on year. There is obviously something flawed in the way we do business.
    So you do believe cutting welfare/state aid will solve things, or you don't? You're not clear here. Your suggestion we take discussion off boards and go read up on google or somewhere is odd. Defeats the whole point of Boards IMO.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,821 ✭✭✭Old diesel


    blanch152 wrote: »
    screamer wrote: »
    No we pay too much tax to pay for welfare and pensions and there’s nothing much left for services, hence they’re ****ty...

    This is the crunch of the issue, though I would add a third reason to welfare and pensions, and that is health.

    We have one of the youngest populations in Europe, yet we have one of the highest spends on health. We have one of the highest nurse to population ratios, yet we are always short of nurses.

    Everyone involved in the health service from the CEO of the HSE to the ordinary nurse, together with the vested interests such as the INMO, the consultants groups and the private health insurers share the blame for this.

    Our health services are well-staffed and well-resourced, but they are not delivering.

    The consequence of these three factors - welfare, pensions and health - taking up too much of the expenditure budget is that other areas such as security, education, defence and most importantly, capital expenditure are severely affected as a result and are under-resourced.

    What is the ordinary nurse getting wrong and how do they fix it


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,382 ✭✭✭facehugger99


    I'm pointing out that curtailing treatment of a symptom won't stop the problem. If you had everyone living on a tin of beans in cargo containers we'd still have more to add to the number year on year. There is obviously something flawed in the way we do business.
    So you do believe cutting welfare/state aid will solve things, or you don't? You're not clear here. Your suggestion we take discussion off boards and go read up on google or somewhere is odd. Defeats the whole point of Boards IMO.

    I've already said what my position is quite clearly.

    Sticking €5 on SW payments and €5 on the pensions as we have done in the last couple of budgets is ridiculous - these are un-targeted costs, introduced to curry political favour, that will likely increase year-on-year.

    Do we need a SW system that protects the vulnerable? - of course we do but how many pensioners need an extra €5 a week? - the answers to that is 'I haven't a clue', and neither do you and neither do the Government, yet here we are spending an extra €300 million and rising.

    That's money that we now no longer have to invest in infrastructure.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,013 ✭✭✭✭James Brown


    I've already said what my position is quite clearly.

    Sticking €5 on SW payments and €5 on the pensions as we have done in the last couple of budgets is ridiculous - these are un-targeted costs, introduced to curry political favour, that will likely increase year-on-year.

    Do we need a SW system that protects the vulnerable? - of course we do but how many pensioners need an extra €5 a week? - the answers to that is 'I haven't a clue', and neither do you and neither do the Government, yet here we are spending an extra €300 million and rising.

    That's money that we now no longer have to invest in infrastructure.

    You've a point. I think the need for welfare needs to be addressed over and above governments doing the usual to placate those on lower incomes. I guess it keeps them at bay while the important people make money until the bottom falls out again. And I think that's far more important to some than redirecting those funds for infrastructure.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,197 ✭✭✭christy c


    I guess it keeps them at bay while the important people make money

    Did you ever manage to come up with a motive for this conspiracy theory of why the government want the "important people" to make money?

    If that were true, surely it would be easier to just favour the majority and they'd never get voted out?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,013 ✭✭✭✭James Brown


    christy c wrote: »
    Did you ever manage to come up with a motive for this conspiracy theory of why the government want the "important people" to make money?

    If that were true, surely it would be easier to just favour the majority and they'd never get voted out?

    But what would be the point in remaining in, the pension?

    Any comment on the topic at hand?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,197 ✭✭✭christy c


    But what would be the point in remaining in, the pension?

    Any comment on the topic at hand?

    Just dodge my question, still no motive?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 32,136 ✭✭✭✭is_that_so


    ZilkyG wrote: »
    It seems to me that compared to other European countries, we pay an eye-watering amount of tax for a transport system that would fit in perfectly in the less affluent neighborhoods of Nairobi. Dublin Bus is not fit for purpose, the Luas has just been shoe-horned in without any proper planning. Besides that, transport is stupidly expensive. Is this just me, or do other people think that they're getting fleeced.
    Tom Darby is why! That and the other 20 odd unions in CIE set the standard.


  • Registered Users Posts: 196 ✭✭A Shropshire Lad


    A friend of mine from Malaysia is a doctor specialising in Emergency Medicine and worked in several Dublin A&E Departments. He couldnt believe the third world service here, not to mention the drink and drug problem that comes crashing through the door at the weekends. He is working in Singapore now. State of the art facilities, not a trolly in sight and remarkably they dont spend as much as we do on health


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,013 ✭✭✭✭James Brown


    christy c wrote: »
    Just dodge my question, still no motive?

    Money Christy. I dodged nothing. You quoted me.
    while the important people make money until the bottom falls out again

    Money, 'Loadsa Money (ten grand would be a start)'. I am saying they use government to enrich themselves and their friends/backers.
    I see you dodged mine. If you're just about scoring points, I'm not interested.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,197 ✭✭✭christy c


    Money Christy. I dodged nothing.



    Money, 'Loadsa Money (ten grand would be a start)'. I am saying they use government to enrich themselves and their friends/backers. Again, money.
    I see you dodged mine.

    Ok can we separate what appears to be corruption (that fella in Monaghan), and other politicians? Unless you're saying all government politicians are corrupt then I'll leave you to it.

    I'm still trying to understand why politicians would want to enrich important people without getting anything in return? Just cause they're sound maybe?

    I'll have no problem answering your questions but trying to get a clear answer to my original question first in case we get distracted.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    A friend of mine from Malaysia is a doctor specialising in Emergency Medicine and worked in several Dublin A&E Departments. He couldnt believe the third world service here, not to mention the drink and drug problem that comes crashing through the door at the weekends.


    Id say they'd cane the arse clean off anyone who'd crash through the hospital doors on drink or drugs, thats why. :D


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,013 ✭✭✭✭James Brown


    christy c wrote: »
    Ok can we separate what appears to be corruption (that fella in Monaghan), and other politicians? Unless you're saying all government politicians are corrupt then I'll leave you to it.

    I'm still trying to understand why politicians would want to enrich important people without getting anything in return? Just cause they're sound maybe?

    I'll have no problem answering your questions but trying to get a clear answer to my original question first in case we get distracted.

    I believe they do get something in return. I'll skip ahead, yes I would inform the police/media if I'd proof. My justification is the policies, quangos, inappropriate behavour, and sweet deals that favour private interests over the tax payer. I do not believe this is down to foolishness or incompetence, entirely. Now I hope that eases your mind and I know my views are not a revelation to you us having well covered this ground before, now where do you stand on topic Christy? I always seem to post an opinion and then spend pages justifying it to you who will give none of your own, on topic.
    Talk about distraction. Where are you on cutting welfare will help us over cutting need for welfare in the context of value for money for the tax payer, funding other essentials?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,197 ✭✭✭christy c


    I believe they do get something in return. I'll skip ahead, yes I would inform the police/media if I'd proof. My justification is the policies, quangos, inappropriate behavour, and sweet deals that favour private interests over the tax payer. I do not believe this is down to foolishness or incompetence, entirely. Now I hope that eases your mind and I know my views are not a revelation to you us having well covered this ground before, now where do you stand on topic Christy? I always seem to post an opinion and then spend pages justifying it to you who will give none of your own, on topic.
    Talk about distraction. Where are you on cutting welfare will help us over cutting need for welfare in the context of value for money for the tax payer, funding other essentials?

    So you believe all government politicians get something in return i.e. are corrupt. That's real tinfoil hat stuff.

    I'm not distracting from anything, the reason I asked is I've seen you post this conspiracy theory on several threads and you hadn't given the motive before. Thanks for answering even if I do find it bonkers.

    Wouldn't be able to give much details on welfare cuts, although I have seen anecdotal evidence of if being too high. The blanket across the board increases do seem a bit suspect and could possibly be better spent


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,506 ✭✭✭fliball123


    Those on the average wage and over pay far too much tax for

    Public sector pay
    Public sector pensions

    Old age pensions

    Welfare
    and services provided.


    You only have to look at the prospect of the whole of the private sector having to work now till 68 to cover the above..No sign of the public sector employees age on retiring going up. Too many self interested and self serving politicians keeping the endless gravy trains going .. health for example is a shame we pay more per capita than most and the return on investment is disgusting. Yet what can you do ..there are no viable options competing with the FF/FG cartel


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,279 ✭✭✭The Bishop Basher


    We pay too much tax for NO services..

    We pay for our services separately on top of our taxes..

    Bins, health, travel, emergency services, street lighting etc are all paid for separately or through Motor Tax, LPT etc..

    Large swathes of the working population get very very little for what they pay in taxes here.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,506 ✭✭✭fliball123


    We pay too much tax for NO services..

    We pay for our services separately on top of our taxes..

    Bins, health, travel, emergency services, street lighting etc are all paid for through taxation.

    Large swathes of the working population get very very little for what they pay in taxes here.




    Totally agree 30 years ago your tax covered all our roads (toll roads on the up) , our bins, our water, our property we had bought (although the stamp was ridiculously high) .. Were is all the money going that we are paying


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,781 ✭✭✭✭kippy


    fliball123 wrote: »
    Totally agree 30 years ago your tax covered all our roads (toll roads on the up) , our bins, our water, our property we had bought (although the stamp was ridiculously high) .. Were is all the money going that we are paying

    The public accounts are public documents as far as I know.

    That said there isn't a country in the world that are taking in or spending the same as they were 30 years ago


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    fliball123 wrote: »
    Those on the average wage and over pay far too much tax for

    Public sector pay
    Public sector pensions

    Old age pensions

    Welfare
    and services provided.


    You only have to look at the prospect of the whole of the private sector having to work now till 68 to cover the above..No sign of the public sector employees age on retiring going up. Too many self interested and self serving politicians keeping the endless gravy trains going .. health for example is a shame we pay more per capita than most and the return on investment is disgusting. Yet what can you do ..there are no viable options competing with the FF/FG cartel

    The must baffling thing about it is the wide-spread support there is for every time there is a public sector strike, with ne'er a question asked if it is justified or not. The default is Facebook frames and beeping the horns driving by the hospital.

    It's the Catholic church scandal of our time ... unquestioning loyalty and funding to the best paid public servants, while the vulnerable and voiceless are hidden in the shadows suffering home help cuts and cancelled operations; so that Mary the nurse and John the teacher who marry and have a €100,000+ p/a household income.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,085 ✭✭✭relax carry on


    Just in case anyone wanted to have a look at some statistics etc on tax collected via Revenue.

    https://revenue.ie/en/corporate/information-about-revenue/statistics/receipts/receipts-taxhead.aspx

    Also on the expenditure side.

    https://whereyourmoneygoes.gov.ie/en/


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    fliball123 wrote: »
    Totally agree 30 years ago your tax covered all our roads (toll roads on the up) , our bins, our water, our property we had bought (although the stamp was ridiculously high)

    It wasn't though. The roads were crap. The bins were cheaper maybe because volume was much less and the council dug a hole, threw the stuff in and covered it over.

    The education system at the time was bloody awful, I had kids with what I now know are special needs in my class and they were basically ignored.


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