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Why low-earners need to continue paying their way in taxes

If you want a functioning State, you’ve got to pay for it – USC might be a horrible tax but we still need it.

THE SPRING STATEMENT by the Ministers for Finance was a bit of a damp squib on the headline stuff, but the general intention signalled by the government is clear: taxes are coming down, and in particular the hated Universal Social Charge will be chopped down and more people will be lifted from the tax net.

As a staunch fiscal conservative and regular Joe Taxpayer, I’m looking forward to getting some of the cash I get out of the bed in the rain, wind and shine to go earn back into my pocket. But I worry that we’re heading back towards an old habit we fell into during the Bertie-Cowen years of narrowing the tax base to the point that it becomes dangerously exposed to shocks in the economy.

One really good thing about USC is that everyone understands it very clearly. It’s an almost-flat tax. I believe that if all tax was flat like it and simple to understand, and the government issued everyone a tax receipt at the end of the year detailing how their money was spent, folks would be a lot more reticent to call for ever-increasing government spending. Go one step further and pay everyone their gross salary and then make them transfer the tax over to revenue each month and I figure I’d make a lot more fiscal conservatives out of you.

USC will raise nearly €5 billion this year

The USC is a horrible tax that most people recognise as a temporary measure, for it was introduced as such by the late Brian Lenihan. That was wishful thinking on behalf of a Fianna Fail government we are all now aware was deeply out of its depth when it came to managing the economy. In the Ahern era we ran a low tax, high spending State with substantial increases each year. We’re never, ever, ever going back to that. It was fuelled by once-off transactional taxes related to a property boom that was out of all scale and proportion to what the economy could handle. We hired nurses and Gardai for 40 years, annual pay increase guaranteed careers with a pension at the end of it, and paid for it out of the building and sale of a house in one year; hoping that another house would be built and sold the next year.

USC will raise nearly €5 billion this year, and more in future years as folks return to employment. That’s almost 10% of what’s spent by government.

It is not a small or temporary wedge, and if it’s to be eliminated then either spending comes down (is it acceptable to say “LOL” in an article?) or other taxes go up. Cutting just 1% off the main 7% rate paid by most people would cost €370 million a year. To put that into context, the water charges half the country is having a conniption over will raise €271 million this year from households. The total room available for all kinds of tax cuts next year would just about pay for a 2% cut in this rate, whilst ignoring stuff we could be doing against other tax heads.

Eroding the base of taxpayers leaves the State exposed

Apart from cutting the headline rates, which is a welcome reprieve, the government is falling into the old habit of narrowing the tax base by lifting people entirely out of the tax net. This erodes the base of taxpayers and leaves the State reliant on other, less predictable, measures as in the past. When the crisis hit there was a massive number of earners who paid no income taxes and had little or no buy in to the financial health of the State.

There is a risk that with a property boom on the horizon to even just meet the demands of the market in the big cities, governments will be inclined to continue to lift folks out of the tax net entirely rather than deliver fair tax cuts to all earners. They will erode the tax base and we will return to the sort of situation where we could see €14 billion in taxes evaporate almost overnight, as happened in 2009 when the exchequer was reliant on property related transactions.

Frankly, low earners should pay tax. For a while there they paid little or none, but today almost everyone contributes something and this helps the financial security of the State. It’s not unfair – someone on €20k a year pays €2,005 in income tax, vs someone on €60k a year paying €19,685. Three times the earning, 9.8 times the tax paid by the person who is clearly better off. But the key thing is that the low earner is contributing something, and that is a safer bet for the financial health of the Exchequer than relying on transactional taxes from the once-off building of a house. Even when the economy collapsed, there remained nearly 2 million people at work and available to pay taxes when we reached the absolute trough.

Slapping more taxes on the rich wouldn’t solve these problems

There is this myth among the left-wing parties that by slapping higher taxes on higher earners, we can cut taxes for the low paid and increase spending to solve all our troubles in housing, health and whatever it is you’re having yourself. Every left wing group sitting in opposition wants to slap a higher rate of tax on people earning over €100,000. They ignore the fact that out of 2.1 million taxpayers, only 103,000 earn over that magic number.

The very top 1% of income tax earners already pay 21% of the income tax raised in the State. That’s a very, very narrow base of people to solve all your problems with; especially if you’re relying on them to hand in their passports rather than jet off elsewhere when the 60% rate of income tax kicks in.

Even the current government was a bit of a let down with its cut to USC last year, by capping it at €70,000 and effectively introducing a new band of tax above that rate. Essentially we’re not all to share in the recovery equally, and if you have the temerity to be successful then you are an ATM first and foremost.

If you want a functioning State, you’ve got to pay for it

We can’t rely on narrow tax bases to secure our future. The likes of the water and property charges are essentially broadening of the base. In the event a collapse comes again, they won’t evaporate the way stamp duty did. Folks might not like it, but again one must stress that government revenues collapsed from €50bn to €36bn in a few months between 2008 and 2009. If you want a functioning State, you’ve got to pay for it. Government spending dipped only a bit, in overall terms, and far more of the debt interest bills we’re paying today relate to deficits we ran to keep public spending up than it did to odious banking bailouts.

Personally, I think we ought to have a smaller state with lower taxes. But if ya’ll are dead set on keeping government spending north of €50bn a year in perpetuity, then we have to pay for it. And if you get your wish and USC is eroded till the point it disappears, and once again half the workforce pays little or no income tax, we’re setting ourselves up for another kick in the financial groin when the next, inevitable, economic shock hits us in future.

Aaron McKenna is a businessman on columnist for TheJournal.ie. You can follow him on Twitter here.

Howlin: I’m amazed people criticised the spring statement, it’s full of ‘real meat’

Enda reveals plan to cut USC and here’s how it could affect your wages

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120 Comments
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    Mute David F
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    Jan 9th 2025, 12:13 PM

    Sad indictment on society’s values when thousands of people are being killed daily in many countries and no one really cares but because these are the rich and famous losing their luxury mansions, there is massive media coverage and public shock horror.

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    Mute Pól Pot
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    Jan 9th 2025, 12:24 PM

    @David F: What are you talking about?! These are the very people who make our dreams come true! They also tirelessly work around the clock rallying for causes for those without a voice. There ought to be a Band Aid type concert in all the global cities to raise the necessary funds to rebuild their mansions. If it wasn’t for Cary Elwes, my son and I would never have had fun drinking iocaine powder. That memory alone is priceless.

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    Mute Ulick
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    Jan 9th 2025, 2:31 PM

    @Pól Pot: And the poor things all still depressed over Kamalalla losing!
    How bad can it get?

    12
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    Mute Phillip Smyth
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    Jan 9th 2025, 12:03 PM

    There are pensioners in their homes now in Ireland who cannot put on heating to warm their homes because costs of heating are way over the top.
    I guarantee you knew there are people who are literally freezing.Are we supposed to feel sorry for these multi millionaires and billions who have homes all over the world, who have made their money through the likes of pensioners and the like.
    Hell no not me anyway that’s for sure, suck it up you have earned it.

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    Mute Susan Walsh
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    Jan 9th 2025, 12:46 PM

    @Phillip Smyth: You know you can feel sorry for more than one set of people at any one time right? I feel sorry for anyone who has been affected by the cold weather here and has been without power for up to 5 days. I hope that they are able to stay warm, get hot food delivered at least and that they’re electricity is restored too.
    I can also feel sorry for individuals who have lost homes to a devastating wildfire that they have raised families in and had so many memories in. Yes they are probably in a better position to rebuild and move on than most but it still doesn’t make it less sad for them to have to flee with just what they can carry and watch their home burn to the ground.
    Empathy doesn’t have to be limited.

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    Mute Phillip Smyth
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    Jan 9th 2025, 12:51 PM

    @Susan Walsh: in this instance it does.

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    Mute Susan Walsh
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    Jan 9th 2025, 12:58 PM

    @Phillip Smyth: Why? Like legitimately, why? Can you not feel for people who’ve lost their homes? I mean Billy Crystal was in his for 45 years. Yes he can afford to rebuild, but you can never get back the house you raised your family in.
    Actual empathy is feeling for another person no matter their wealth or social status.

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    Mute Phillip Smyth
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    Jan 9th 2025, 1:08 PM

    @Susan Walsh: it’s crystal clear on my part, I m sorry but I don’t feel sorry for these people their circumstances allow me to be honest.

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    Mute Kevin Kerr
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    Jan 9th 2025, 1:14 PM

    @Phillip Smyth: you’re not supposed to do anything, Phillip. It’s your choice whether you want to feel sorry for them, or not

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    Mute DAN TEDSON
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    Jan 9th 2025, 1:29 PM

    @Susan Walsh: majority of them are pro Zionists and use their power, money and influence to oppress and murder Palestinians while denying them even the right to give voice to their oppression. Hollywood, specifically the inhabitants of the Hollywood hills are a substantial chunk of the financial power of AIPAC.

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    Mute Frank O'Hara
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    Jan 9th 2025, 1:40 PM

    @Phillip Smyth: You’re a pretty pathetic lowlife dirtbag buddy. How on earth did a movie star make their money off the back of a pensioner? Was it unfair that the pensioner didn’t get some government-mandated role in the film? The reason that these people are rich and successful is because people chose to go watch their films in the cinema and on streaming services because they were of high quality. People like you are the problem with the world. You envy those who work hard and have become successful because you’re stuck in whatever mundane job you work instead of using them as inspiration to pull your stock up and knuckle down. I will always have more sympathy for millionaires and billionaires if their house burns down than I would for envious little brats like yourself if yours did.

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    Mute Megan Ward
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    Jan 9th 2025, 2:48 PM

    @Phillip Smyth: Empathy is objectively not limited. No one is saying you have to feel sorry for anyone, but it is possible to have empathy for many people. We don’t get a finite number of empathy points per day and have to choose who we use them on. Not an opinion to go back and forth on, just fact.

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    Mute Fergus O'Donnell
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    Jan 9th 2025, 11:26 AM

    I feel bad for Anthony Hopkins.

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    Mute Dermot Blaine
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    Jan 9th 2025, 11:35 AM

    @Fergus O’Donnell: I feel bad for everyone it’s happened to but the likes of Hopkins probably has multiple houses, unlike the ordinary folks’ whose homes are gone and the whole communities that have been destroyed.

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    Mute ben wu
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    Jan 9th 2025, 2:15 PM

    @Dermot Blaine: Those famous names are probably the best insured and able to recover, but there’s a bit more to it than money for them. Like what Billy Crystal is talking about regarding memories living in the home for 46 years, or in a previous fire season the guy that lost a rare car collection had been building up over 50 years.
    Would tend to have a lot more sympathy for those ordinary types who have been finding getting fire insurance ever-increasingly difficult over the years of these events happening more frequently.
    A lot more sympathy for the families and friends of the first responders that keep putting their lives on the lines.

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    Mute peter hopkins
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    Jan 9th 2025, 2:21 PM

    @Dermot Blaine: don’t feel bad for this guy but there are thousands of impoverished people living in tents in California, multiple fires in tents ever week trying to keep warm, this is the California that they don’t want you to know about

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    Mute ben wu
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    Jan 9th 2025, 2:41 PM

    @peter hopkins: The fact that the term ‘skid row’ has been around for o long, that a metal band used it as their name back in 1988 is quite telling. That some seem to be more concerned about changing the nomenclature of it, rather than solving it, is saddening.

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    Mute Dermot Blaine
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    Jan 9th 2025, 6:20 PM

    @peter hopkins: yeah, there’s a shockingly bad homeless and drug problem, especially in San Francisco.

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    Mute Ulick
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    Jan 9th 2025, 2:28 PM

    That famous Irish invention known as begrudgery is on full display here today.

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    Mute Brian O'Connor
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    Jan 9th 2025, 12:23 PM

    Meanwhile, all over Ireland persons unbeknown are sleeping on card board! Where is reporting on that? Has TheJournal offered warm meals or even a shelter ? And to ask for €2 a month. The journalists of TheJournal should watch film Paper Moon. Con artists

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    Mute Phillip Smyth
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    Jan 9th 2025, 12:47 PM

    Journal have you shut this down in favor of multi millionaires and government censorship?

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    Mute DAN TEDSON
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    Jan 9th 2025, 1:25 PM

    James Woods too. lol.

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    Mute michael mcsharry
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    Jan 9th 2025, 9:59 PM

    Would the people empathising with James Woods new homelessness status find equal empathy for the 40 to 180 thousand Gazans that the IDF have already killed in Gaza or the hundreds of thousands that face homelessness in Gaza from Zionist indiscriminate bombing of their homes. Is he proud to have urged the Israeli government to “kill them all ?”

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    Mute Frank O'Hara
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    Jan 9th 2025, 10:50 PM

    @michael mcsharry: 180,000 people? Even Hamas isn’t claiming those numbers, you absolute clown. If you don’t want civilian infrastructure to be bombed, tell your buddies in Hamas to stop building their missile launching sites and command centres beside schools, hospitals and homes. Why hasn’t Hamas built a single bomb shelter in the entirety of Gaza in the 18 years that they’ve been in charge? Why don’t Hamas let civilians enter their underground tunnel system? In any case, the fact that James Woods had the courage to say that makes me respect him even more and have even more sympathy for what happened to his house.

    3
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    Mute anthony lambe
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    Jan 10th 2025, 4:49 AM

    @michael mcsharry: Jesus you and people like you are so boring. Parroting the same gick on so many comments sections. You complain about people not caring for Gazans but you and your ilk don’t care that you are antisemitic. Pathetic

    1
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    Mute martin finnegan
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    Jan 9th 2025, 11:43 PM

    Who cares there millionaires and the amount coverage getting . There are people in America leaving on streets what about them

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    Mute martin finnegan
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    Jan 9th 2025, 11:44 PM

    Probably get huge insurance money back so they be ok can stay one other home s

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    Mute John Meade
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    Jan 10th 2025, 1:19 PM

    All these celebrities are insured to the hilt, they will not loose out in the long run, they all choose to live in this part of the world known for earthquakes and wildfires. Let’s all calm down with the tears for them, they won’t go hungry or homeless, far more deserving people need help in this world

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    Mute If you're
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    Jan 9th 2025, 8:47 PM

    I’m very, very sad for the loss of their homes and property. Scitt happens.

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