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Tuesday, May 22nd 2012


Peadar Kirby| Crisis Shedding Light on the Irish State

Peadar Kirby: Crisis Shedding Light on the Irish State

Peadar Kirby makes the point that the economic and financial discourse that dominates debate now needs to be balanced by an examination of the administrative and the political features of the current crisis. He says that “the state has a very poor capacity for longer-term forward planning and has failed to even begin to address the challenge of designing a more adequate system of taxation.” This is particularly clear when Corporation Tax is being discussed.

At a time when we are agonising over cutting back welfare payments, pensions, various supports for the most vulnerable in our society, and core funding for our health and education services, and are being told that the pain must be widely shared, we all seem to accept that powerful global corporations who declare a very high level of profits in Ireland should share absolutely no part of the adjustment. This remarkably benign and subservient treatment is based on the claim that raising corporation tax by a percentage point or two might undermine a core part of the state’s development strategy. But instead of debating whether this might be so, and seeking evidence as to what impact it might have, we simply succumb to a response based on fear.

Discussion

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  1. Comment by: Déirdre O'Byrne

    Nov 18th 2010 at 21:11

    Peadar Kirby is talking complete and absolute sense! Surely, it is time now that all economic sacred cows such as corporation tax are interrogated. Ireland’s current crisis is testimony to a result of not keeping check on the sacred cow of the Free Market. Our leaders never thought it worth their while to consult or check on the financial regulator. His activities were a ‘no go’ area. We are being told by government and their right wing neoliberal enablers/advisors (who all earn very high salaries) that we must all take financial pain.
    As a community worker, the only pain I see being shared is that which has been foisted upon people who can least afford it. We have unprecedented unemployment figures, re-possessed homes, ill people languishing on hospital trolleys, special needs assistants being cut who provide vital services to vulnerable children, our youth is emigrating; this list of pain is endless. It is being compounded by policies that are bereft of any force to stimulate jobs, allowing the economy to spiral even further downwards.
    If we don’t start thinking in an alternative fashion to that which got us into this mess in the first place and replace the people who brought us here, there’s very little hope of a recovery. The sacred cowns must be debated.

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