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Wednesday, Feb 8th 2012


Articles Covering Taxation

European Commission Plans to Argue Against a Financial Transaction Tax at ECOFIN meeting

The meeting tomorrow of the Economic and Financial Affairs Council (ECOFIN) is being heralded as one of its most significant since the crisis began because of the potentially far reaching decisions that the new proposals for economic governance will have for every country within the European Union.
Once we find out what the European commission has [...]

The Suffering of the Rich - Can You Feel It? The Recession Diaries - August 25th

There have been some outrageous and hilarious things said in this economic debate. I don’t know how economic historians will come to rank them. But surely at the top must be the claim that the rich have paid a ‘far higher price’ than other groups in society as a result of the economic downturn. You [...]

Ireland Trades in its Property Bubble for an Export Bubble

A small follow on from Michael Taft’s post, about the well-known exports tax scam known as the “Double-Irish”.
The story of the tax scam has gone around the world and some at this stage, but I’ve yet to see or hear of it on Irish TV or radio, or in the print media.
Following on from my [...]

It’s a Tax pure and simple - and It’s a Bad Tax. The Recession Diaries - August 10th

Do not be confused. The Government’s recently announced increase in electricity prices through the Public Service Obligation levy (PSO) is a tax, pure and simple. And it’s a very bad tax.
The PSO levy subsidises electricity suppliers who are required to purchase electricity from renewable and peat-generated sources. This is because the costs of electricity from [...]

Raise €500 million in tax? Easy-Peasy. The Recession Diaries - July 19th

Brian Keegan from the Chartered Accountants Ireland says that finding €500 million in tax revenue for Budget 2011 will be ‘very difficult to find’. There are no easy choices, he writes in the Sunday Business Post. He does flesh out two ideas - a flat-rate property tax which could raise €500 million and a reduction [...]

Economic Common Sense and the Low-Paid. The Recession Diaries - July 8th

Social Justice Ireland has produced a well-argued proposal for refundable tax credits - a long-standing demand to make the tax system more equitable. In essence, as SJI describes it:
‘A refundable tax credit is one where, in the event that the income of an individual is insufficient to use up all of his or her tax [...]

The The Unbearable Lightness of Economic Ignorance. The Recession Diaries - July 6th

I have to admire those who claim we must bring the low-paid into the tax net. I admire their chutzpah, their audacious willingness to flaunt in public their remarkable ignorance of the tax system. For the low-paid are already in the tax net - big time. Let’s go through the arguments and see if those [...]

Better Scrutiny Of The Rich Set Would Be Good For Us All

The number of Ireland’s rich, measured as those having investable assets of $1 million or more, rose by over 10 % last year. To top it off ‘Ireland is perceived to be ahead of the game’, because apparently, our efforts to rein in the public finances have paid off for the Irish economy. This is [...]

Two TASC Reports: Pay in the Restaurant Sector and Ireland’s Finance Acts and their Role in the Crisis

TASC have so far this week brought out two reports, a major and a minor, with more to follow.
The first, A Square Deal? The Real Cost of Making a Meal in the Restaurant Sector focuses on the call for a reduction in the minimum wage from the Restaurant Association of Ireland (RAI).
As those who are [...]

Attack of the 50 Foot Water Charges. The Recession Diaries - February 14th

Water charges (or levies or taxes) will come up the agenda and no doubt there will be considerable confusion as to what they are intended for: incentivise ‘efficient use of water’ or cover the cost of water provision. These are not necessarily intertwined; one may incentivise efficient use and not recover costs and vice-versa.
What is [...]

Sins of the Father

Sins of the Father:

Tracing the Decisions

That Shaped the Irish Economy,

by Conor McCabe

from The History Press

Now Available as an e-Book.

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