Maybe someone earning €200k-€300k a year should have to work the odd weekend.
Certainly should. I would imagine anyone earning €300k is probably working the odd weekend, as a private consultant, in the Beacon.
The State would have to come up with €2 billion extra to fund the subsidy that the private healthcare industry currently plugs the public system with.
The private healthcare industry does not 'plug' or subsidize the public system. Is that €2bn figure anything to do with with 2m+ people that pay private health insurance in addition to tax?
The private healthcare industry is a scam of the highest order. A money fest for consultants and shareholders of insurance corporation selling their wares by way of shiny hotel style lobbies, colourful multi-plan brochures promising private rooms (if available) and flat screen HD TV's.
You have to hand it to those marketing firms, they really do earn their buck.
I recently had cause to see a private consultant. Even with PI it cost me €240. Ordinarily it is only €200 but as it was my first appointment with this consultant I had to pay an additional €40 (seriously, I was honored to have this privilege bestowed upon me).
The blood tests I had were subsequently clear, and I was to hear back in a week.
Three weeks later and EIGHT phonecalls to his office he finally found time to deliver my results. And further to boot, he has moved hospital, so I guess I will always remain a first-time patient for this guy.
With all due respect that shows a fundamental lack of understanding of how mobile capital is and what the MNC's actually use Ireland for
I understand the mobility of capital only too well, and how Ireland treats their profits favourably for tax, and all within the law of the EU.
But it would be naive to think that multinationals are doing us any favours. There are good reasons why they are here beyond the favourable tax treatment.
They could still sell into Europe, have exactly the same market access, and be 10% of their current size.
Yes, I agree, but this is where long-term it gets complicated. This is where organizations like the IDA have done a great job. There is quid pro quo here - favourable tax treatment for sustainable and significant employment.
In the main that is what occurs, save the financial industry who abused the system through gold-plates (but those leeches would sell their great grannies corpse if they could).
Apple employ some 5,500 people in Ireland and have been here since 1980. They owe €15bn. The equivalent of paying each one of those workers €68,181pa for 40yrs!
So the favourable tax treatment is not without a return. The return is sustainable employment in the country.
We are fast running out of road as other countries rightly do what they can to stop our unethical behaviour. We need to realise that and plan for it. The threats are both political and economic and they are very real
I agree, but it still begs the question - where will they go?
If they all hop and jump to Costa Rica, or wherever, in the short-term that will hurt Ireland, in the long-term, access to the biggest market will become more restrictive.
Not because they are no longer present in Ireland, but because they are no longer present in EU.
Could you honestly say that alcohol sales would not increase if there was no tax on it?
No I couldn't, but I asked you a different question. Has high tax rates, in your opinion, deterred alcohol consumption in this country?