Z
z109
Guest
Well, the maximum is €600 a week, I think, but it is a tax-free payment, so the person on 200k a year gets a greater benefit from the tax-free status (assuming they are not let go in January/February!). No?Hi Yog
It is called insurance, but it's not really insurance. There is no attempt to relate the premium to the claim. A person earning €200k pays a much higher premium than a person earning €36,000, but they get exactly the same benefits.
On a risk-basis, high earners are surely more risky than low earners of getting the chop when a business downturn occurs, so a risk weighting should apply? (Okay, I'm being cheeky here)
Nah, if you want to opt out of social insurance, become self-employed. Half the male working population has already done so. Should people be able to opt out of the social insurance and even the tax system altogether then?And if it's insurance, people should have the option of paying it or not.
Ah, so they did increase funding to pay for higher dole, maternity pay, redundancy pay! (These are the benefits that were increased).The government removed the cap on employers' prsi some years ago which was a huge increase in the cost to employers. I don't recall any benefits being increased at the time.