Re: Look again
Since when has any business been obliged to set their charges in relation to their costs?
Therein lies the rub. If essential services are privatised we pay for the service plus the profit for the operator. If they are publically operated then we should only be paying for the cost (in my opinion), but of course we end up paying above the odds to fund local government budgets.
I've thought about this a lot since the Bin Charges issues blew up and I've decided that I'm against Martin Cullens mantra of low tax, with service charges. Particularly if there are dozens of local authorities with completely different schemes and charges. We're a small enough country. Give us 3 or 4 provincial councils and it'll do the same job.
I did a quick tot up of about 10 service charges/taxes/levy's/stamp duties that a typical family might pay over and above income tax/prsi/Health Levy.
For the 10 items I could think of off the top of my head the bill came to between 4000 and 5000 per year.
That represents a much bigger proportion of a low income families income, than a high earner. The worst off are large families on low incomes (until recently a typical Irish Family).
But we keep getting charges stripped out from income tax to preserve the myth that tax is not increasing. The net result is we're widening the gap between rich and poor. Something I've never had a problem with per se (it's difficult to stop the rich leveraging their wealth, and I think it's more important to raise the worst off than to try to keep everyone together), but we shouldn't have a tax regime that promotes and protects a widenning gap. It may be inevitable, but there's no reason to help it along.
I appear to be turning into a socialist. Very worrying.
I've been frequenting the same threads as Rainyday for far too long. Where did I leave that Thatcher Biography?
-Rd