Dr Strangelove
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It’s entirely plausible that lower-value houses transact less often.As of November 2021 (last LPT valuation date) the median sale price of a home was €280k.
Yet for LPT valuation, just under 60% of homes were valued at less than €260k
Yet if you're working a full 5-day week on minimum wage, you'll earn circa €25k.These days €20k a year as a single person will leave you struggling
In 2011 You started paying USC at 4,004 euro now it is 13,000I can't think of any other way. Are there other ways
Oh those innocent days when people thought that PAYE workers never dodged tax...would wonder how much undeclared earnings there are out there aswell. What percentage of the tax paying class are Paye workers with tax bring paid directly from wages
Could PAYE workers dodge income tax?Oh those innocent days when people thought that PAYE workers never dodged tax
More like €28k for a full-time worker on NMW now.you'll earn circa €25k.
But not to the same extent, so with a more diverse tax base the effect on revenue is more diffuse.It's still linear, but it was more my point that when property values fall, incomes, prosperity and tax revenues take a bath.
Increasing VAT would do it. If you don't tax the money when it is earned, then tax it when it is spent.So in order to widen the income tax base to capture some of those 1 in 4 (or 4 in 10?) who earn income but dont pay income tax.
One way would be to increase the National Minimum Wage, inducing wages increases up the income scale.
Another way would be to reduce tax bands or cut income tax credits.
I can't think of any other way. Are there other ways?
While it would broaden the tax base it wouldn't necessarily diversify the tax base.Increasing VAT would do it. If you don't tax the money when it is earned, then tax it when it is spent
The solution is .. higher LPT.
Equally, the more public spending you indulge in, the more volatile your revenue stream will be, and in particular the more vulnerable to economic shocks of one kind or another.The narrower your tax base, the more volatile your revenue stream will be, and in particular the more vulnerable to economic shocks of one kind or another.
JM Keynes would disagree. The use of public spending to smooth the impact of external economic shocks (which would include smoothing their impact on revenue streams) is a core Keynsian tool of economic and fiscal management.Equally, the more public spending you indulge in, the more volatile your revenue stream will be, and in particular the more vulnerable to economic shocks of one kind or another.
To be clear, I don't think Ireland should increase its VAT rates. They are high enough already.While it would broaden the tax base it wouldn't necessarily diversify the tax base.
VAT, a tax on transactions, is going to be heavily correlated with economic activity - much like income (growth).
Well, I don't think the parallel is coincidental. It's generally true that diversified systems are more resilient, and more stable, than concentrated systems. So the optimal tax system will have a blend of taxes on earnings and taxes on wealth; a blend of annual levies and transaction taxes; a blend of taxes on income and taxes on expenditure.Of course having your eggs in 2 (similar) baskets is better than one but, much like the personal advice you would get on here, the Government should aim for a diversified (into a less correlated) pool of income streams. But that's easier said than done.
Only in the view of people who, themselves, are somewhat on the margins of economic thinking. Its not the 1980s any more. Keynesian ideas are pretty firmly embedded in current mainstream macroeconomic thinking.Keynes? Bless.
The poor man is long discredited.
Don't increase the SRCOP and tax credits and let wage inflation *slowly* increase the tax baseAre there other ways?
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