Gordon Gekko
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https://www.google.ie/amp/s/amp.ind...-of-family-homes-after-backlash-35999210.html
Our Leader has ruled this out.
Our Leader has ruled this out.
The watering down of the LPT showed it is no longer seen as a fair national tax it is now open to abuse the county with the lowest LPT will still get money from central funds possibly coming out of the pockets of the people paying the highest
LPT,
On the post -colonial thing when you look at the smoking ban it did not seam to matter seen to be fair is the problem when the stood up to the TD who broke the smoking ban in the Dail the people supported it without question,Its all down to trust,
There's never much problem in principle with any new tax. The problems arise in practice. This suggestion if acted upon will have devastating effects on families and on the availability of housing.All messing about sacred cow metaphors aside, I'm still waiting for someone to explain to me what the problem in principle is with a PPR being potentially subjected to some level of CGT.
All messing about sacred cow metaphors aside, I'm still waiting for someone to explain to me what the problem in principle is with a PPR being potentially subjected to some level of CGT.
There's never much problem in principle with any new tax. The problems arise in practice. This suggestion if acted upon will have devastating effects on families and on the availability of housing.
In principle, I object to all forms of taxation and they are borne under sufferance and any tax must be justified. It is not the exemption that needs to be justified, it is the tax that needs to be justified to convince the people why it is necessary.
Also I think all new taxes require a mandate from the people i.e. they should be part of election manifesto. Otherwise they are illegitimate and as far as I'm concerned civil disobedience of them is morally justified.
In principle, I object to all forms of taxation and they are borne under sufferance and any tax must be justified. It is not the exemption that needs to be justified, it is the tax that needs to be justified to convince the people why it is necessary.
Because there would be inherent disincentive to downsize and a further one to improve or extend cheaper properties.That's the second time you've said that, and apologies if I'm being a bit thick, but how exactly would this happen, in practice? Even if there was a rollover relief and a tax free threshold for gains?
That might be your view, but unfortunately it's not actually supported by law, and you don't seem to understand how our constitutional democracy works.
Ok - So hypothetically if this reservation could be satisfied and there was widespread agreement that an additional take was required, would you still hold out against this CGT proposal as opposed to, say, a rise in income tax levels?
Taxes are already too high. We don't need an additional take we need to cut spending.
So it'll be a long time before I'd agree to a new tax purely from a revenue gathering perspective, unless the tax is intended to also reduce detrimental bevaviour (either to the economy or society).
I would only agree with a re-balancing of tax rates as in there must be a reduction in tax elsewhere or else such additional benefit such as mortgage interest relief.
odyssey06 - I notice you evaded answering the actual question. You're not thinking of taking up politics yourself?
If I took up politics I would have to evade a lot of questions!
May I answer that for myself?True ! But back to my question - hypothetical as it is. If there was widespread popular support for a need to increase the overall tax take (for whatever widely agreed purpose) would you still hold out against this CGT proposal if the alternative was an increase in income tax rates? Which alternative would you object least to if, by democratic popular demand, some tax rise was inevitable?
No answer - no vote!
I think there is widespread sopport for the view that Increasing tax will not give you better services by the people providing them at the front line who are taxpayers until you fix this there is no point in increasing taxTrue ! But back to my question - hypothetical as it is. If there was widespread popular support for a need to increase the overall tax take (for whatever widely agreed purpose) would you still hold out against this CGT proposal if the alternative was an increase in income tax rates? Which alternative would you object least to if, by democratic popular demand, some tax rise was inevitable?
No answer - no vote!
May I answer that for myself?
My answer: increase Income Tax.
My reason: people will feel it almost immediately in their pockets and accordingly pressure will build to cut both it and the overall tax take.
This won't be the case with CGT on PPR's which merely incentivises homeowners to hold on to their properties until they die, at which time no CGT arises anyway.
Leaving aside the immediate housing crisis, we have historically been over-focussed on the family home as a kind of investment strategy. ?
Have we? .