Brendan Burgess
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According to the Irish Tax Institute, the top 9% of income earners pay 54% of all income tax and USC.
This, from Ronan Lyons, is a little out of date but excellent as it takes all income into account.
Please note that you appear to be referring to income tax alone, rather than all taxes.
[broken link removed]
This estimates the total taxes paid across all deciles.
Big +1 to that. They are the (mis)information department of the Trade Union movement.I would treat any research that emanates from the Nevin Institute with extreme caution.
I have also found this published by Revenue for 2017
There was a brief discussion on Prime Time on tax last Monday week, first RTE had an ICTU funded TASC economist (Nat O'Connor), then for a bit of balance they'd an ICTU funded NERI economist (Michael Collins), both with the same view - essentially "isn't tax great - we should have more of it". I'd wondered why ICTU had two "think" tanks, now I'm impressed with their pre-budget media manipulation.Big +1 to that. They are the (mis)information department of the Trade Union movement.
Don't forget that just about everyone in RTE is also a member of an ICTU Union.There was a brief discussion on Prime Time on tax last Monday week, first RTE had an ICTU funded TASC economist (Nat O'Connor), then for a bit of balance they'd an ICTU funded NERI economist (Michael Collins), both with the same view - essentially "isn't tax great - we should have more of it". I'd wondered why ICTU had two "think" tanks, now I'm impressed with their pre-budget media manipulation.
I realise you said supposedly, but despite the name PRSI has to be considered a tax, and as a consequence we don't really have social insurance.PRSI is supposedly a social insurance. You pay a premium and you get a pay related benefit when you claim.
IMF said:Note 8 page 37 from the IMF
The Irish welfare system does not differentiate significantly between social insurance and social assistance, or
between contributory and non-contributory state pensions. Accordingly, PRSI contributions do not bear a strong
link to welfare benefits, so that it is acceptable to combine (employee) PRSI with income tax and USC when
looking at personal income taxation in Ireland
I would treat any research that emanates from the Nevin Institute with extreme caution.
first RTE had an ICTU funded TASC economist (Nat O'Connor).
If you can show that any of the data he used is wrong, please go ahead.
It's not data but on that Prime Time program I mentioned there was some discussion of whether income tax should be brought in at lower levels - much like it is in countries like Sweden.If you can show that any of the data he used is wrong, please go ahead.
A nice bit of misinformation since in fact around 2m taxpayers (not just low earners) would pay income tax at that level and it would generate large and reliable revenue.
Are you sure?
Would they not just quit working and go on the dole?
Ideologically, I agree that the lower paid should pay more tax. But with such generous social welfare payments, it wouldn't work in Ireland, unless...
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