Brendan Burgess
Founder
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First of all, from a global perspective, it seems right to say to the likes of Google and Amazon that they should pay at least 15% of their profits in Corporation Tax somewhere in the World.
It would be good for the citizens of the World if that came to pass.
If so, then Ireland should not stand in the way of implementing that.
Imagine if you had different income tax rates in the different counties in Ireland. And Kerry brought in a maximum income tax rate of 10% as long as you owned a house there. We would all shift our income to Kerry.
Brendan
Lots of people moving from California to Texas, where there is no state income tax. Elon Musk being one of them.First of all, from a global perspective, it seems right to say to the likes of Google and Amazon that they should pay at least 15% of their profits in Corporation Tax somewhere in the World.
It would be good for the citizens of the World if that came to pass.
If so, then Ireland should not stand in the way of implementing that.
Imagine if you had different income tax rates in the different counties in Ireland. And Kerry brought in a maximum income tax rate of 10% as long as you owned a house there. We would all shift our income to Kerry.
Brendan
First of all, from a global perspective, it seems right to say to the likes of Google and Amazon that they should pay at least 15% of their profits in Corporation Tax somewhere in the World.
It would be good for the citizens of the World if that came to pass.
If so, then Ireland should not stand in the way of implementing that.
Yes that has been true since the 90s with the break up of the Soviet union and the resulting globalisation but it looks like that era is ending. The US and EU are now on the same hymn sheet they want more taxes from those global multinationals. The global pandemic and the anti China rhetoric has actually increased since trump left. Globalisation is actually moving backwards now , when carbon taxes really kick in in the next few years this will have a big impact.The old "sovereign right to tax as we see fit" is very difficult to defend given that there is so much globalistion and so much scope to move profits to where they will be taxed the lowest.
First of all, from a global perspective, it seems right to say to the likes of Google and Amazon that they should pay at least 15% of their profits in Corporation Tax somewhere in the World.
It would be good for the citizens of the World if that came to pass.
If so, then Ireland should not stand in the way of implementing that.
Imagine if you had different income tax rates in the different counties in Ireland. And Kerry brought in a maximum income tax rate of 10% as long as you owned a house there. We would all shift our income to Kerry.
Brendan
First of all, from a global perspective, it seems right to say to the likes of Google and Amazon that they should pay at least 15% of their profits in Corporation Tax somewhere in the World.
It would be good for the citizens of the World if that came to pass.
We are also one of the richest countries in Europe by income, we are no longer the poor 1980s economy. We can't really defend this on moral grounds, we can't really defend it period we will just have to accept what we are told to do by Joe Biden or Ursula.I don't think we should agree to increasing our Corporation Tax Rate - we're a small county that needs a competitive edge, and the 12.5% rate is it.
But Ireland doesn't get to decide what the target is, we have successfully dodged the bullet for more than a decade now. The government doesn't seem to be taking seriously that this is in the firing line, they are going to ramp up spending on housing and "green infrastructure" despite the glaring hole in the finances. Are we heading for another 2008 financial crash where spending becomes unsustainable when revenue suddenly falls. The bigger issue is that countries want to take tax from where the product is sold therefore France and Germany will be taking their share of the pie nowWe may be shooting at the wrong target.
No it doesn't and I didn't suggest otherwise but I certainly think we should be starting the conversation at an OECD level, if only to deflect the spotlight away from us.But Ireland doesn't get to decide what the target is, we have successfully dodged the bullet for more than a decade now.
Possibly, maybe probably. Fear of the populist left is driving the government to do stupid things and an economically illiterate populace is being fed emotive populist nonsense by a heavily unionised left wing media. The rubbish about the causes of the housing crisis being the best case in point.The government doesn't seem to be taking seriously that this is in the firing line, they are going to ramp up spending on housing and "green infrastructure" despite the glaring hole in the finances. Are we heading for another 2008 financial crash where spending becomes unsustainable when revenue suddenly falls.
Yes, but that's what we said we want and our defence in the EU/Ireland Apple tax case.The bigger issue is that countries want to take tax from where the product is sold therefore France and Germany will be taking their share of the pie now
We need to think about the future, not just the present, and the past.We are also one of the richest countries in Europe by income, we are no longer the poor 1980s economy. We can't really defend this on moral grounds, we can't really defend it period we will just have to accept what we are told to do by Joe Biden or Ursula.
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