I have no problem paying OAP's €230 a week. The elderly in our society deserve our gratitude and respect. I also have no problem paying people who find themselves suddenly unemployed after years of working €200 a week. I do have a problem with the whole universal aspect of social welfare though. Like child benefit, some people do not need it. We have limited resources and what resources we do have should be targeted at the most vunerable.
We need to ask ourselves what type of welfare system we want. I don't believe in comparing ourselves to the UK or any other Country. I am proud that we look after our vunerable as long as they are truely vunerable. There is little doubt that there are far too many people benefiting from welfare that don't need it whether that is in child allowance, OAP, Rent allowance, single parent allowance, Job seekers allowance etc....
I have no problem paying OAP's €230 a week. The elderly in our society deserve our gratitude and respect. I also have no problem paying people who find themselves suddenly unemployed after years of working €200 a week. I do have a problem with the whole universal aspect of social welfare though. Like child benefit, some people do not need it. We have limited resources and what resources we do have should be targeted at the most vunerable.
We need to ask ourselves what type of welfare system we want. I don't believe in comparing ourselves to the UK or any other Country. I am proud that we look after our vunerable as long as they are truely vunerable. There is little doubt that there are far too many people benefiting from welfare that don't need it whether that is in child allowance, OAP, Rent allowance, single parent allowance, Job seekers allowance etc....
The only fair solution to this is tax. If we believe that those earning €35k should be making a contribution, then we tax all those earning €35k, regardless of the source of their income.I agree high earning pensioners can afford a cut, I just don't agree there are lots and lots of them earning €35,000 pa.
Very True, I work for one of those companies and I deal with EMEA in the morning and US in the afternoon.
The time Zone is another factor definetly to our benefit.
If you look at the advanced western countries on a map of the world, Ireland is the most centrally located - right in the middle with Europe to the east and USA to the west. We downgrade our mid-Atlantic location too much. Its the best location in the world.
A lot of sound bites in there.
The trouble is that respect and gratitude our OAPs are in receipt of at the moment is coming from the international money markets, not us.
OAPs currently represent a flat tax of about 6% on all workers. By the time most of us will have retired this will have increased to 15% due to demographics.
If we can't afford 6% now (we are borrowing to pay it rather than funding it from taxes) what makes anyone think we will be able to afford 15% in the future.
I have no respect for the following:
1) The view that we can bury our heads in the sane and declare any aspect of public spending untouchable
2) The view that it is right that many working people are giving up upwards of 20% of their net pay and we should not have so much as a token gesture from OAPs in an environment of falling prices
So give me a break on gratitude and respect until such a time as we actually have to make a genuine sacrifice to prove it
The only fair solution to this is tax. If we believe that those earning €35k should be making a contribution, then we tax all those earning €35k, regardless of the source of their income.
.
We are a small island off the coast of a bigger island off the coast of Europe. Costs are higher here than in most of Western Europe and all of the Eastern Europe. Companies here have access to a tiny pool of skilled labour (There are 20 million people within a two hour drive of Düsseldorf). The notion that we have a world class education system is laughable. Our ability to link between universities and industry is (and I’m being very kind here) embryonic. We have very low levels of multilingualism and we have very little indigenous industry.
Add to that the fact that we are an island so supply-chain management costs and times are high; the cost of unprocessed iron ore or other basic raw materials is irrelevant. Dell moved to Poland to be closer to their supply chain and their markets, as well as the labour costs. Anyone who thinks our location doesn’t matter when it comes to manufacturing needs their head examined.
It’s all about the tax breaks, the rest is just stuff we tell ourselves to make ourselves feel better.
A lot of sound bites in there.
The trouble is that respect and gratitude our OAPs are in receipt of at the moment is coming from the international money markets, not us.
OAPs currently represent a flat tax of about 6% on all workers. By the time most of us will have retired this will have increased to 15% due to demographics.
If we can't afford 6% now (we are borrowing to pay it rather than funding it from taxes) what makes anyone think we will be able to afford 15% in the future.
I have no respect for the following:
1) The view that we can bury our heads in the sane and declare any aspect of public spending untouchable
2) The view that it is right that many working people are giving up upwards of 20% of their net pay and we should not have so much as a token gesture from OAPs in an environment of falling prices
So give me a break on gratitude and respect until such a time as we actually have to make a genuine sacrifice to prove it
De Kaiser,
Most people want a society that looks after our elderly and vulnerable.
Maybe you would have all the old people killed off when they retired and all the other vulnerable people keilled off. It would be much easier than looking after them.
Eh??
So anyone who thinks that pensions should not be exempt from cuts is a closet advocate of mass-murder?
Now you're not just stretching it...
I don't care how many economic facts you throw out, these people need to be protected.
wiki said:In the 1933 general election Blythe lost his seat.
Blythe was a senior figure in the Blueshirts and his support for the fascist leader Eoin O'Duffy
So FG's grandaddy cut pensions. Would they have the balls to do it now?Topic Reminder:
The subject of this thread is the proposed cuts to Social Welfare OA pension floated by Min OCuiv.
[broken link removed]
I wonder does Minister for Social Protection Ó Cuív wish to go down in history with Minister Ernest Blythe in 1924 when he reduced old-age pensions from 10 shillings (50p) to 9 shillings (45p) a week.
I have paid PRSI for over 30 year, (plus taxes) where has my money gone? it is spent by the Government, If I had saved it and invested it I would have ample pension by now, pension is my entitlement.
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