Brendan Burgess
Founder
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I propose a system where people’s PRSI goes into an account in their own name – their pension will depend on what they have in their pot when they retire
Why not just leave it alone, and let inflation slowly reduce its real value?
I don't think somebody with meaningful savings should qualify for a (means tested) welfare benefit.
One can want to see the guy on €60k a year get €40k a year whilst he gets back on his feet and still want to see malingerers hammered and prevented from milking the system. Having said that, I'd want to see €60k man exhaust his savings before the State kicked in.
if a welfare recipient is eating takeaways or buying a coffee, he or she is being paid too much.
Ok BS, here's a very simple proposal for debate - increase JSB by 15% and reduce JSA by 15%.
The 15% increase \ decrease would be a step in the right direction and in the current political climate I think the only way a reduction could be delivered is via a carrot and stick...
Under this scheme, if an individual, working constantly for 30yrs+, paying taxes and PRSI, paid off mortgage, put kids through college and built a nest egg of €10,000 savings, is made redundant.
Would they have to use up their own resources first (€10,000) or would they automatically be entitled to payment from their PRSI fund?
They would be fully entitled to get their own money back. They would not have to use the €10,000.
This is your money and you can use it as you please, within limits. So if you have been working for 10 years and want to take a year off, you could do so and draw from the fund. Again, you would be getting your own money not some form of state hand-out.
Why not put high vise vests on them and put them out picking rubbish cleaning our parks make them work for there few bob, and maybe give them bit extra.I do a bit of cycling and the rubbish on the side of our roads is a disgrace, a win win for everyone don't you think
BS, in a shockingly unusual development, you are (deliberately?) misunderstanding what posters are saying.
The rigorous means-testing (the no-more-coffees stage) would only apply after a point - usually time-based (as with JSB and other European earnings-based systems) but potentially after one’s PRSI pot runs out (BB’s proposal). So you can have all the coffees you want and all the Madrid holidays you want and €1M in the bank while still receiving your initial, full non-means tested JSB-type benefit.
When you transition to the means-tested benefit (after a certain time or when your PRSI pot runs out), your actual NEED is assessed. If you have savings, you don’t need your fellow citizens to pay for your food or your shelter. And you don’t have a fundamental need for coffees and holidays so your fellow citizens should not pay for them.
In BB proposal, as you have interpreted, there would be a time limit to JSB, based on previous PRSI contributions. Once this runs out, you are means-tested.
What if two workers, same income, with same contributions are being means-tested and it transpires that one worker has savings of €10,000, lives in a terraced house, drives a small car, doesn't drink, doesn't smoke. The other worker, lives in a big house, still has €10,000 credit card debt, car loan, etc.
If you were the means test assessor, according to the above, the first worker would get €0 in welfare, as he has €10,000 to sustain him. The second worker will get full JSA because he has no means.
Is it fair? Why bother saving in the first place? Why should the state assist the debtor in paying down his debt, but pilfer the savings of the other worker?
The person in the big house in this case - if they don't get welfare, what are they expected to live off? Thin air? The first person (in the smaller house) has savings so has something.
Remember here, this is after a period of time (lets say 12 months) and the person has not been able to get a job, or is not able to get a job. If they are living off welfare for the year, then chances are the big house is under pressure with mortgage repayments anyway
Maybe there is an option where people have non-liquid assets such as family houses, then a 'charge/loan' can be placed against them similar to the fair deal scheme ?
Similar to the pension issue - everyone knows an issue exists but its politically toxic and no one is willing to tackle it. Better put our heads in the sand and hope it goes away...
I think the draw down should be based on the person's wishes subject to restrictions such as x% of the pot per month and/or up to average wage etc... Bigger questions would be whether all my contributions to date get transferred into the pot [I have 20 years contributions made...others will have more, others less]The 12 months period though is in dispute, the proposal was to take welfare from your PRSI contributions, if PRSI contributions are same for both workers, won't they use up their contributions at same time? Or can someone (the saver) opt to take less welfare, in order to extend the benefits?
Same could be said about the Fair Deal scheme. Is there not a precedence here?The (saver) will not want his savings touched, but if it transpires that his pot runs out, he has to fend for himself from his own savings, the (debtor) gets a dig out from the state to pay down his debt - is that fair?
I think the draw down should be based on the person's wishes subject to restrictions such as x% of the pot per month and/or up to average wage etc... Bigger questions would be whether all my contributions to date get transferred into the pot [I have 20 years contributions made...others will have more, others less]
I think BB proposal though is quite specific. You draw down only from what you have put in.
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