Brendan Burgess
Founder
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- 54,805
The biggest problem I see is the issue of people who are in low paid work all their life. They lose their job or retire and their pension would be based on their fund and their age. With a 4% employee contribution and a 10.75% employer contribution, they would get very little as their fund would be very low. I don't know the best solution to this. It could be that the taxpayer doubles the contribution of the low paid
I think you need to cover all of the payments made out of the Social Insurance Fund:
· Jobseeker's Benefit
· Illness Benefit
· Maternity Benefit
· Adoptive Benefit
· Health and Safety Benefit
· Invalidity Pension
· Widow's, Widower's or Surviving Civil Partner's (Contributory) Pension
· Guardian's Payment (Contributory)
· State Pension (Contributory)
· Treatment Benefit
· Occupational Injuries Benefit
· Carer's Benefit
My issue is with wasters; people who milk the system or are too lazy to work.
Get him behind a counter in McDonalds now! How many more wasters are out there?
Hi Brendan
I get what you are saying. An account, in which, the more you contribute, the more you get out. So if you earn twice my salary on average, you should have twice the pension?
That is fine. But those who do not have accounts, for example, someone who is a full-time home carer. How is their income provided? From which pot? And who contributes to this pot? Presumably the taxpayer? Is this in addition to their own contributory account? Or are contributions taken from your own account to support the home carer?
This kind of nonsense is happening across Ireland. What percentage of the circa €20b social welfare budget do you think is paid out to wasters and spoofers, BigShort?
How many thousand "single mothers" are living alone for strategic reasons?
I don't know Gekko! If someone is defrauding the system they should pay the consequences for sure.
You are again suggesting fraud. If fraud is all you want to stamp out, I have no issue there.
But the topic isn't about fraud. It is about cutting social welfare which will affect those who aren't defrauding the system too.
If we cut their benefits by €100 then the State could save €100x15,000x52 weeks = €78m a year reducing the social protection budget from €19.1 bn to €19.02bn.
A proverbial beggar who's picking and choosing in terms of potential jobs is a fraudster.
I think that's a tad much now Gordon. If a skilled worker finds themselves unexpectedly unemployed, are you saying they should apply immediately for every unskilled job available rather than trying to get a skilled job in their chosen field.
Is that what you'd see yourself doing, if you found yourself jobless tomorrow? You wouldn't even spend the first few weeks focused on well paying and stimulating jobs in your area of experience and expertise? Honestly?
The initiatives are pretty thin on the ground as it is. It tends to start with big notions of cutting the welfare budget and diminishing into a tweak here and there.One such initiative every year would cumulatively make a significant dent...
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