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Property Tax (MOD REMINDER: Don't get too personal)

17778798183

Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 21,727 ✭✭✭✭Godge


    I'm wondering what powers they have outside their own jurisdiction?

    Like I've stated, I've asked my financial director to come back to me via email and let me know if I'm obliged to consent to this request, as my monies paid from a company not based in the republic.

    He's in the process of finding this out for me.

    Strange that they've asked for my consent.
    Slick50 wrote: »
    You are right, the revenue have no authority outside this jurisdiction. And as it is not a legal obligation on you within your employers jurisdiction, they have no authority to deduct it without your consent. If you were obliged to give consent, it's not consent, and you wouldn't be being asked.

    Godge and alastair conveniently overlooked that your employers are based outside of the country.


    I didn't conveniently overlook that his employer is based outside of the country. I just assumed that he is working in Ireland and his employer and himself are revenue compliant with respect to income tax.

    If he is based in Ireland and working here, he is paid under Irish law and is subject to Irish revenue deductions no matter where his employer is based. That means there is no need for consent and the revenue just take the money.

    Now, if he is working abroad, no problem, outside the jurisdiction.
    However, if he is working in Ireland and being paid offshore, then the LPT is the least of his problems if the Revenue have caught up with him.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,309 ✭✭✭✭alastair


    Slick50 wrote: »
    I think that is your interpretation of it, and you have interprated it wrong.
    And were does CGT come into it. If it's a field that is not being farmed, what's to define were the boundary is, when there is no physically demarcation?

    CGT comes into play on anything over an acre - as posted already.
    My interpretation isn't exactly complex - if the land is being used for commercial purposes, it's not considered residential. If it's not , it is. It doesn't need a fence or other boundary - it just needs to be within your ownership.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,309 ✭✭✭✭alastair


    Slick50 wrote: »
    Godge and alastair conveniently overlooked that your employers are based outside of the country.

    It might be worth acquainting yourself with double taxation agreements. They (Revenue) have jurisdiction abroad too - related to foreign-sourced income.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,686 ✭✭✭✭Zubeneschamali


    Godge wrote: »
    Now, if he is working abroad, no problem, outside the jurisdiction.

    Paid abroad, working abroad but house in Ireland - if the house is rented, I'd say they'll go after it.

    If it's sitting vacant, they may just attach the bill and wait for it to be sold/inherited.

    Next option on their list after salary is going after your bank accounts, if you have any of those.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,309 ✭✭✭✭alastair


    Paid abroad, working abroad but house in Ireland - if the house is rented, I'd say they'll go after it.

    If it's sitting vacant, they may just attach the bill and wait for it to be sold/inherited.

    No need tbh - they have ample legal jurisdiction to garnish his foreign-sourced income.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 14,380 ✭✭✭✭Banjo String


    I work 50/50 between the two jurisdictions. Bi-weekly.

    I have a northern drivers license.
    I have a northern address.
    Northern Bank account (which is only used as an expense account)
    National insurance number. Etc etc.

    I also have a southern address, (obviously)
    Prsi number
    Irish bank account


    I could honestly claim tax residency in either jurisdiction, as I work in both, and split my time equally between them.

    Just for clarity.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,062 ✭✭✭Slick50


    If it's sitting vacant, they may just attach the bill and wait for it to be sold/inherited.
    That doesn't mean, the revenue have the authority to instruct his employers to deduct LPT in another jurisdiction.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,309 ✭✭✭✭alastair


    I work 50/50 between the two jurisdictions. Bi-weekly.

    I have a northern drivers license.
    I have a northern address.
    Northern Bank account (which is only used as an expense account)
    National insurance number. Etc etc.

    I also have a southern address, (obviously)
    Prsi number
    Irish bank account


    I could honestly claim tax residency in either jurisdiction, as I work in both, and split my time equally between them.

    Just for clarity.

    That doesn't really help you.

    http://www.revenue.ie/en/about/foi/s16/income-tax-capital-gains-tax-corporation-tax/part-42/42-04-57.pdf?download=true


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 14,380 ✭✭✭✭Banjo String


    Slick50 wrote: »
    That doesn't mean, the revenue have the authority to instruct his employers to deduct LPT in another jurisdiction.

    Payroll seem to be questioning this also.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,309 ✭✭✭✭alastair


    Slick50 wrote: »
    That doesn't mean, the revenue have the authority to instruct his employers to deduct LPT in another jurisdiction.

    They do, but it's nothing to do with vacant properties etc.

    http://www.revenue.ie/en/practitioner/law/double/uk.html


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 14,380 ✭✭✭✭Banjo String




  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 43,311 ✭✭✭✭K-9


    I work 50/50 between the two jurisdictions. Bi-weekly.

    I have a northern drivers license.
    I have a northern address.
    Northern Bank account (which is only used as an expense account)
    National insurance number. Etc etc.

    I also have a southern address, (obviously)
    Prsi number
    Irish bank account


    I could honestly claim tax residency in either jurisdiction, as I work in both, and split my time equally between them.

    Just for clarity.

    Mod:

    Now we getting into the realms of tax advice, which isn't what this forum is for, plus you are posting personal enough information. It's best you sort this out with your employer and/or get tax advice.

    Mad Men's Don Draper : What you call love was invented by guys like me, to sell nylons.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,309 ✭✭✭✭alastair


    What doesn't?

    That you work across two jurisdictions.
    With effect from 1 January 2006, as regards the income of a foreign employment, it will be necessary to distinguish:

    that part of the income attributable to the performance in the State of duties of such employment, and
    that part of the income attributable to the performance outside the State of duties of such employment.
    As regards the income at a, irrespective of the residence or domicile position of the employee, such income is now chargeable to Irish tax and within the scope of the PAYE system of deductions at source.

    As regards the income at b, whilst such income may be chargeable to Irish tax in the hands of the employee, it is not within the scope of the PAYE system of deductions at source.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,062 ✭✭✭Slick50


    Godge wrote: »
    I didn't conveniently overlook that his employer is based outside of the country. I just assumed that he is working in Ireland and his employer and himself are revenue compliant with respect to income tax.
    Why would his employers approach him for consent, if they are obliged by revenue to deduct it.
    alastair wrote: »
    CGT comes into play on anything over an acre - as posted already.
    Have you jumped threads? we are talking about LPT?
    alastair wrote: »
    My interpretation isn't exactly complex - if the land is being used for commercial purposes, it's not considered residential. If it's not , it is
    I never suggested it was, if anything it's over simplifying it.
    alastair wrote: »
    It doesn't need a fence or other boundary - it just needs to be within your ownership.
    But in my suggested scenario, the whole thing is in your ownership, but not all liable to LPT. The one acre is the defining boundary for LPT valuation purposes.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,062 ✭✭✭Slick50


    alastair wrote: »
    They do, but it's nothing to do with vacant properties etc.

    http://www.revenue.ie/en/practitioner/law/double/uk.html
    This is not income tax or CGT.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,309 ✭✭✭✭alastair


    Slick50 wrote: »
    Why would his employers approach him for consent, if they are obliged by revenue to deduct it.
    They don't have to.
    Slick50 wrote: »
    Have you jumped threads? we are talking about LPT?
    See the minister's response on the rules relating to residential property I posted. CGT applies over 1 acre - that's the technicality that limits the LPT to gardens of an acre.
    Slick50 wrote: »
    I never suggested it was, if anything it's over simplifying it.
    Not according to the Revenues own info I posted already.
    3. My house is located in the middle of the farm. What should I take into account when valuing my house for LPT purposes?

    A residential property is defined in the Local Property Tax (LPT) legislation to include not just the dwelling house itself but also any other buildings or structures and any land that, in a broad sense, belongs with the dwelling house and that are enjoyed as an amenity rather than used for a commercial purpose. These are regarded as an intrinsic part of the dwelling house. Such buildings or structures would include, for example, a garage for the family car but not a shed for the tractor or other farm machinery. Land would include a lawn or flower beds but not a haggard, farmyard or a commercial glasshouse. So in the case of a farmhouse, any land used for farming purposes will not be included in the chargeable value of the farmhouse.
    Slick50 wrote: »
    But in my suggested scenario, the whole thing is in your ownership, but not all liable to LPT. The one acre is the defining boundary for LPT valuation purposes.
    Unless you're using all the land for commercial purposes - which would exempt it from the LPT - only your house would be liable.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,309 ✭✭✭✭alastair


    Slick50 wrote: »
    This is not income tax or CGT.

    It's a Revenue tax levied on your income. And falls within the agreement as a consequence - same as the USC etc.
    with respect to taxes on income

    http://www.irishecho.com.au/2013/03/21/revenue-warns-irish-in-australia-over-property-tax-payments/24224


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,062 ✭✭✭Slick50


    alastair wrote: »
    They don't have to.
    Not here they don't. But for some reason they did, where they are based. We may as well wait and see, when banjo gets back to us.
    alastair wrote: »
    See the minister's response on the rules relating to residential property I posted. CGT applies over 1 acre - that's the technicality that limits the LPT to gardens of an acre.
    I still don't see why you introduced CGT to the debate. It has no bearing on LPT.
    alastair wrote: »
    Not according to the Revenues own info I posted already. Unless you're using all the land for commercial purposes - which would exempt it from the LPT - only your house would be liable.
    That does not address the scenario I posed. It is clarifying what other buildings and amenities should be considered.

    I was talking about a single residential building, on a large plot of land. You could landscape the whole plot, but only one acre is considered for LPT purposes.
    alastair wrote: »
    It's a Revenue tax levied on your income. And falls within the agreement as a consequence - same as the USC etc.
    http://www.irishecho.com.au/2013/03/21/revenue-warns-irish-in-australia-over-property-tax-payments/24224
    It is not a tax levied on your income. Wasn't that the arguement for a property tax, not increasing income taxes, because the are to anti employment/work. It is a tax based on your homes value, not your income.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,309 ✭✭✭✭alastair


    Slick50 wrote: »
    It is not a tax levied on your income. Wasn't that the arguement for a property tax, not increasing income taxes, because the are to anti employment/work. It is a tax based on your homes value, not your income.

    It's a tax levied on your income if you don't pay it the normal way. Please don't pretend that you don't understand this.

    The only reason I introduced CGT into the discussion is because it's the technical reason why LPT is limited to a maximum of an acre residential land. I can keep repeating this, will that help?

    I honestly can't help you understand the distinction between commercial land and residential land any further - it's pretty simple stuff.
    Supposing you have a house situated just off the road, in a ten acre field with no out houses or other buildings.

    Ten acres of farmland - not liable for LPT
    Ten acres of garden - an acre technically liable for LPT, but what premium does it add to the market value of your house?


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,062 ✭✭✭Slick50


    alastair wrote: »
    It's a tax levied on your income if you don't pay it the normal way. Please don't pretend that you don't understand this.
    It may be levied on your income, but it's not an income tax. We'll see how banjo gets on.
    alastair wrote: »
    The only reason I introduced CGT into the discussion is because it's the technical reason why LPT is limited to a maximum of an acre residential land. I can keep repeating this, will that help?
    What is the technicality? That might help.
    alastair wrote: »
    I honestly can't help you understand the distinction between commercial land and residential land any further - it's pretty simple stuff.
    Don't worry, I wasn't depending on you for that, it is simple enough.. It was you who seemed to have a problem understanding how to define an unmarked boundary between the two, for LPT purposes.
    alastair wrote: »
    Ten acres of garden - an acre technically liable for LPT, but what premium does it add to the market value of your house?
    Isn't that the beauty of the one acre limit, you figure out how much more valuable you property is, due to the extensive lands/gardens, and reduce the value of your property by that much for the purpose of LPT evaluation. Who could have dreamt that one up? Who benefits from such a clause?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,309 ✭✭✭✭alastair


    Slick50 wrote: »
    It may be levied on your income, but it's not an income tax.
    That doesn't matter - nor is the USC - which is also levied on those with foreign-sourced salaries. It's a tax on income.
    Slick50 wrote: »
    What is the technicality? That might help.
    I posted the Ministers synopsis - feel free to review.
    Slick50 wrote: »
    Don't worry, I wasn't depending on you for that, it is simple enough.. It was you who seemed to have a problem understanding how to define an unmarked boundary between the two, for LPT purposes.
    I've no problem in that regard. It's the use defines whether LPT is applicable or not - not a fence.
    Slick50 wrote: »
    Isn't that the beauty of the one acre limit, you figure out how much more valuable you property is, due to the extensive lands/gardens, and reduce the value of your property by that much for the purpose of LPT evaluation. Who could have dreamt that one up? Who benefits from such a clause?
    It doesn't benefit anyone - as the Minister's reply makes clear. It's also, as I keep pointing out, rather moot, because generous gardens, irrespective of whether they're included in LPT, will add a premium to the market value of the house itself - which will be reflected in the applied LPT band.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,062 ✭✭✭Slick50


    alastair wrote: »
    That doesn't matter - nor is the USC - which is also levied on those with foreign-sourced salaries. It's a tax on income.
    We'll see.
    alastair wrote: »
    I've no problem in that regard. It's the use defines whether LPT is applicable or not - not a fence.
    It's not just the use, the acreage is also considered irrespective of use, which was the point in question.
    alastair wrote: »
    It doesn't benefit anyone - as the Minister's reply makes clear. It's also, as I keep pointing out, rather moot, because generous gardens, irrespective of whether they're included in LPT, will add a premium to the market value of the house itself - which will be reflected in the applied LPT band.
    It certainly does benefit some, those with rolling lawns and large lanscaoed gardens. The point is not mute, because the whole point of the acre limit means the added value connot be considered for valuation purposes. re:LPT. So the 'technicality' is a ministers opinion... they wouldn't know how to value something so valuable.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,309 ✭✭✭✭alastair


    Slick50 wrote: »
    We'll see.
    We already know. He'll have the LPT garnished from his salary.
    Slick50 wrote: »
    It's not just the use, the acreage is also considered irrespective of use, which was the point in question.
    I'm not clear that you've any point here. You certainly haven't articulated any.
    Slick50 wrote: »
    It certainly does benefit some, those with rolling lawns and large lanscaoed gardens. The point is not mute, because the whole point of the acre limit means the added value connot be considered for valuation purposes. re:LPT. So the 'technicality' is a ministers opinion... they wouldn't know how to value something so valuable.
    Where's the benefit? Large gardens raise the market value of a house, even if you pretend that the gardens don't extend beyond an acre. You don't 'deduct' anything from the value of your house if you've a large garden. Two identical houses next to each other - one with a small garden, one with a big one - which will have the higher market value? In the end of the day - it's market value determines which band of LPT you pay.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,212 ✭✭✭Good loser


    Slick50 wrote: »
    We'll see.

    It's not just the use, the acreage is also considered irrespective of use, which was the point in question.

    It certainly does benefit some, those with rolling lawns and large lanscaoed gardens. The point is not mute, because the whole point of the acre limit means the added value connot be considered for valuation purposes. re:LPT. So the 'technicality' is a ministers opinion... they wouldn't know how to value something so valuable.

    Slick 50 listen to this: principal private residences with grounds of up to one acre maximum are exempt from Capital Gains Tax.

    The LPT is chargeable on residences with up to one acre curtilege. If this was not so taxpayers could claim five, ten, 100 acres+ were 'attached' to their residences and exempt from CGT.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,815 ✭✭✭creedp


    oscarBravo wrote: »
    Taking all that on board, something that's important to keep in mind is that progressiveness is not the only metric by which a tax (or a tax regime) should be judged. We could make corporation tax progressive by charging 1% corporation tax on cottage industries and 99% on Google and Intel - but that wouldn't be a good idea.

    Progressiveness is just one metric by which to judge a tax. Sustainability is another, and the two are, to an extent, mutually exclusive. The challenge is to find the balance.


    Agree with this and the real problem is that our IT system is too progressive with too many people out of the tax net. It FG weren't so spineless the Govt would admit that their manifesto promise of no extra ITaxes did not mean that some people would have to pay more taxes and would reduce the threshold which knocks people out of the IT net. Instead the well paid spinners/PR gurus have decided that prefect Kenny and co can get around that silly promise by introducing a less progressive LPT which essentially means low paid people will pay more tax as there is no low pay exemption threshold.

    While I am not idelogically againt a property tax I am sickened by this Govt selling this tax as some kind of major reform when it is nothing more that a backdoor attempt at forcing more low paid people into the tax net by a Govt that doen't have the courage to deal with the real tax reform required.

    I am also tired of apologists going on about the fact that the LPT will be 100% spent funding local authorities as if paying more tax via thge LPT will actually provide more funding for local services .. another spinners gold medal .. every € of LPT funding is replacing a previous € of central funding which is now directed to funding the banks, etc. The LPT will not provide 1 cent of additional funding for local services despite what the Govt might claim.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,815 ✭✭✭creedp


    alastair wrote: »
    And your shill paranoia is pretty tired.

    I'm confused here .. who actually is being a shill and who is being paranoid? Are you quoting me by mistake? For my own perspective I'm simply commenting on the progressiveness of a new tax and I am certainly not in any way paranoid about it.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 21,727 ✭✭✭✭Godge


    Good loser wrote: »
    Slick 50 listen to this: principal private residences with grounds of up to one acre maximum are exempt from Capital Gains Tax.

    The LPT is chargeable on residences with up to one acre curtilege. If this was not so taxpayers could claim five, ten, 100 acres+ were 'attached' to their residences and exempt from CGT.

    In my opinion, both LPT and CGT should be payable on large gardens, agricultural land etc.

    The CGT exemption limit should not limit the applicability of LPT.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,815 ✭✭✭creedp


    Godge wrote: »
    In my opinion, both LPT and CGT should be payable on large gardens, agricultural land etc.

    The CGT exemption limit should not limit the applicability of LPT.

    Ah c'mon now .. you couldn't expect the farmers to pay tax on the 'land'. Businesses pay rates, households pay LPT, but farmers pay nothing. I wonder why those advocating the LPT in order to broaden the tax base don't suggest broadening it a little further such that the agri sector contributes a few more bob to the exchequer? Would that be a 'broadening' too far?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,309 ✭✭✭✭alastair


    creedp wrote: »
    I'm confused here .. who actually is being a shill and who is being paranoid? Are you quoting me by mistake? For my own perspective I'm simply commenting on the progressiveness of a new tax and I am certainly not in any way paranoid about it.

    Not sure why you're confused - it was in response to this:
    It seems to me that the views expressed in certain posts are pro-Government policy for the sake of it irrespective of what the issue is .. e.g broadcasting charge and LPT. I would have though that even if someone was a Government spokesperson (not saying anyone on here is!) they could admit to flaws, even minor ones, in Govt policy on an anonomous internet forum.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,815 ✭✭✭creedp


    alastair wrote: »
    Not sure why you're confused - it was in response to this:

    My question stands though? Where is the shill and where is the paranoia? In my opinion its a perfectly reasonable statement, obviously others can disagree. I don't this its necessary to call someone a shill or consider their opinions paranoid simply becasue you disagree with what they say.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,309 ✭✭✭✭alastair


    creedp wrote: »
    I am also tired of apologists going on about the fact that the LPT will be 100% spent funding local authorities as if paying more tax via thge LPT will actually provide more funding for local services .. another spinners gold medal .. every € of LPT funding is replacing a previous € of central funding which is now directed to funding the banks, etc. The LPT will not provide 1 cent of additional funding for local services despite what the Govt might claim.

    Of course it will provide more funding for local authorities. They have had Local Government Fund funding cut for a number of years - without this LPT revenue, they would be in a worse situation - it's a reality that central fund cuts would be retained in local services before health or welfare spending. Nobody is claiming that additional services will accrue from this - but it certainly means fewer cancelled services. And again - the percentage of your taxes that go to funding banks is in the tuppenny place compared to servicing existing services and the deficit derived from loans for those services.

    taxbill.jpg

    Monthly-tax-bill.png


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,686 ✭✭✭✭Zubeneschamali


    creedp wrote: »
    In my opinion its a perfectly reasonable statement, obviously others can disagree. I don't this its necessary to call someone a shill or consider their opinions paranoid simply becasue you disagree with what they say.

    No-one called you a shill. You said that certain posters here are less critical of government policy than a paid spokesman would be.

    You actually said people here are worse than shills.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,309 ✭✭✭✭alastair


    creedp wrote: »
    My question stands though? Where is the shill and where is the paranoia? In my opinion its a perfectly reasonable statement, obviously others can disagree. I don't this its necessary to call someone a shill or consider their opinions paranoid simply becasue you disagree with what they say.

    You're accusing posters of shilling for the government (ironically, because you disagree with what they say). That's the paranoia referenced.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,815 ✭✭✭creedp


    No-one called you a shill. You said that certain posters here are less critical of government policy than a paid spokesman would be.

    You actually said people here are worse than shills.


    OK so if I comment on the nature of other people posts I am automatically a shill? If that is the case then I am in good company.


  • Registered Users Posts: 546 ✭✭✭kfk


    creedp wrote: »
    Ah c'mon now .. you couldn't expect the farmers to pay tax on the 'land'. Businesses pay rates, households pay LPT, but farmers pay nothing. I wonder why those advocating the LPT in order to broaden the tax base don't suggest broadening it a little further such that the agri sector contributes a few more bob to the exchequer? Would that be a 'broadening' too far?

    Farmers are not exempt from paying LPT! Also, many farmers have been paying huge water bills for years!


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 14,380 ✭✭✭✭Banjo String


    kfk wrote: »
    Farmers are not exempt from paying LPT! Also, many farmers have been paying huge water bills for years!

    Would these water bills be known as 'rates'?

    Farmers operate from a farm.
    A farm is a business.
    Something that actually does generate an income.

    Farmers get the odd EU grant too don't forget. Hardly all one way traffic now is it.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,686 ✭✭✭✭Zubeneschamali


    creedp wrote: »
    OK so if I comment on the nature of other people posts I am automatically a shill?

    Come on, you're not even reading things before you respond!

    I just said "No-one called you a shill".


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,309 ✭✭✭✭alastair


    creedp wrote: »
    OK so if I comment on the nature of other people posts I am automatically a shill? If that is the case then I am in good company.

    Stunning comprehension fail. :eek:


  • Registered Users Posts: 546 ✭✭✭kfk


    Would these water bills be known as 'rates'?

    Farmers operate from a farm.
    A farm is a business.
    Something that actually does generate an income.

    Farmers get the odd EU grant too don't forget. Hardly all one way traffic now is it.

    No, the water charges are not known as rates. In my area, water charges would usually amount to a lot more than rates.

    I presume you mean farm subsidies? Farmers would be a lot happier to get paid a fair price for their produce rather than receive a small subsidy. The aim of the subsidies is to keep food prices low for the consumer, so in fact these subsidies benefit the consumer and not the farmer.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,786 ✭✭✭slimjimmc


    kfk wrote: »
    No, the water charges are not known as rates. In my area, water charges would usually amount to a lot more than rates.

    I presume you mean farm subsidies? Farmers would be a lot happier to get paid a fair price for their produce rather than receive a small subsidy. The aim of the subsidies is to keep food prices low for the consumer, so in fact these subsidies benefit the consumer and not the farmer.

    Are those huge water charges due to using huge volumes of water which is drawn from a public or group water supply and not from their own private source?


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 14,380 ✭✭✭✭Banjo String


    kfk wrote: »
    No, the water charges are not known as rates. In my area, water charges would usually amount to a lot more than rates.

    I presume you mean farm subsidies? Farmers would be a lot happier to get paid a fair price for their produce rather than receive a small subsidy. The aim of the subsidies is to keep food prices low for the consumer, so in fact these subsidies benefit the consumer and not the farmer.

    I'm not disagreeing with you incidentally.

    Farmers have to pay lpt too, that is correct. They were extremely lucky that it wasn't a site valued tax that was introduced though.

    Ref the water charges. There is no denying a farm is a business. The very nature of a farm means that it will need to consume a high volume of water. Be it to water live stock, cleaning purposes, and general maintenance of the farm. With this comes pollutants to a certain extent t (seepage from silage, slurry and the likes)

    On that basis I think its reasonable to expect the farm to contribute to the resources it's using no doubt about it.

    I was referring to the annual single farm payment grant.
    We know what its intended for. But lots of other countries dont get the same handouts (I'm thjnkinh new Zealand as an eg)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,815 ✭✭✭creedp


    Come on, you're not even reading things before you respond!

    I just said "No-one called you a shill".


    I agree I jumped the gun! Apologies. While I was undoubtedly being ham fisted what I am trying to get at is that every policy has certain flaws such that in an anonomous forum even Govt advisors might have criticisms which is why sometimes I find it unusual when people don't have any such criticisms. Hell that's no better!

    Anyway I am still interested in whether people who are positively disposed to the LPT consider that it could be construed as a policy measure introduced to try and address the overly progressive nature of the IT system which exempts too many low income taxpayers by a Government which made a silly pre-election promise not to increase IT? Or is this complete trot??


  • Technology & Internet Moderators Posts: 28,820 Mod ✭✭✭✭oscarBravo


    creedp wrote: »
    Anyway I am still interested in whether people who are positively disposed to the LPT consider that it could be construed as a policy measure introduced to try and address the overly progressive nature of the IT system which exempts too many low income taxpayers by a Government which made a silly pre-election promise not to increase IT? Or is this complete trot??
    You might not be far wrong. I do think, however, that the bemoaning of the LPT isn't in the ha'penny place compared to the repercussions that would follow from dialing back the progressivity of income tax to saner, more sustainable levels.

    Think about it: FF won election after election by taking ever more workers out of the income tax system. You really think they wouldn't be shameless enough to go to the polls next time with "we took you out of the tax net, FG put you back in it, who you gonna vote for?" Worse, you really think that campaign wouldn't wash with the Irish electorate?


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 8,224 ✭✭✭Going Forward


    creedp wrote: »
    I agree I jumped the gun! Apologies. While I was undoubtedly being ham fisted what I am trying to get at is that every policy has certain flaws such that in an anonomous forum even Govt advisors might have criticisms which is why sometimes I find it unusual when people don't have any such criticisms. Hell that's no better!

    It is seen by supporters as the one single element of our taxation system which was missing, which now completes the perfect wheel, and by that logic I expect it to make an amazing difference to our fortunes, going forward.

    I've said it before and I'll say it again, Kenny and co. would have been far better to dupe the country, if this 500M was so sacrosanct, by flatly refusing to introduce an LPT but at the same time raising it by other means, the range of methods have been suggested on this thread many times.

    And Kenny would not have his very own personal "Read my lips" speech following him around. Lets not forget the Labour's way waffle either.

    The effect would have been to galvanise the electorate by giving some credence to the pre election cross party guff of standing up to the troika etc etc.

    Instead, the country voted and for their troubles got a property tax, from a coalition hell bent on the implementation of the previous government's memorandum of understanding, and watered down versions of transparency and very little actual "change".

    The unnerving thing is that a shill would hardly have the blind enthusiasm displayed here for the LPT, aside from the fact that a shill is not even necessary as the tax is copper fastened anyway:confused:


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,686 ✭✭✭✭Zubeneschamali


    creedp wrote: »
    Anyway I am still interested in whether people who are positively disposed to the LPT consider that it could be construed as a policy measure introduced to try and address the overly progressive nature of the IT system which exempts too many low income taxpayers by a Government which made a silly pre-election promise not to increase IT?

    Yes, I already pointed this out:
    If we just added the 500 mil planned from LPT to income taxes, it would mostly fall on the same very narrow base.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,686 ✭✭✭✭Zubeneschamali


    And Kenny would not have his very own personal "Read my lips" speech following him around.

    I don't like Kenny, I think he's a shallow and rather stupid say-anything politician with no convictions at all. He took over the FG leadership when Noonan got pasted in 2002 for telling the truth, and Kenny has never made that mistake.

    But really, nobody cares about that 20 year old sound-bite now.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 8,224 ✭✭✭Going Forward


    I don't like Kenny, I think he's a shallow and rather stupid say-anything politician with no convictions at all. He took over the FG leadership when Noonan got pasted in 2002 for telling the truth, and Kenny has never made that mistake.

    But really, nobody cares about that 20 year old sound-bite now.

    TBH, I dont think anyone cares what politicians say anymore, period, in part because of this sort of thing!

    But isnt it most ironic that Kenny is the very one out of all the Irish politicians who then proceeded to introduce a home property tax?

    He could have used it to his advantage: "I said it 20 years ago, and I stand by it now"/"Its a long held conviction of mine", etc, etc.etc.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,686 ✭✭✭✭Zubeneschamali


    He could have used it to his advantage: "I said it 20 years ago, and I stand by it now"/"Its a long held conviction of mine", etc, etc.etc.

    Not if he had to break an explicit election pledge on income taxes in order to stand by that old sound-bite.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 8,224 ✭✭✭Going Forward


    Not if he had to break an explicit election pledge on income taxes in order to stand by that old sound-bite.

    A stupid move, particularly when such promises were hardly required for Fine Gael to be successful , as the largest party had already gone into meltdown by then.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,686 ✭✭✭✭Zubeneschamali


    A stupid move, particularly when such promises were hardly required for Fine Gael to be successful , as the largest party had already gone into meltdown by then.

    I agree. They should have promised nothing - "elect us because you need to throw FF out". Then they should have applied a very harsh correction to the finances immediately while people were still blaming FF for everything.

    But Enda didn't consult me :P


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