|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Ireland
Irish budget hands millions of euros to business
By Niall Green
11 December 2003
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
In his seventh budget as Minister of Finance, Charlie McCreevy
continued the Fianna Fail/Progressive Democrat coalition governments
policy of offering tax breaks to big business while starving public
services of investment. Increases in indirect taxation, which
hit the poor hardest, have also been announced.
Transnational corporations and the construction industry were
the main beneficiaries of the budget, presented with tax breaks
worth hundreds of millions of euros over the next five years.
McCreevy announced a new tax credit that would shave 20 percent
of the costs of research and development off the corporation tax
bills of companies. The government estimates that the credit will
provide an average annual windfall of 90 million euros to business
over the next five years.
The tax break was welcomed by the American Chamber of Commerce,
whose chief executive, Joanne Richardson, said, This is
a bold move which will greatly assist multinational companies
based in Ireland to attract R&D [research and development]
investment from their global corporations.
The United States is the single largest foreign investor in
the country and American-based companies employ 90,000 Irish workers.
Almost 25 percent of all US investment into the European Union
goes to the Republic of Ireland.
Also set to benefit is the construction sector. Currently one
of the few flourishing areas of the Irish economy, construction
was handed a raft of ten tax relief schemes that could save building
firms around 100 million euros in the coming year. Currently the
government spends 1.7 billion euros annually on allowances and
incentives to business.
In a move partly aimed at increasing the popularity of the
government in the counties outside Dublin, the finance minister
announced the redistribution of over 10,000 civil service jobs
from the capital to small towns across the country. Civil servants
affected are generally opposed to their forced relocation. When
representatives of the four main civil service unions inquired
about compensation packages for relocated workers the minister
in charge of the project, Tom Parlon, told them that they would
get short shrift. The government, on the other hand,
is likely to do very nicely out of the move, vacating expensive
rented premises in Dublin and selling off some of its own city
centre buildings.
In areas earmarked for relocated government departments, house
prices have seen significant increases, worsening the shortage
of affordable housing in the provinces. With little public money
allocated to fund public housing schemes and a highly inflated
property market in the Greater Dublin area (which is unlikely
to be dented by the exodus of civil servants), thousands of young
Irish workers cannot afford a mortgage on even a modest home.
While offering some modest increases in the state old age pension
and social welfare payments, the budget has perpetuated the starvation
of funds to vital public services such as schools, hospitals,
housing and public transport. As was the case with last years
budget public spending on the health service falls below the rate
of medical inflation. Several hospitals across the Republic are
faced with cuts or closure.
The budgets announcement of hikes in indirect taxes will
shift the burden of taxation even further towards low and middle-income
earners. Petrol and diesel duties were increased by five cents
a litre. The fuel price increases will add an average of 125 euros
per year to motorists costs on top of a five- percent increase
in car registration tax announced last month. VAT on cigarettes
also went up.
Targeting middle income earners, the PRSI (Pay Related Social
Insurance) scheme has been broadened to take deductions from those
earning up to 42,500 euros. PRSI is not deducted from those earning
more than this amount, meaning that the wealthiest people pay
a relatively tiny proportion of their incomes into the scheme.
In another policy tailored to the interests of business McCreevy
announced that the number of Public Private Partnership (PPP)
agreements would be increased. PPPs allow the private sector
to construct and/or operate public institutions such as schools
and hospitals in return for an annual fee. Currently three percent
of total public investment is undertaken by the private sector,
a figure to be increased to 15 percent by 2008.
McCreevy was responding to economic commentators who have bemoaned
the low number of PPP contracts handed out and who have warned
that Irish capital was starting to flow into the United Kingdom
to take advantage of the many lucrative PPP projects that the
New Labour government has initiated there.
Handouts to big businessthe basis of this budgethave
been the hallmark of Irish economic policy over the past decade.
During the 1990s government subsidies and tax breaks played a
crucial role in securing internationalprimarily USinvestment.
The standard corporation tax rate was reduced from 50 percent
in 1988 to just 12.5 percent at the start of 2003.
Throughout the period of high growth and super profits for
corporations and wealthy individuals the position of the Irish
working class stagnated. While unemployment fell and average wages
increased the low tax and low wage environment offered to multinationals
ensured that the Republic of Irelands public services remained
starved, indirect taxation rocketed and social inequality deepened.
Today the so-called Celtic Tiger is struggling to
sustain the growth rates of the past decade. Since 2000 the countrys
annual GDP growth has weakened (although it is still above the
EU average). The Allied Irish Bank has estimated that this years
GDP growth will be around two percent.
With multinational firms increasingly relying on wringing out
productivity increases from workers and demanding tax cuts from
governments in order to sustain profitability, the government
in Dublin has responded by stepping up the transfer of wealth
from the working class to big business.
See Also:
Irish government prepares
airport and transport privatisation
[30 July 2003]
Ireland: Health care cuts claim
childs life
[11 July 2003]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |