logo
Middle class parents are the winners in third-level fee cut. That's why Fine Gael don't want to touch it

Middle class parents are the winners in third-level fee cut. That's why Fine Gael don't want to touch it

Irish Times10 hours ago
When the
Nobel Prize
winning
US
economist Milton Friedman – who was much admired by Ronald Regan and Margaret Thatcher – remarked that 'nothing is so permanent as a temporary Government programme' he most certainly didn't have the Irish higher education grant system in mind.
But the kerfuffle over the suggestion that the €1,000 reduction in the '
student
contribution'
towards third-level fees may be axed
looks set to prove him right once again.
Introduced in Budget 2022 as part of a
cost-of-living
package, the temporary measure reappeared in the following two budgets and the expectation was that it would also feature in next year's budget, the details of which will which be announced in October.
That would certainly seem to be the view of
Simon Harris
, leader of junior Coalition partner Fine Gael, who has thrown shade on the suggestion at the weekend by the Minster for Higher Education, Fianna Fáil's James Lawless, that the measure would not feature next year. Harris – who introduced the cut when he was doing Lawless's job – remarked somewhat elliptically that we will 'see where the Budget brings us'.
READ MORE
The issue will no doubt provide much political sport over the dog days of summer but what is not up for debate is that the arguments for its retention are electoral rather than economic.
[
Third-level fees: No funding earmarked to avoid the €1,000 hike this year, Taoiseach says
Opens in new window
]
The main beneficiaries of the cut are middle-class, higher-income voters. The €1,000 reduction has little impact on the ability of students from lower-income families to access third level education.
There are roughly 250,000 third level students and around a quarter of them get a grant. There are various levels of grant ranging from the full package (covering the costs of accommodation, living and student contribution) to grants covering part of the student contribution. The income thresholds for the various levels go from €27,400 for the full package to €136,000 for the minimum grant. Roughly two-thirds of recipients are on the full grant.
The Department of Education says students from families earning less than €55,924 will not have to pay the student contribution this year.
Defining what constitutes the middle class in contemporary Ireland is not straightforward. In many ways, it's more a state of mind than an income bracket. However, the think tank Social Justice Ireland (SJI) reckons that a middle-income earner is someone on between €40,000 and €100,000 a year.
If you accept the SJI categorisation, then all students from lower-income families should get their student contribution covered. Likewise, a fair chunk of the bottom half of the middle-income bracket get all or some of it covered.
The real winners from the across-the-board reduction in student contribution are those at the top end of the middle-income bracket and the lower end of the high-income bracket. They are the Irish middle class. And they were undoubtedly feeling the pressure as inflation and energy prices soared in 2022. The cut in the student contribution would have made a significant difference to many families back then, but inflation has abated, wages have gone up and people have adapted.
The reduction costs the exchequer almost €100 million a year, which is roughly a quarter of what the Government spends on third level student supports such as grants. If the policy of this Government is – as stated in its programme for Government – 'fair and equal access to quality further and higher education regardless of socioeconomic status, ability or geographical location' a hallmark of its time in office, then it is a no -brainer that the €100 million should now be used to increase the size of grants and raise the income thresholds.
It is not that simple, of course. More than half of Irish income tax is paid by the top 10 per cent of earners, who take home more than €100,000 a year, says the parliamentary budget office, which crunches the numbers for Oireachtas members.
It is an unbalanced and unstable system, as we saw in the 2008 crash when income tax revenues evaporated, but it keeps the economy competitive.
The impact of the lopsided levying of income tax is felt most by those who earn just over €100,000. They may earn a lot, but they also pay a lot of tax and can struggle to fulfil the conventional aspirations of middle-class life such as higher education for their offspring.
There are a couple of carrots thrown our way, including child benefit – which is not means tested – and a heavily subsidised private education system which sees the State pay teachers' salaries at elite private schools. There are also generous allowances to ensure that we can pass on our wealth – mostly in the form of the family home – to our children. All of which are political no-go areas.
The real problem for the Government is that the temporary reduction in college fees seems to have become part of this unwritten social contract with the middle class. Changing it will come at a political price.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ulster Bank begins refunding overcharged customers
Ulster Bank begins refunding overcharged customers

Irish Times

timean hour ago

  • Irish Times

Ulster Bank begins refunding overcharged customers

Ulster Bank has started to refund mortgage customers who were overcharged due to errors in the application of interest to their accounts. The lender, which returned its banking licence to the Central Bank recently, has written to affected customers, setting out the refunds to which they are entitled. It is understood that some 90,000 mortgage accounts were affected by the errors. The mortgages are now held by AIB, PTSB and vulture funds after the NatWest-owned lender sold its loan books in advance of its exit from the Republic, which it announced in 2021. A spokesman for Ulydien DAC, Ulster Bank's remaining Irish entity, said it is writing to customers who may have been impacted by the errors. READ MORE 'Contact has been under way to provide a detailed explanation of the issue, the corrective actions being taken and the specifics of the payments to each customer,' he said. 'Ulydien is working closely with all financial institutions who have purchased and/or are servicers of Ulydien mortgage portfolios to rectify the matter. The payment that is being made to customers ensures that no current or former customer is out of pocket as a result of this issue.' How the wealthy are buying up land to avoid inheritance tax Listen | 22:03 Ulydien, which is continuing to function in the State as a retail credit firm, confirmed late last month that it had handed back its banking licence after 165 years in the Republic. The Central Bank last year authorised the new subsidiary to act as a service company over a trust set up to hold unclaimed funds of former customers' closed accounts and products, according to its latest annual report. Migration of these funds to the trust ensures that unclaimed customer balances are safeguarded and available to beneficial owners should they seek to reclaim them in the future, the report said. Unclaimed funds of less than €100 in individual accounts were given to charity, though the owners retain a right to reclaim their money.

Redundancies at Romero Games after project funding cancelled
Redundancies at Romero Games after project funding cancelled

Irish Times

time2 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Redundancies at Romero Games after project funding cancelled

About 100 jobs are to be lost after Galway based developer Romero Games lost funding for a major project. The news is widely reported to be linked to cuts this week at Microsoft which this week announced some 9,000 job losses worldwide, a move that is understood to have had significant repercussions for its Xbox operation and the funding of a number of its projects. Company filings indicate Romero Games, which was founded in 2014 by award winning developer John Romero and Brenda Romero, employed 42 people, including its directors, at the end of last year but the company website suggests it has over 100 developers on its books. Various postings on LinkedIn on Friday suggested all had been let go while the company told The Irish Times said it was 'evaluating a number of alternative options for the game' at the heart of the funding cut. READ MORE In a social media post on Thursday morning, Brenda Romero said the company had learned on Wednesday evening that 'our publisher has cancelled funding for our game along with several other unannounced projects at other studios'. 'This was a strategic decision made at a high level within the studio, well above our visibility or control. We deeply wish there had been something, anything, we could have done to prevent the outcome.' [ Microsoft to cut some Irish jobs in global cost-reduction push Opens in new window ] She said the decision had been made despite the company meeting all of its targets and 'consistently received high praise' for the work completed on the project. She said the founders were 'heartbroken' by the news and said they were supporting employees trying to find new jobs. Though the company, which is known for its highly successful first person shooter (FPS) games, suggested it was not in a position to name the funder which had withdrawn support due to a confidentiality agreement, it was reported by industry figures writing on social media and trade press to be Xbox. How the wealthy are buying up land to avoid inheritance tax Listen | 22:03 Not all of the jobs being lost appeared to be based in Ireland, the company indicates on its website that it is open to employees working remotely and some of those posting on LinkedIn about having been let go, appeared to be based abroad but some of the redundancies do appear to be local. The company did not clarify the precise number of roles involved when asked but the Financial Services Union (FSU), which has members in the sector through its Game Workers Unite Ireland branch, put the figure at up to 100 when subcontractors were included. The game development sector has grown hugely over the past decade but the FSU said earlier this week that lay-offs were becoming an increasingly regular feature although the scale of scale of the cuts at Xbox, which had purchased a number of major developers in recent years, seemed to come as a surprise for of those impacted this week.

Irish rents rise by 115% since 2010, more than four times EU average
Irish rents rise by 115% since 2010, more than four times EU average

Irish Times

time3 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Irish rents rise by 115% since 2010, more than four times EU average

Average rents in Ireland rose by 115 per cent between 2010 and 2025, according to new figures from Eurostat. The cumulative increase was more than four times the European Union (EU) average (27.8 per cent). Eurostat said rents increased in 26 EU countries between the first quarter of 2010 and the first quarter of 2025, with the highest increases registered in Estonia (220 per cent), Lithuania (184 per cent), Hungary (124 per cent) and Ireland (115 per cent). Greece was the only country where rent prices decreased (-11 per cent). READ MORE Eurostat also assessed the changes in house prices over the same 15-year period. Average prices in Ireland were found to have risen by just over 80 per cent compared to an EU average of 57.9 per cent. [ Private rental sector has lost more than 43,000 properties over past five years Opens in new window ] The figures show Irish house price have been on something of a rollercoaster since the depths of the financial crisis in 2010 when they fell by 12.5 per cent. That was followed by declines of 17.8 per cent, 14.7 per cent and 0.5 per cent in 2011, 2012 and 2013. However, they rebounded in 2014, rising by 15.2 per cent and rose every year, barring 2023, since. How the wealthy are buying up land to avoid inheritance tax Listen | 22:03 When comparing the first quarter of 2025 with 2010, house prices increased more than rents in 21 of the 26 EU countries for which data are available, Eurostat said. They more than tripled in Hungary (260 per cent) and Estonia (238 per cent) and doubled or more than doubled in nine EU countries: Lithuania (194 per cent), Latvia (154 per cent), Czechia (147 per cent), Portugal (130 per cent), Bulgaria (125 per cent), Austria (113 per cent), Luxembourg and Poland (both 102 per cent) and Slovakia (100 per cent). [ Landlords rail against rent control reforms Opens in new window ] Italy was the only country where house prices decreased, falling 4 per cent. Eurostat noted that house prices and rents in the EU followed a similar pattern between 2010 and the second quarter of 2011 'but have since evolved differently'. 'While rents have increased steadily, house prices have followed a more variable pattern, showing a staggering increase between Q1 2015 and Q3 2022, followed by a small drop and stabilisation, before increasing again since 2024,' it said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store