logo
Keeping student fees down and reducing VAT would cost €3 billion we don't have

Keeping student fees down and reducing VAT would cost €3 billion we don't have

Irish Times13 hours ago
Political decision-making and attention-seeking have morphed into one. Getting attention or avoiding it are old habits – the new normal is that analysis underpinning choices with big consequences too frequently amounts to a calculation about how it affects the news cycle. Its all-pervasiveness means there are no longer good litmus tests for policymaking.
The debate over student fees is an example of the wrong thing for the wrong reason. Another is the threat to again reduce the VAT rate on hospitality businesses to 9 per cent, down from 13.5 per cent. Minister for Higher Education
James Lawless
spoke the truth when he said that the €1,000 reduction in student fees was a once-off measure, funded by a cost-of-living package that would not be repeated. The Tánaiste and Fine Gael
Simon Harris
leader jumped in feet-first, made a big issue of it, and insisted that fees would be reduced. But reduced from what? The €3,000 they were before the series of 'once-off' reductions, or the €2,000 they were last year? The sustainability of third-level funding was not allowed to cloud the issue. A spat was started, and the spotlight was on.
Manufacturing difference and reducing students fees would cost €100 million per year. Bringing VAT down again to 9 per cent for the hospitality sector would cost €734 million. Cumulatively that is more than €3 billion cut out of the tax base in the remaining life of the Government.
That is big money in a country with only three sources of tax large enough to make any real difference – income tax, corporation tax and VAT. Just days away from learning what the next turn in the
Donald Trump
tariff saga will be, we are being egged on to slash a dangerously narrow tax base further. It is only weeks since the International Monetary Fund
described our fiscal position
as 'highly exposed to external policy shifts and shocks' and recommended 'broadening the tax base through VAT, property tax and personal income tax reforms'.
READ MORE
The
Department of Finance
's Tax Strategy Group in its report on VAT last July pointed out that the EU Commission, the OECD and others such as the Commission for Taxation and Welfare recommended broadening the VAT base and narrowing the scope of reduced rates to stabilise VAT revenues. The Commission for Taxation and Welfare proposed widening the VAT base and limiting the use of zero and reduced rates of VAT. There is no requirement, it said, for a business to pass on any VAT reduction to the consumer at reduced prices.
When the State spent €1.2 billion on the last VAT reduction for the hospitality sector it went into the pockets of proprietors, not customers. To repeat the dose would, in the opinion of the Tax Strategy Group, constitute 'an enormous fiscal transfer of taxpayers' money to the sector which the evidence available at present does not support'.
To add to the dreary nonsense of experts who don't have to get elected, or even get on the news, on Monday the governor of the
Central Bank
reiterated warnings about the narrowness of the income tax and VAT base. He specifically warned against the widespread application of reduced and zero rates to a variety of goods and services.
In a digital era where attention is currency, and clicks shape policy, the frenetic pursuit of the spotlight passes for political expertise. In fact, it's a downward spiral where good money and credibility are thrown away in the false hope of electoral approval for bad policies. The remark of the wily Luxembourg politician Jean-Claude Juncker that 'we all know what to do, but we don't know how to get re-elected once we have done it' has become a backstop for time servers. Their own supposed expertise in getting elected is the real nonsense.
Fine Gael
chased the crowd and lost badly in three elections. It is in Government with an apathetic Fianna Fáil because time and again the opposition, principally Sinn Féin, failed to persuade people they are up to the job. They have not only lost their way; they have also lost the compass.
The problem is not that the Government parties can't do economics, they can't do politics. They have neither the backbone nor the bandwidth to carry the arguments they once believed in but now hardly remember. It is a measure of how far Ireland has come that the power of the publicans has passed intact to restaurateurs and hairdressers. That is progress indeed.
Days before Trump rolls the dice on
tariffs
again, big chunks of our tax base are blithely gambled on in pursuit of the approbation of a grasping and politically unreliable middle class.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

European shares dip ahead of US tariffs
European shares dip ahead of US tariffs

Irish Times

time44 minutes ago

  • Irish Times

European shares dip ahead of US tariffs

European shares ended lower on Friday as losses in banks and mining-related stocks weighed, with focus now shifting to the July 9th deadline for trading partners to reach a deal with the United States. US President Donald Trump said Washington will start sending letters with tariff rates to countries on Friday, subduing markets globally. With Trump's 90-day pause on higher US tariffs ending next week, investors have taken a cautious stance as several large trading partners, including the European Union (EU), are yet to secure trade deals. Dublin The Irish index of shares closed the week marginally lower, falling 0.33 per cent to end the week at 11,320. READ MORE The main banking stocks edged lower, mirroring the decline in the wider market and trends elsewhere in Europe. AIB was just under half a per cent lower by the end of the day, clawing its way back to €6.82 after hitting a low of €6.82 early in the session. Bank of Ireland was down 0.37 per cent, after an early high of €12.22 dipped to a €12.04 low, settling down at €12.12. Permanent TSB ended the day up almost 1 per cent, but volumes were thin in comparison. Food groups Kerry and Glanbia were both off, with the latter down 0.39 per cent and the former shedding 0.16 per cent. Shares in insulation specialist Kingspan were marginally higher, gaining back some of the ground it lost on Thursday, ending the day at €70.90. Hotel group Dalata Hotel shed 0.15 per cent over the day, and airline Ryanair fell 0.55 per cent. The airline has been hampered by strike action among French air traffic controllers over the past two days, leading to the cancellation of more than 400 flights. London London's main stock indexes closed mixed on Friday, with investors assessing domestic fiscal worries and the rate cut path. The blue-chip FTSE 100 was unchanged on the day but notched up a second weekly gain, while the domestically-focused FTSE 250 lost 0.7 per cent on Friday and ended the week lower. Home builder stocks led sectoral losses on Friday, dropping 2.1 per cent after MJ Gleeson warned of profit being at the lower end of market expectations for fiscal 2026 due to subdued demand. The group slumped 6.7 per cent and was the top decliner on the smallcap index. Larger peers Vistry, Persimmon and Taylor Wimpey fell 2.8 per cent, 1.3 per cent and 1.6 per cent, respectively. Industrial metal stocks fell, tracking lower metal prices. Anglo American, Antofagasta and Glencore slipped more than 1 per cent each. Atalya lost 3 per cent. Among individual stocks, greeting card and gifting retailer Moonpig fell 8.7 per cent to the bottom of the midcap index after a rating downgrade by Deutsche Bank. Europe The pan-European STOXX 600 index closed 0.5 per cent lower, clocking a marginal weekly fall. Other regional indexes also declined, with Germany's DAX down 0.6 per cent and France's CAC 40 losing 0.8 per cent. Spain's benchmark lagged with a 1.5 per cent fall. Euro zone banks slid 1,3 per cent, with Spain's BBVA topping declines at a 2.6 per cent fall. Helping limit losses, healthcare advanced 1.1 per cent. Drugmakers Novartis, Roche and Novo Nordisk – some of the biggest weights on the STOXX 600 – all clocked gains. Shares of French spirits makers Pernod Ricard, Remy Cointreau and LVMH – the owner of Hennessy – all finished well off their session lows after China spared major cognac producers from new duties on EU brandy, provided they sell at a minimum price. Despite a roaring start to the year, European shares fell behind the US S&P 500 on year-to-date basis on Friday, driven dominantly by tech shares. The STOXX 600 was last up 6.6 per cent for 2025, compared with the 6.7 per cent advance for the S&P 500. Among individual stocks, Germany's Rheinmetall advanced 3.3 per cent after JP Morgan and Deutsche Bank raised their price targets on the defence contractor. New York The US markets were closed due to the July 4th holiday.

‘Absolutely not' – Ryanair boss Michael O'Leary rules out Irish Presidency bid but backs ‘terrific' contender for Aras
‘Absolutely not' – Ryanair boss Michael O'Leary rules out Irish Presidency bid but backs ‘terrific' contender for Aras

The Irish Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Irish Sun

‘Absolutely not' – Ryanair boss Michael O'Leary rules out Irish Presidency bid but backs ‘terrific' contender for Aras

RYANAIR boss Michael O'Leary has ruled out trying to land the Presidency and has instead thrown his weight behind Fine Gael's Mairead McGuinness in the race to the Aras. The election to replace The date for Asked if he fancied a tilt at the Aras, O'Leary told 'So I wish well whoever decides to run for President but it sure as hell won't be me.' Read more in News However, the motormouth airline CEO is backing former The ex- The hugely popular former Party figures say McGuinness has been openly courting the candidacy and she has made several media appearances in recent months in a bid to keep her name in the conversation. Most read in The Irish Sun Ryanair boss O'Leary said: 'If Mairead McGuinness ran for President I would be happy to endorse her. 'I think she's been a terrific success on the European stage both as an MEP and Vice President of the CAMPAIGN CLANGER O'Leary previously propelled Fine Gael into the headlines for the wrong reasons the last time he endorsed one of their candidates. In the general election last year, he launched Westmeath TD Peter Burke's campaign and made a gag about there being too many teachers in the Despite this, Burke topped the poll and was appointed Minister for Enterprise again in the new coalition. Meanwhile, Aontu leader Paedar Toibin today revealed that his party are considering backing a candidate and they have held talks with several potential runners. The 1 Ryanair boss Michael O'Leary has ruled out trying to land the Presidency Credit: Reuters

DCC gives permission for Clonskeagh student housing
DCC gives permission for Clonskeagh student housing

Irish Times

timean hour ago

  • Irish Times

DCC gives permission for Clonskeagh student housing

Dublin City Council has given the go-ahead to a Bain Capital backed firm to build student housing at the former Smurfit Paper Mills site at Clonskeagh in Dublin 6. The council has granted planning permission to Bain Capital vehicle, Harley Issuer DAC to construct 439 bed spaces across five blocks from one storey to part seven storeys along with 16 residential apartments. The Large Scale Residential Development (LRD) also includes the extension and renovation of 14 existing residential dwellings at Clonskeagh Road. The planning authority has granted planning permission despite opposition from some local residents and River Dodder anglers. READ MORE In the 38 page Council planner's report recommending that planning permission be granted it stated that 'the application site is a vacant brownfield site. The proposed development for Purpose Built Student Accommodation (PBSA) and residential development will make efficient use of this underutilised site.' The planned scheme is 1km northwest of UCD's main campus at Belfield and in lodging the Purpose Built Student Accommodation (PBSA) plans the firm is looking to tap into the lucrative market of student accommodation provision in south Dublin. The 2023/2024 annual report by UCD – the market leader in the south Dublin sector – shows it generated €42.8 million in 'rental income from student residences on campus' in the 12 months to the end of September last. In an objection against the scheme, the Dodder Anglers Association, which represents over 1,300 members, said it is very concerned the proposals 'could damage the biodiversity of River Dodder green/blue corridor and are in breach with Dublin city councils biodiversity action plan as well as the EU habitats direct and water Framework Directive'. However, in the council planner's report, it stated that 'the proposed removal of a proportion of the existing sluice gates in combination with a series of river bed grade control structures will facilitate indigenous fish passage of key species and age classes over a range of flow rates at the existing historical weir'. On behalf of the Eglinton Residents Association, Robin Mandal hit out at what he believes to be 'a proposed gross over-development of this sensitive site'. Mr Mandal told the Council: 'we believe that the proposed development would constitute over-development of the site by virtue of its height, scale, bulk and massing at this sensitive and highly visible and sensitive site on the banks of the River Dodder Mr Mandal said that the former Smurfit Paper Mills site 'has remained vacant and unused for more than 20 years'.

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