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Quick analysis and highlights

Bob Tallent

The Synergy Group

December 2012


 

I’m one of those people who sees the glass as being half full.  Instinctively, I find ways around things and the means to make things happen.  Yet, I’m looking at our recent budgets and am trying to find the way through the mess.  I’m old enough to remember the Halls Pictorial Weekly programmes in the ‘70’s depicting our minister of the day as Richie Ruin.  How are our present Ministers to be remembered?

Our Government has delivered our new 2012 budgets over 2 days on 5th and 6th December 2011.  Our 2 ministers delivered their budgets in order to achieve €3.8bn fiscal adjustment in 2012.  Minister for Public Expenditure and Reform Brendan Howlin delivered his own cuts in the public service and Minister for Finance Michael Noonan announced details of €1.6bn in tax increases and extra charges in the second part of the 2012 Budget.

Let me give you some good news first:

The highlights:

 

Budget 2012 – Key Figures

Minister Howlin’s part was:

Health

Social

Education

Reform

Minister Noonan’s part was:

Persons under the age of 70. Annual Income

Rate

Total income under €10,036

0%

First €10,036

2%

€10,037 - €16,016

4%

Over €16,016

7%

Over €100,000 (self assessed income only)

10%

A little detail:

-          He will introduce a Special Assignee Relief Programme, which will allow multinational and indigenous companies to attract key people to Ireland so as to create more jobs and to facilitate the development and expansion of businesses in Ireland.

-          A special allocation will be made in the Revised Estimates Volume early in the New Year in relation to The Gathering in 2013 and it will be launched on St Patrick's Day.

-          Marginal rate of taxation on income is now 53% for PAYE workers and 55% for the self-employed.

-          The top 5% of earners pay 44% of income tax according to Revenue records.

-          Allowing farmers a double income tax deduction for increased costs arising from the change in carbon tax.

-          Full measures already announced account for €600m; announcing additional new tax measures today worth €1bn approximately.

-          Modifying retirement relief from Capital Gains Tax so it better incentivises the timely transfers of farms and businesses before the current owners reach the age of 66.

-          50% stock relief for all registered farm partnerships and 100% stock relief for certain young trained farmers forming such partnerships.

 

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