
24September/October 2015
In Ireland, the unemployment rate currently stands at .%,
with a target to reduce this to .% by . While the unem-
ployment statistics are moving in the right direction, Ireland
still has one of the highest rates of jobless households in the EU,
with almost one quarter of household (%) falling under this
category.
The quality of the jobs is just as important. Policy needs to
reverse the growth in precarious work, including zero-hour con-
tracts and workers being forced to register themselves as being
self-employed to get work, when in fact they should be
employees.
According to the NESC Report, ‘Jobless Households: An Explo-
ration of the Issues ()’[, the emphasis on participation and
activation must extend beyond those on the Live Register and
those classified as long-term unemployed. Improved services
are required in the areas of adult literacy, child development,
family supports, addiction, disability, housing, education
and training, public employment and community employ-
ment. All of this requires significant public investment.
In the area of pay: Ireland’s recently increased minimum
wage of €9.15 falls far short of the Living Wage of €11.50.
However, the establishment
of a Low Pay Commission is
an important institutional
development. Closing the
income gap requires meas-
ures to reverse the trend of
top earners taking the grow-
ing portion of the income pie.
Over a year period (
– ) the top % share of
income has increased from
.% to .%, while the share
of the top % has increased
from .% to %.
In the area of ownership and
transmission of wealth, Atkin-
son’s proposals include:
creating a sovereign wealth
fund to build up the state’s
net worth – the establish-
ment of the Irish Strategic
Investment Fund is a modest start in this regard; introduc-
ing a distributional dimension into competition policy e.g.
taking account of the impact of mergers and acquisitions on
employment – Aer Lingus is a case in point; and putting a legal
framework in place that allows trade unions to represent work-
ers on equal terms in corporate decision-making.
In general, the relentless drive for profit maximisation is a key
feature of the ‘shareholder model’, which is the dominant corpo-
rate structure. There is a need for more democracy in public and
private enterprises.
A shift in decision-making power is needed from a small
minority of corporate shareholders, whose focus tends to be on
short-term profit maximisation, to a larger majority of public
and private stakeholders, who are more likely to take a balanced
and longer-term view of maintaining a viable business while also
taking other factors, such as employment and the environment
into consideration.
Taxation is the key mechanism through which wealth and
income is redistributed. Inheritance tax, capital gains tax and
taxing income from capital/wealth in the same way as earned
income all have a role to play. The introduction of a minimum effective tax
rate for wealthy individuals and large corporations in Budget would
be a step in the right direction towards narrowing the income gap and
improving the redistributional effectiveness of the tax system.
Anthony Atkinson’s book clearly demonstrates what can be done to
reduce income inequality. The Irish budget plays a key role in creating the
conditions for reducing or increasing income inequality. The choices made
will indicate the importance the government gives to equality and, so far, it
is not looking good when compared to Atkinson’s proposals. •
OPINION Sinéad Pentony
Increase the marginal
rate of taxation, with
a top rate of 65%;
increase inheritance tax;
introduce property tax
(where it doesn’t exist);
substantially increasing
child benefit and tax it as
income; increase social
insurance or introduce a
basic income
“
Atkinson’s Recommendations
Taxation
• Return to a more progressive rate structure for the income tax, with
increasing marginal rates of tax up to a top rate of 65 per cent,
accompanied by a broadening of the tax base.
• Introduce into personal income tax an Earned Income Discount,
limited to the first tranche of earnings.
• Change Inheritance Tax from [in the UK] a tax on giving to a tax on
receiving, with a progressive lifetime capital receipts tax.
• Council Tax [in the UK] to be replaced by a proportional property tax
based on up-to-date property assessments.
Spending
• Child benet should be paid for all children at a substantially higher
rate, and taxed as income.
• A participation (citizen’s) income should be introduced,
complementing existing social protection, with the prospect of an
EU-wide child basic income.
• OR Restore social insurance to reduce dependence on means-tested
benefits.
• Rich countries should raise their target for Ocial Development
Assistance to 1 per cent of Gross National Income.
Employment and Wages
• The government should adopt an explicit target for reducing
unemployment, and offer guaranteed public employment.
• There should be a national pay policy: with the minimum wage set at
the Living Wage, and a code of practice for pay above the minimum.
• The direction of technological change should be an explicit concern
of policy-makers, encouraging innovation in a form that increases
the employability of workers, emphasising the human dimension of
service provision.
Capital and Wealth
• (a) Introduce a distributional dimension into competition policy,
(b) ensure a legal framework that allows trade unions to represent
workers on level terms, and
(c) establish a Social and Economic Council.
• The government should oer via national savings bonds a
guaranteed positive real rate of interest on savings, with a maximum
holding per person.
• There should be a capital endowment (minimum inheritance) paid to
all at adulthood.
• Creation of a public Investment Authority, operating a sovereign
wealth fund to build up the state net worth.