1 2 September 2016
EU Commissions ruling merely highlights
that economics-fetishising Ireland is not
focused on social, environmental, cultural
or transparency agendas
by Michael Smith
26%
me arse thanks,
Apple
NEWS
September 2016 1 3
I
rish politics insincerely enmires itself in the need
for joined-up thinking, that ubiquitous cliché. But
it skirts around the best place for it: amalgamating
our erratic but once again soaring economic genius
with other more real agendas - making sure we
pursue ends and not just means, that we advance
social, environmental, cultural and transparency agen-
das. Quality of Life. Not just GDP, which measures,
according to Bobby Kennedy, “everything except that
which makes life worthwhile”.
Once in a while we get an insight into where our poli-
ticians stand on the economy and society. For example,
Enda Kennys principal vision is to make Ireland the best
little country in the world in which to do business.
That’s shocking dereliction for a countrys chief
visionmaker.
The only “absolute red line” issue in 2010 for the Min-
ister for Finance, Brian Lenihan, in international talks
about Irelands banking bailout was retaining Ireland’s
Corporation Tax Rate of 12.5%. Then-Tánaiste Mary
Coughlan confirmed it was “non-negotiable”.
Similarly tax credits for research and Irelands 12.5
per cent corporation tax rate, were among the “red line
issues” for Ireland outlined by the Minister for Finance
Michael Noonan to an EU committee on taxation that
visited Dublin last year after the LuxLeaks tax-avoid-
ance scandal.
It is clear that petty red lines flow in the blood of most
of our inestimably unimaginative leaders.
Not once has a government minister asserted that
social-welfare rates, income inequality, Traveller wel-
fare or quality-of-life indicators were any sort of red-line
factor. It’s always wheedling businesses and its horri-
ble corporation-tax rates.
Sometimes we see deference to corporations and
multinationals in a broader vista. There was Michael
Noonan’s ludicrous slurpings over a bovine Donald
Trump on a red carpet at Shannon on the promise of
some golf dollars to the peasants in Doonbeg. There’s
the silence on Shannon rendition flights since ethical
objections to the warfare and kidnappings effected by
transient US troops using the airport as a base risk
attracting a spoonful of disapproval from our friends in
the headquarters of capitalism. There is our longstand-
ing deference to international pharma and the
inflationary effect this has on Irish medical costs,
because many of its purveyors have their EU headquar-
ters in Ireland.
But the most Orwellian moment in the history of tax
and the relationship between corporations and govern-
ments everywhere came at the end of August, courtesy
of the EU Commission’s ruling on Apple’s tax liabilities
to Ireland. It was pure Myles na Gopaleen.
The EU Commission of course dramatically ruled
against Apple, whose EU headquarters employing 6000
people is Cork. Apple paid an effective rate of tax on its
earnings in 2014 of 0.005% (not much). It has pulled off
the scam by filching profits into a special 'stateless
company' with its headquarters in Ireland. Apple paid
the standard 12.5pc corporate tax on its Irish earnings
– indeed it is our biggest taxpayer – but it contrived
simply not to earn much in Ireland.
"The profits did not have any factual or economic jus
-
tification. The “head office” had no employees, no
premises and no real activities," said Margrethe
Vestager, the EU spoilsport competition chief.
Paul Ryan, speaker of the US House of Representa-
tives – admittedly not the smartest guide, claimed:
This is precisely the kind of unpredictable and heavy-
handed taxation that kills jobs and opportunity.
Moving sharply to contradict himself he then pontifi-
cated: “Above all, this is yet another reason why we
need to fix our tax code. We need more American com-
panies to invest their money and create jobs right here
in the United States. Today’s decision should be a spur
to action.
Perhaps indeed it should. But you'd think even Paul
Ryan would know that the action should be for people,
not for corporations.
The mishmash of national rules and bilateral treaties
that determine how much tax companies owe, and to
whom, is egregiously dated. It was designed for the
manufacturing age. Business today is increasingly digi-
tal, services-based and driven by intangible assets,
including rights to exploit intellectual property, from
patents to logos. These are easier than physical assets
to shift from subsidiaries in high-tax countries to those
in low-tax ones. Hence the relentless rise of tax plan-
ning as a fundament of multinationals’ greedball
business plans. The OECD conservatively reckons that
the resulting revenue losses to national exchequers
have grown to as much as $240 billion a year, or 10%
of global corporate income tax. The ethics of this are
revolting.
The growth of the likes of Apple, the world’s biggest
company by capitalisation, is at the expense of ordinary
people whose countries forego the benefits of equita-
bly taxing them. The US’s 500 largest firms hold more
Enda Kenny’s principal vision is
to make Ireland the best little
country in the world in which to
do business. That’s shocking
dereliction for a country’s chief
visionmaker.
Slurping
1 4 September 2016
than $2tr in profits offshore. Its tax laws
encourage this, because – to facilitate Ameri-
can corporate colonialism - profits its
companies make abroad are taxable in America
only when repatriated. Unless Donald Trump
comes to town.
Anyway the Commission wants Apple – with
perhaps (many) others to follow - to reimburse
Ireland for unpaid taxes of €13bn, plus interest
that might amount to another €6bn. That's
€2,600-€4,000 per head of population: far
more to the poor if equitably distributed.
This could change the country, beleaguered
after nearly a decade of austerity. It could take
a chunk off the national debt, which now stands
at €200 billion. It could pay a few years of the
Universal Social Charge (USC) which brings in
around €4bn a year annually.
It could put a rocket under the school build-
ing programme between 2016 and 2021
currently limited to capital of €2.8bn, intended
to deliver 310 major extension/refurbishment
projects and 14 new schools.
More enticingly still €13bn is the exact figure
budgeted for our health system this year. Or it
could pay more than twice over for the Govern-
ment’s Action Plan on Housing which commits
€5.5bn for building social housing and infra-
structure between now and 2021. The
government claims €5.5bn would fund 47,000
social houses and help to end long-term
homelessness.
So why do we hear so much about the need to
feed our economic side and so little about boost-
ing the stuff economics allows us to achieve.
The reason is that our politicians are captive
and deferential. And I mean you Trump-slurping
Michael Noonan. Twenty years ago as Minister
for Health he refused, on civil service and legal
advice, to grant significant aid payments to vic-
tims of the State-occasioned Hep C
blood-contamination scandal and resisted Don-
egal mother Brigid McCole who was forced to
take court action for compensation but died
before she could benefit. It had been forgotten
but for a decade the debacle was a byword for
a Minister, who knew better, favouring the
economy over morality and decency.
So what would we do with the Apple money
and, with or without it, how should we shift
politics?
NEWS
Freedom and
equality are poles.
All political activity
can be charted on
their axes
I
t is abhorrent that so much about a child’s
future is determined from the age of two, and
by its parents and background. My inclina-
tion is to compensate for this. Thats what I
mean by equality. Equality is the central politi-
cal value as it a human-on-human, relative one,
not focused on non-human means to ends like
capital in all its forms.
Equality Theory
Village goes on about the difference between
equality of opportunity, which is really free-
dom, and equality of outcome which
compensates for the accidents of birth. Free-
dom and equality are poles. All political activity
can be charted on their axes.
What Equality Means
A famous recent tome called ‘The Spirit Level’
documents a lot of the knock on effects of
equality and inequality, highlighting the "per-
nicious effects that inequality has on societies:
eroding trust, increasing anxiety and illness,
(and) encouraging excessive consumption". It
shows that for each of eleven different health
and social problems: physical health, mental
health, drug abuse, education, imprisonment,
obesity, social mobility, trust and community
life, violence, teenage pregnancies, and child
well-being, outcomes are significantly worse in
more unequal rich countries”.
Taking physical health as the indicator, Ruth
Barrington, head of the Health Research Bureau
said, in 2007, that 5,400 people die here every
year because of deprivation. A report, ‘Poverty
is Bad for your Health’, claimed: "It has been
estimated that 5,400 fewer people would die
prematurely each year if death rates were
reduced to match those in Europe by tackling
social deprivation and inequalities". She based
this calculation on a report by the Institute of
Public Health, ‘Inequalities in Mortality. Why
don’t we measure this stuff stringently and try
and change any scandalous phenomena it
points to? Why have we instead made GDP – a
measure which treats an oil-slick and its clean
up as a (desirable?) boost to growth – the prin-
cipal gauge of our success. And thats leaving
aside the fact three quarters of the growth
was illusory, a confection of the per-
versions of a couple of unnamed
multinationals.
Anyway, using economic
wealth as a gauge of per
-
sonal fortune, unfortunately
in Ireland the top 1% owns
15% of wealth; the top 10%
owns 54% of wealth’ and the
top 20% owns 73%. The
share of gross pre-redistribu-
tion income going to the top one
per cent of earners increased from
34 per cent in 2011 to 39 per cent this year.
And over half of the increase in total income
(€21 billion) over the last five years has gone to
the top 10 per cent of earners. The bottom 50
per cent of earners got just six per cent of it.
We’re bad on wealth distribution; now quite so
bad on (post-tax) income distribution.
Towards the end of the boom and during the
downturn the Gini coefficient, which measures
income equality, improved in Ireland, post-
redistribution – through direct taxation and
welfare. The effect of redistribution is much
less the case for example in the US where wel-
fare is more basic. Indeed of the 31 wealthy
countries included in an OECD analysis for
2009, Ireland had the highest level of inequal-
ity for direct income by some distance but
Ireland’s tax and transfer system, on the other
hand, had the biggest impact on reducing the
level of income inequality, putting us 17th out
of 31 countries and making us more equal than
the OECD average albeit by a narrow margin,
from the late noughties.
Having disimproved in the early years of the
boom from 30.2 in 2000 to 32.4 in 2005, income
inequality in Ireland has narrowed during the
economic crisis due to the protection of welfare
rates and middle-income earners shouldering
the burden of tax increases, according
to the ESRI. In 2011 and 2012 it was
31.1, falling to 30.0 in 2013. The
ratio in the UK is 38; and in
the US it is 42. However
there is no room for com-
placency as it leaves us
more unequal than we
were in 2000 and other
measures eg figures for
the top 10% of income
earners versus the bottom
10% of income earners – Gini
measures the ratio across the
board - and measures which on wealth,
not income, show more of a problem. According
to leftist think-tank, Tasc: “Wealth is highly
concentrated, with 72.7% of net wealth held by
the top 20% , which is higher than the Euro Area
average of 67.6%. The bottom half of the distri-
bution has around 5% of wealth (4.9%).
The top 10% have more than half of all the net
wealth in Ireland (53.8%). The Top 5% have
37.7% while the Top 1% has 14.8%
(In passing we may note that in 2014, Oxfam
reported that the 85 richest people in the world
have as much wealth as the 3.5 billion
poorest.)
The figures are also distorted as many of the
least provident simply emigrated. Extraordinar-
ily one in six of all those over the age of 15 who
were born in Ireland are living abroad and there
seems little sign this is changing.
EQUALITY AND A SOCIAL AGENDA
September 2016 1 5
SOCIAL PROBLEMS
I
reland’s July unemployment rate was 8.3. Youth unemployment
was 17.8 percent. The unemployment Rate in Ireland averaged
10.91 percent from 1983 until 2016, reaching an all time high of 17.3
percent in December of 1985 and a record low of 3.70 percent in
December of 2000.
The deprivation rate is still very high, at 31. The adult consistent
poverty rate was 7.9% in 2014 A recent report from UNICEF shows
30% of Irish children suffer from material deprivation, and lack
essential items
According to TASC the proportion of children living in consistent
poverty in Ireland almost doubled during the economic recession
from 6.3% in 2008 to 11.2% in 2014. This equates to 138,000 chil-
dren, or one in eight, living in consistent poverty. We have nothing
to be complacent about in terms of the material circumstances of our
population.
The most recent data showed there were more than 2000 children
in homeless accommodation in Dublin in August, up from 1275 last
August and 780 in January 2015.
At the end of June there were 38,000 mortgages in arrears more
than 720 days and 98000 or 13% in arrears. 50,000 debts have been
sold to unregulated private investors. Household debt was €148.5bn
at the end of March.
And there are 4000 asylum-seekers in direct provision with their
1000 court cases. awaiting decisions on their asylum applications in
shoddy accommodations, unable to work driven by the unethical goal
of policymakers is to deter asylum seekers from coming here in the
first place. The numbers seeking refugee status here have fallen from
a high of 11,500 asylum applications in 2002 to fewer than 1,000 last
year.
Thankfully Ireland does not suffer from significant racism: there
is, for example, no organised racialist organisation. Nearly one in
eight people living in Ireland comes from abroad, according to
research by Eurostat, 11.8 per cent of the population: Ireland had the
sixth highest proportion of foreign nationals. By contrast only 7.9%
of British are non-nationals.
As of 2014, Poles made up the largest grouping of non-nationals
in Ireland at 22 per cent (or 118,042), followed by British 21 per cent
(115,658); Lithuanians 7 per cent (35, 617) and Latvians (20, 086) and
Nigerians (19, 727) 4 per cent each.
So the equality statistics are important but in a centralised but
parochial society like Ireland’s they mask particular points of
dysfunctionality.
Towards the end of the boom
and during the downturn, the
Gini coefficient, which measures
income equality, improved in
Ireland, post-redistribution
– through direct taxation
and welfare. The effect of
redistribution is much less the
case, for example, in the US
where welfare is more basic
ENVIRONMENT
T
he environment isn’t a vested interest so
it doesn’t rate as an issue for politicians
in Ireland. We emit twice as many green-
house-gas emissions as the Swedish per
head: at 16.7; the UK for example is at
10, while the EU average is 11 and Sweden’s
is down at 7.4. To put this in perspective the
US’s are 23 and Ethiopia‘s only one.
We throw tantrums for Irish exceptionalism
on climate change and have duly prevailed in
Europe which has now recognised the special
position of Irish agriculture, the biggest sec-
toral emitter largely because of flatulent cows,
in European climate-change policy. We’re not
and we did not deserve to get any exemptions
at all. We’re rich. If cattle farming is noxious,
the world needs to stop it, not allow more of it
to happen in Ireland which does it marginally
less noxiously than most others. If we want to
save humanity we’ve to eat fewer burgers.
Though of course we don’t.
According to the Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA (2014) the majority of Ireland’s
most important habitats are reported to be
poor or bad conservation status, including
raised and blanket bogs, dune systems, oligo-
trophic lakes, fens and mires, natural
grasslands and woodlands. Many protected
species have favourable conservation status
but certain species, particularly of wetland
and freshwater environments, such as the
Atlantic salmon and freshwater pearl mussel
are reported to be of bad conservation status.
A recent Birdwatch Ireland assessment of
the population status of Ireland’s birds indi-
cates that of the 199 species assessed, 25
were placed on the red list (i.e. of most con-
servation concern). There is evidence that
some species are still undergoing significant
declines (e.g. kestrel and skylark) or have
become extinct in Ireland (corn bunting).
An anecdote illustrates the disengagement
of the political classes. At a dinner for busi-
ness-people last year, then environment
Minister, Labours Alan Kelly, was engaged by
1 6 September 2016
NEWS
ENVIRONMENT (continued)
a Green Party spokesperson who sat next to
him but whom he did not recognise. The con-
versation turned to climate change and the
Minister grew increasingly frustrated and then
furious at the tenor of the criticism. Eventually,
he told the spokesperson to “get out of my
face!”. Subsequently, one of Kelly’s handlers
approached, to advise that whatever she
wanted, the Department would be doing the
opposite. Simon Coveney is no better. A long-
standing panderer to Irish agriculture, he is
about to send central Dublin down a dead end
of character-destroying high-rise
development. He simply doesn’t care enough
to think expansively or independently.
More generally it is shocking that while cli-
mate change is beginning to register among
the chattering classes there is little awareness
that 50 percent of wild animals have disap-
peared over the last forty years. The number
of wild animals on Earth – vertebrates - has
halved in the past 40 years. If half the animals
died in the zoo it would be front page news.
Half the planet dies and its dreary negativity.
Let’s talk about the Rose of Tralee.
We emit twice as
many greenhouse-gas
emissions as the Swedish
per head: at 16.7; the UK
for example is at 10,while
the EU average is 11
W
ithout good governance we can’t
guarantee that any of the agendas we
need will be delivered.
OVER-CENTRALISATION
We’re too centralised. We have no directly
elected mayors and the number of councillors
has reduced since the downturn from 1627 to
949. There is little accountability for local
expenditure. The proceeds of the property
tax are not really put into local services.
CORRUPTION
As to corruption the truth about the tribunals
is that they rarely nail the culprits. From the
Beef Inquiry, let down by a compromised
chairman; to the Mahon Tribunal which
unduly and arbitrarily relied on the evidence
of the unreliable Gogarty and Dunlop; to the
Moriarty Tribunal which pulled its punches
after a half-cocked interim report and assault
by Denis O’Brien; to the Smithwick Tribunal
which changed its mind about the identity of
the key colluder; to the Ansbacher cover-up,
an investigation into which has run dry again;
to a number of Banking Inquiries which didn’t
call key witnesses, they haven’t had the
means to find out who is telling the truth and
often rely arbitrarily on witnesses.
Two tribunal reports - Mahon and Moriarty
- made precise recommendations as to ethics
in government. They largely overlapped. Gov-
ernment claimed some years ago that almost
half (29) of the 64 recommendations made by
the Mahon tribunal have already been imple-
mented or are in the process of being
implemented. If anyone had the energy
they’d second-guess that, but I’d estimate
the figure as closer to half of what they claim,
with most of the important ones ignored.
TRANSPARENCY
Ireland slipped one place on Transparency
International’s Corruption Perceptions [as
opposed to Corruption Reality] Index for
2015. The findings showed a fall in Ireland’s
ranking since 2014 from 17 to 18 out of 168
countries, but a slight improvement in its
score from 74 to 75 out of 100. Transparency
International considered the failure to pub-
lish new anti-corruption legislation, four
years after it was announced, was hugely
disappointing.
The last government did advance the Free-
dom of Information, lobbying and
whistleblower regimes. Whistleblower legisla-
tion was introduced this year embracing
workers in all sectors. And lobbying legislation
though it only guarantees to record that meet-
ings took place not what was said; and
establishes cooling off periods for officials
before they go into private-sector jobs of only
a year, not the two years originally promised.
POLITICAL FUNDING
Political funding has massively changed,
with much now coming from uncorrupting
government funds. Nevertheless for example
the Mahon tribunal recommended that the
threshold over which political donations
should be disclosed should be reduced to €55
for individual candidates and €175 for par-
ties. In fact Government reduced these limits
to €600 and €1,500 respectively. Ten times
more.
The independence of the Revenue Commis-
sioners has been placed on a statutory basis,
and the Central Bank’s regulatory powers
have been enhanced.
There also appears to be reduced tolerance
for nepotism though as a country we appear
still to have no particular problem with paro-
chial improprieties such as Councillor-driven
planning permissions and Garda favours.
MEDIA OWNERSHIP
Denis O’Brien is Irelands most powerful
media owner and richest man and a big sup-
porter of the main governing party FG ,and
mate of Bill Clinton. The Moriarty Tribunal,
which was instigated after the Planning Tri-
bunal to look into political corruption found
that, Communications Minister, Michael
GOVERNANCE
PLANNING
E
ven after the publication of the Mahon Tribunal report and its
findings of systematic corruption, Penrose’s successor Jan
O’Sullivan was unmoved, describing criticisms of a cover-up as
a smokescreen. It took a High Court case, by former Donegal Planner
Gerard Convie, to force the government into a u-turn.
After the RTÉ Investigates programme which uncovered extraor-
dinary dodginess in planning last year, the government sheepishly
announced a package of ‘radical’ planning measures which included
the belated publication of the independent review, further rehashed
details on the proposed Office of the Planning Regulator (the major
recommendation of the Mahon Tribunal) and a ‘roadmap’ for the
forthcoming National Planning Framework (NPF). The independent
review uncovered considerable evidence of malpractice throughout
the planning system and includes 29 recommendations to improve
“standards of transparency, consistency and accountability” which
the Department says it will implement.
September 2016 1 7
GDP (Constant prices, SA), €m 52,573
GNP (Constant prices, SA), €m 44,124
General government surplus/deficit as a % of GDP -3.1
Gross General government debt as a % of annualised GDP 93.8
Numbers in employment, 000 1,976.5
Unemployment rate (SA), % 7.8
Numbers on Live Register (SA), 000 309.2
Average weekly earnings, € 707.99
Consumer price index, December 2011=100 101.9
CSO Figures - Irish Economy 2016
Lowry a self-righteous Fine Gael who was
excitingly beholden to Ben Dunne, a super
-
market mogul with a cocaine habit, assisted
Denis O'Brien's consortium Esat Digiphone in
acquiring Ireland’s lucrative second mobile
phone licence in the mid-1990s This ulti
-
mately made O'Brien the richest man in
Ireland. At an infamous meeting in Hartigan’s
a grubby bar off Stephen’s Green in Dublin,
Lowry tipped O’Brien off as to how to secure
the bid.
The Moriarty Tribunal noted that O'Brien had
“made or facilitated three payments to Lowry,
the deciding Minister, of around $1m: £147,000
sterling, £300,000 sterling and a benefit equiv-
alent to a payment in the form of O'Brien's
support for a loan of £420,000 sterling”.
O’Brien now has nearly 30% of INM, the
Independent Newspaper group Ireland’s big-
gest newspaper group, though he denies he
controls it; and owns several radio stations.
In 2013, I wrote in Village that Denis O’Brien
was exercising an extraordinarily chilling
effect on journalists. I detailed his litigious
“promiscuity”. The first six journalists I spoke
to for a profile of him, big beasts in Ireland’s
world of journalism, wouldn’t comment on him
for fear of litigation, for fear of having their
careers damaged as happened to several..
Although O’Brien at one state informed Vil-
lage that “I take very serious objection to the
use of the word ‘corruption’ Village has always
taken the line that you can say Denis O’Brien
was corrupt. However, spineless Irish media
had chosen to learn an entirely different
lesson: Not to mention that, or him!
Onto this lethal deferential background
then came the decision of one of Ireland’s
soberest TDs, Independent Catherine Murphy,
last year to read details not of that impropriety
but of Denis O’Brien’s banking arrangements
with State-owned IBRC into the parliamen-
tary record. She claimed he was getting an
interest rate of 1.25% when the state-owned
successor to Anglo Irish Bank which held his
loans was charging everyone else 7.5%.
Because she said it in parliament the matter
is constitutionally protected. The constitution
is clear.
When Murphy raised it in the Dáil, lawyers
acting for O'Brien immediately demanded the
country's media censor reporting the parlia-
mentary of proceedings. Following poor legal
advice RTE, the national broadcaster, the Irish
Times and of course The Irish Independent
Group, arguably controlled by O’Brien, com-
plicitly did not report on this. I noted that
when the legal advice was inevitably found
by the High Court to be nonsense their bosses
should resign. But it was; and they didn’t.
O’Brien also incidentally extracted an apol-
ogy from IMN in 2015 for saying he controlled
it. Which sort of proved the point that he half
did. And that ‘Independent Newspapers’ is an
oxymoron.
The media in Ireland are not safe, not
democratic.
R
ecent CSO figures showing the Irish
economy grew by a massive 26pc last
year - more than three times faster
than first thought - were quickly dismissed
as "farcical" at home and abroad. Nobel
Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman
described the phenomenon as "Leprechaun
economics", as experts lined up to explain
why the figure doesn't reflect reality.
Nevertheless the debt mountain built up
paying off bank debts and funding the cur-
rent deficit in the years of austerity is
shrinking. Soon it will look almost normal by
European standards.
Ireland is predicted to be the fastest-grow-
ing economy in Europe this year according to
new figures from the European Commission,
with the EUs executive arm expecting the
economy to grow by 4.9 per cent this year –
not 26%.
The predicted GDP growth rate is higher
than the figure of 4.5 per cent for 2016 esti-
mated four months ago. The Commission
also revised upwards its estimates for 2017
to 3.7 per cent, up slightly from the growth
rate of 3.5 per cent predicted in February.
The 4.9 per cent GDP growth rate con-
trasts with the euro zone average of 1.6 per
cent growth expected this year, down slightly
from the 1.7 per cent growth forecast in Feb-
ruary. Germany, Europe’s largest economy,
is expected to grow by 1.6 per cent in 2016
with a 1.3 per cent growth rate expected for
France. The deficit – which at one point
soared to 30 per cent of GDP but which was
for a long time over 10 per cent – will shrink
to less than 1 per cent this year.
We could be facing a €13 - €19bn boost to
our public finances. There is palpably scope
for radical social action.
P
olitics is of course the agencys for these
agendas: for balancing the rest of them
against vested economic agendas and
so-called imperatives. The extent to which the
priority has shifted from tax cuts to public
spending increases was evident from a recent
claim by Minister for Finance Michael Noonan
that about 85 per cent of available extra
resources this year was going to extra public
spending rather than tax cuts.
The Government remains committed to
whittling away at USC for lower and
middle-income earners over the coming years.
But it seems it is a lot more committed to more
spending on public services. Noonan speaks
repeatedly of investment in “schools and hos-
pitals” on Tuesday. Largely absent has been
the emphasis more customary from Fine Gael
in recent years about “putting money back
into people’s pockets”.
Noonan recently told Sean O’Rourke:
“Governments govern from the centre if
they’re doing their job properly. And some
-
times depending on conditions they have to
veer to the right sometimes they have to veer
to the left. And if you think a simple model for
left and right whether you spend more or you
don’t spend more.
This government is moving left of centre
because we know that public services have
been very damaged and we didn’t invest in
them over the last five years simply because
we didn’t have the money. Well we have the
money now and we’re going to do it".
The Apple debacle shows the need for acute
scepticism, and mobilisation.
ECONOMY
POLITICS
The proportion of children
living in consistent poverty in
Ireland almost doubled during
the economic recession from
6.3% in 2008 to 11.2% in 2014

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