Léargas
By Sinn Féin’s Gerry Adams
Friday, June 14, 2013
Opposing the Family Home Tax
This week the Sinn
Féin Dáil team introduced a Private Members Bill to repeal the Irish
government’s family home tax – property tax which takes effect in July.
Fine Gael and Labour
combined to vote it down in the Dáil on Wednesday evening. Notwithstanding this
Sinn Féin is committed in government to repeal this tax.
Our Finance (Local
Property Tax Repeal) Bill was about lifting the burden of the government’s unfair
property tax from families and households and replacing it with alternative
measures to raise taxes, including a wealth tax. It was about undoing one of
many bad policy decisions taken by Fine Gael and the Labour Party in the past
two years.
Fine Gael and the
Labour Party were elected to undo the damage caused by Fianna Fáil, but they
have instead chosen to implement Fianna Fáil policies. This has led to greater
inequality, poverty and disadvantage. This week the cuts to the respite care
grant take effect and will hit 77,000 of our most vulnerable citizens.
Emigration and unemployment are at record levels, especially among young
people. Public services, particularly health, are in crisis, with further cuts
to be imposed this year.
I listened on Tuesday
and Wednesday night during the Dáil debate to a succession of Fine Gael and
Labour Deputies trying to defend the government’s tax on the family home. They
sought to do it, if we could believe this, and I do not believe that they
believe this, by comparing it with the domestic rates system in the North.
They must know - and
if they don’t they should take a run up the road and they will see - that rates
in the North cover a range of public services, including education - those who
live there do not pay for school books, emergency services or the public health
service. There are no prescription charges, no private bin collection charges,
no road tolls, and water and sewerage services and even septic tank services
are provided.
The Fine Gael and
Labour also know that Sinn Féin blocked the introduction of domestic water
charges in the north.
Of course there are
inefficiencies in the services but the rationale the Minister for Finance in
his defence of the tax gave as his justification of it that the big boys – the
Troika of the European Central Bank, the International Monetary Fund and the
European Commission – made them do it.
Before the Government parties came into office they said that
they opposed this property tax. In the Fine Gael Election manifesto the people
were told:
“Fianna Fail’s proposal, now endorsed by the Labour Party, to
introduce by 2014 an annual, recurring residential property tax on the family
home is unfair” (P59)
Indeed the Taoiseach himself in a campaign against a previous FF
Property Tax said “It is morally unjust and unfair to tax a person's home”
The property tax that
this government has introduced takes no account of ability to pay or of those
in negative equity; and it ignores the fact that one in four mortgage holders
is in mortgage distress or the many others stuck in homes whose value has
dropped and on which they have paid huge stamp duty.
The Government has
also ensured that Revenue has the means to take this tax irrespective of the
individual or family circumstances. Let the big bankers, the big developers and
the speculators off free, award its policy advisers exorbitant, high salaries
but deduct the tax from people's social welfare benefits, from their wages,
their bank accounts and even from their credit union accounts.
This is despicable -
going after those who cannot afford it. As a consequence of their actions more
and more people will be driven further and further into debt.
There are alternative
measures that the Government could have taken, including the introduction of a
wealth tax on all property, liquid and assets, above a certain net wealth.
Why could they not do
that?
Why could it not levy
a 1% wealth tax on all net wealth over €1 million with certain exclusions?
Because it is based on net wealth, it takes into account mortgages and loans.
Because it has a high value, it protects struggling families.
And because it is
aimed at high net worth individuals, it is dealt with by people used to
engaging with the revenue system, who very often have tax accountants dealing
with the system on their behalf.
So Fine Gael and
Labour had a choice. There are alternatives.
They could have opted
to take more from those who can afford it.
Instead, Labour and
Fine Gael chose to inflict more pain on struggling families.
Sinn Féin Mountmellick-Serving The Community
No comments:
Post a Comment