| Fianna Fail Promises Big Cuts
By Paddy Clancy
FIANNA Fail this week spelt out its financial policy for the next five
years and pledged billions of dollars worth of tax cuts, most to be introduced
next year, if returned to power in the summer general election.
Although Finance Minister Brian Cowen said tax reforms will be implemented
over five years, he also promised to set aside €1.2 billion for tax-rate
reductions for low and middle-income earners in 2008.
He insisted that at the same time a Fianna Fail-led government will put
strong emphasis on the reduction of public debt as part of the policy
of securing Ireland’s economic gains.
He said his proposals will not involve borrowing money and will result
in a net debt of less than 3% of GDP by 2012 from the present figure of
14.5% of GDP. Cowen said that will mean the country being relatively “debt-free.”
The plan is based on assumptions that inflation rates will be low, more
jobs will continue to be created and wage increases will be kept under
tight control. The rate of increase of day-to-day government spending
will be halved to 7% per annum for the plan to work.
Cowen insisted the plan was prudent and affordable. “There is no
question of cuts in services here whatsoever. We are talking here about
increasing and building on a much bigger base which we have put in over
the past 10 years,” he said.
Key commitments include a 1% reduction in the bottom tax rate to 20% of
income next year, and a further 2% reduction to 18% over the next few
years.
In a nod to the environmental lobby, vehicle registration tax will be
further weighted in favor of vehicles with lower emissions.
Cowen, Taoiseach Bertie Ahern and their advisors based their figures on
assumptions that there will be an average economic growth of 4.5% per
year in real terms, an average annual earnings growth of 4.5%, yearly
employment growth of 2.5%, an average increase in base current expenditure
of 6% a year, and an average rate of return on the National Pensions Reserve
Fund of 7% a year.
Labor Party finance spokesperson Joan Burton was scathing in her criticism
of the plan which she claimed lacked credibility.
“Even a first-year accountancy student would know that you cannot
cut expenditure growth and provide extra services at the same time,”
Burton said.
The Green Party said the Fianna Fail economic policy “should only
be read as an election document with all the characteristics of any other
work of fiction.”
And Sinn Fein claimed that, despite unprecedented resources, Fianna Fail
had chosen not to deal with poverty and inequality.
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