Notes on the Front

Commentary on Irish Political Economy by Michael Taft, researcher for SIPTU

The Great Squeeze: The Recession Diaries – September 8th

Recession 197 The Government now has its bookends. On the expenditure side, the McCarthy Report; on the taxation side, the Commission Report. Now we can stack the economy between the two and . . . squeeze. The only problem is that one of the bookends may not be so reliable. Indeed, it may fall off the bookshelf. And if that were to happen, the other bookend may find its function redundant.

The Commission Report is the dodgy endpiece. The Report is at great pains to highlight its remit, notably that its recommendations must be placed in the context of continuing Ireland’s low-tax model. But sometimes it doesn’t sound too excited by this:

‘In keeping with our Terms of Reference these recommendations have regard to the medium to longer term and, in aggregate, they are compatible with keeping Ireland a low tax economy.’

Compatible, yes. Inevitably so? That is more problematic. The Report protests that its recommendations would be ‘revenue-neutral’ – Peter and Paul would balance out. Except that, while we get a lot of proposals to raise money, there isn’t a comprehensive schedule of tax cuts to balance. They’ve left that exercise, by and large, to the Government. If I were a Minister, I wouldn’t be thanking the Commission.

All this suggests that reading the Commission report is a more nuanced affair than the McCarthy Report which was just a blunt instrument to hammer, for the most part, low and average income earners by cutting social transfers. The McCarthy Report is bad melodrama, the Commission report approximates a more confusing film noir.

Our starting point is to separate out the political context from the actual content. SIPTU Vice-President Brendan Hayes has done the public debate an enormous service by refusing to sign the report. His letter which appears in the Appendix lays out the primary reason:

‘The Commission’s Recommendations reinforce a low-tax model of the economy and of society that I do not support.’

All his other objections flow from this fundamental premise. By highlighting this, Brendan goes to the heart of the matter and elevates the ‘politics’ of the report in a way that makes clear the real and substantial difference between a progressive and a conservative economics (his interview on Morning Ireland is worth listening to for an elaboration on his letter). Paul Sweeney also makes useful points in this regard over at Progressive-Economy. This is where the battle lies.

But encouragingly, in fighting this battle, we can turn much of the content of the Report against this political context and, in many cases, against the regressive recommendations in the Report itself. Let’s take one example: tax expenditures.

The section on tax expenditures is by far the largest section in the Report and arguably the most detailed in terms of highlighting revenue and costs. There is much progressive meat here. The Report acknowledges the regressive impact of much tax expenditure – in addition to their inefficiency, deadweight, lack of cost control and lack of transparency. For instance, 50 percent of the revenue foregone under mortgage interest relief, which costs the Exchequer over €700 million, goes to the top two income deciles. There is considerable revenue gain to be made through the reform of tax expenditures with less deflationary impact and much benefit to both equity and the Exchequer.

The Report lists 96 tax expenditures, not including personal credits. This is by no means an exhaustive list – it omits discussion on 17 property-related schemes, though some of these are being phased out (the Labour Party has estimated that these property-related schemes still cost the Exchequer over €500 million).

Of these 96 tax expenditure programmes, 29 could not be costed. However, of those that could, the revenue foregone amounted to nearly €11 billion. That’s equivalent to all the revenue obtained in the income tax system and a third of all tax revenue. The Report breaks down these tax expenditures into two three categories:

  • those they would continue as is: these cost €4 billion (though over half of this come from one tax relief – the exemption of the sale principal private houses from capital gains tax)  
  • those they would discontinue: this would save over €700 million,(more than half of this, though, comes from the controversial taxation of Child Benefit), and  
  • those they would reform in some way: these cost over €6 billion.

Let’s examine one small area in housing tax expenditures: namely the operation of mortgage interest (MIR) and rent relief. The starting point is the Report’s general recommendation regarding tax expenditures:

‘We have concluded that, in general, direct Exchequer expenditure should be used instead of tax expenditures. This allows greater transparency and control of public resources and avoids many of the aforementioned undesirable characteristics.’

This is a correct and progressive perspective. Unfortunately, the Report didn’t apply this principle to housing tax reliefs. Instead, they propose that:

  • MIR be confined to first-time buyers only, and 
  • Rent relief be abolished

While the first is fair enough, removing rent relief will disproportionately affect those on lower incomes (tenants are generally poorer than owner-occupiers) while creating an imbalance between the home-owning and rental sector. There is another way, however, using the Report’s general recommendation. If the MIR and rent relief were wrapped up into a taxable Housing Benefit, this could reduce the cost of these housing supports, progressively direct the subsidies to low and average income groups while achieving considerable social welfare savings.

For instance, the average cash subsidy to those in receipt of MIR and rent recipient is €840 annually, at a cost of over €840 million per year. Setting the new Housing Benefit at a level substantially higher than the average cash subsidy, and taxing it, would still reduce the overall costs (especially if second-house purchasers were excluded).

As well, this would reduce the social welfare costs of rent and mortgage interest supplements as home-owners and tenants would keep the Housing Benefit whether employed or not. This Benefit would be subtracted from the social welfare subsidies.

We could go further and extend the Housing Benefit to all first-time buyers and tenants – public and private. This would have progressive knock-on effects for local authority tenants – comprising some of the lowest income groups in society – while at the same time allowing local authorities to readjust the differential rent scheme to recoup more of their construction and maintenance costs. Tenant and public landlord would both gain.

This is one small example of how the Report’s recommendations can be transformed in a progressive manner. That doesn’t take away from the larger political context – the low-tax model it espouses and which is a direct contributor to the economic and fiscal crisis we find ourselves in. But disentangling the context from the content frees us up to be more creative. I’ll return to other aspects of the Report in subsequent posts.

For at the end of the day, progressives are going to have to write their own Taxation Report – one which shows how we can increase taxation to facilitate economic growth and social infrastructure development, consistent with the economy’s ability to absorb such tax increases.

We can turn the Commission on Taxation against the Right and even against their Report’s own regressive recommendations.

And in so doing, remove one of the bookends that threaten to squeeze the economy.

8 responses to “The Great Squeeze: The Recession Diaries – September 8th”

  1. Tipster Avatar

    Erm. Your dates are looking funny. Yhis post says August 8, and the one from a few days ago says August 5.

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  2. Michael Taft Avatar

    Thanks for that Tipster. I guess I just don’t want to let go of summer.

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  3. t g macamhloaibh Avatar

    Thanks for the post. As always, it’s very informative and I look forward to further articles in the same vein.
    Btw, the idea of a progressive tax proposal document is not only ‘progressive’ but important. Will we plebs be able to access it? It might just start off some debates within the progressive bloc and beyond. All the running is in the MSM and so many people are just impervious to what’s occuring.

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  4. Joanna Tuffy Avatar

    Michael,
    You did a post a while back ‘How Middle is Middle class’ where you work out from the CSO figures the median income. What would be the up to date median income if you worked it out on the same basis?
    Regards,
    Joanna Tuffy

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  5. Hugh Green Avatar

    Splendid appearance with an excellent parting shot on Prime Time last night, Michael.

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  6. Michael Taft Avatar

    Joanna – the figures come from the CSO’s EU Survey of Income and Living Conditions. The latest data we have is from 2007. It states that the average net disposable household income was €47,988. Unfortunately, there is no median figure for households. The EU Survey uses ‘median’ but mostly in the context of poverty measurements.
    However, there is some data that allows us to find, sometimes in a roundabout way, what median figures are for certain categories. For instance, in 2007 for single people, no children, the median income was €19,747. For a couple with two children, it was €45,815. Both these figures would include social transfers so we can see how important Child Benefit is for low and middle income families. For instance, for an average income household (€43,000) ‘family/children related allowances’ made up over 8 percent of their disposable income. Child Benefit would be the main social transfer under this heading.
    Where the EU Survey is very helpful is in charting the income rise by decile groups. For instance, between 2003 (the first year of the publication) and 2007, the top 10 percent income group experienced a 41 percent rise in working income; all other income groups averaged 28 percent.
    The CSO will be publishing the new 2008 stats in November and I hope to work up some numbers then. It will also be interesting to see how people are faring during the first year of the recession. If there’s any other numbers I can provide, let me know.
    Thanks for the comment, Hugh. Somewhat frustrating to discuss a 500 page report in 8 minutes, especially when so much time is taken on the one proposal least likely to be implemented – property tax.

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  7. Shay Avatar

    Things have moved on for Colm McCarthy in recent days.
    It is ludicrous that he now feels free to call for further public pay cuts.
    Still a direct contributer to Irish economic thinking, Colm was until recently construction economist in Davy and a central figure in the construction boom, which contributed to the fiscal crisis we find ourselves in.

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  8. Joanna Tuffy Avatar

    Michael,
    Many thanks for that.
    I took the liberty of refererencing you in my article on my blog the link to which I attach:
    http://www.labour.ie/joannatuffy/blog.html

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Commentary on Irish Political Economy by Michael Taft, researcher for SIPTU