Notes on the Front

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

Attack of the 50 Foot Water Charges. The Recession Diaries – February 14th

Recession 225 Water charges (or levies or taxes) will come up the agenda and no doubt there will be considerable confusion as to what they are intended for: incentivise ‘efficient use of water’ or cover the cost of water provision. These are not necessarily intertwined; one may incentivise efficient use and not recover costs and vice-versa.

What is not in dispute is that Minister John Gormley wants €1 billion from water charges (which suggests recovery costs are the prime motivation). There are a number of issues regarding this revenue-raising target.  Let’s deal with one here -  namely, the economic impact.

Water charges will act like a tax. This could be a very high tax. The 2006 CSO Census shows that there are approximately 1.47 million households (of which nearly half have children). A flat-rate tax which would ‘raise €1 billion’ would equal €680 a year per household. To the extent that certain households will be exempt or partially exempt – those on social welfare/low incomes – this tax will increase on the remainder. If, for example, 10 percent were exempt, the charge on the remaining houses would be over €750.

Of course, there may be a long-term agenda – in line with the Commission on Taxation’s recommendations – of installing meters and taxing water on the basis of usage. However, since this could take up to four to five years, the Commission also called for an interim flat-rate tax phased in over a number of years.

Let’s use the ESRI’s simulation of the impact of a rise in income taxes as a proxy for water charges. This could be the economic impact in the first year of introducing water charges:

  • GDP: -0.2 percent (approximately -€338 million)
  • Consumer spending: -0.7 percent (nearly -€700 million)
  • Employment: -0.1 (nearly -2,000 jobs)

The introduction of water charges will have a deflationary impact. The fall in growth and consumer spending will not only result in lower employment, it will result in a fall of services output. In short, water charges will mean more job losses, more enterprises put under pressure, while contributing to a low-growth scenario.

The problem is that the situation grows worse. By the fourth year, the loss of economic growth doubles (-0.4 percent), consumer spending falls by nearly -1 percent, while employment losses quadruple – at -0.4 percent, or nearly 8,000 less jobs.

Of course, this is if the Government introduced the charges in one year. More realistically, they will phase it in. However, all this does is spread out the deflation. The long-term impact will be the same.

Just as interesting is the fiscal impact. Minister Gormley may well
refer to raising €1 billion through charges. However, when account is
taken of the impact on growth, spending and jobs on the general tax
base, the ‘net gain’ is substantially less.

For instance, the ESRI simulation for a tax increase designed
to raise revenue of €1 billion, would in the first year only yield a
net gain of €764 million. However, this gain dissipates as the
deflationary impact accelerates over the years, so that by the 4th
year, net gain would be €627 million. So while Minister Gormley talks
about a headline rate of €1 billion raised from charges, the real gain
will be less than two-thirds of that.

But there is one critical difference. The ESRI’s simulation uses income tax rises. Whatever the defects in the income tax systems (too many tax reliefs that primarily benefit high income groups), a rise in income tax rates is, at least, somewhat progressive: the higher your income, the higher the tax payment.
Water charges – at least in the first phase – is a flat-rate, regressive levy (something I will look into in a later post). Therefore, the impact on consumer spending and employment is likely to be more severe as the charge would disproportionately burden the ‘spenders’ – low and average income groups. This, in turn, would reduce the net gain to the Exchequer even more.

This is not an argument in principle against water charges. This is, however, an argument that the debate over such charges be grounded in an honest assessment of its impact – not only on the economy and public finances, but on the real problems underlying water consumption; in particular the woeful state of our investment-starved water infrastructure.

On past record, it is doubtful this will happen.

8 responses to “Attack of the 50 Foot Water Charges. The Recession Diaries – February 14th”

  1. Rob Avatar

    Another thing you need to take into account is rural households that have their own well and provide their own water. i presume they will be exempt from the charge – to charge them would be massively inequitable in fairness – so you have to remove those from the equation of those who would pay.

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  2. tgmac Avatar

    There are local or group water schemes existing where the infrastructure is already paid for and functioning with meters. We currently have “price” rationing within the scheme. Households that use above 80 cubic meters water annually incur water charges. (Our household used 30.78 cm last year, and we also collect rainwater and so on for non-cleaning activities.) Residents also have a forum at public meetings to hear and voice issues with water usage. The upshot is that we may be doubled taxed and lose local accountability. I can tell you that if I’m charged a flat tax fee, I fecking use water up to the threshold. Sure I’m paying for it, I might as well use it.
    However, there is a greater issue where the middle classes need to wake up an smell the coffee. These new taxes, that aren’t sold as taxes but as charges, are adding up annually to flat rate fixed costs on household income statements and balance sheets. By the time you add up tolls, mandatory parking fees, refuse collection, madatory motor insurance, health policy requirements and now water charges, the middle classes incomes are slowly being eroded.
    Of course, when or if public finances stabilise, the cash flows from water charges become a glittering prize for the privatisation brigade. How many years before we hear that water must be privatised in order to create “efficiencies”. What we really get is a fixed household cost that is legally binding while part of the precious monetary resources are siphoned off as profits to individuals. Who pays for water and plumbing infrastructure on an ongoing basis? It’s either charged pro rata to water consumers or is suplemented through the public purse. In either case individuals pay for the costs as well as contributing to profit margins.
    The issues surrounding water taxes need to be understand by the middle classes or they will become a rare species in the future.

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  3. Proposition Joe Avatar
    Proposition Joe

    @tgmac
    I hear you about the accumulation of stealth charges, but “madatory motor insurance”? C’mon!
    Do you see driving uninsured as an unalienable right? Is the state profiteering off your insurance payment?
    @Michael Taft
    Interesting numbers from the ESRI simulation on the economic impact of taxation. I wonder has anyone totted up the cost (in terms of jobs lost) of the tax rises in the Oct 2008 and April 2009 budget? Or indeed, the future tax rises being widely advocated.

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  4. Michael Taft Avatar

    Rob – good point. Just looked up the numbers from the CSO 2006 Census. 192,000 households (or 13%) get water from private sources so these should be excluded from a public water charge. Whether they will or not remains to be seen – but if they are, then the average household charge would be nearly €800. And that’s not counting the exemption for social welfare/low-income households.
    And, yes, tgmac – let’s get real here. With companies already selling products to reduce water consumption (part of their ads is to cut water charges that haven’t even been introduced yet) – the longt-term agenda, like bin collection, is privatisation. In privatised England, water charges can make up close to 4% of the gross income of poorer households. We have seen the future – and its lucrative for some and expensive for the rest of us.

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  5. Michael Taft Avatar

    Proposition Joe – yes, there are numbers on this. A back-of-the-envelope job suggests that the combined impact of the 2009/2010 levies would have resulted in 12,000 job losses in the first year – quadrupling by the fourth year. However, given the size of the impact (the ESRI only estimated on the basis of tax rises in €1 billion tranches) the downside could be more. All in all, an irrational policy – cutting disposable income in the middle of a recession. I will try to do a post on this in the near future.

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  6. tgmac Avatar

    @Prop Joe, yes insurances are a fixed household cost, especially as public transport outside major metro areas is virtually non-existant. And you choose to highlight one item out of many other charges that household face or may face that were formally covered in social expenditure.
    As we all know its not the coverage that insurance companies make their dosh on. It’s “investing” the mandatory expenditures that makes the real dosh for these companies – the OPM scam. Then again, maybe I’m personally peeved that my auto insurance premium increased by 28.9% from last year – that with a spotless record, full license and low category risk due to age, job profile and location. Strangely enough all quotes from competing companies are very similarly priced. A page out of the vintner’s handbook?

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  7. Proposition Joe Avatar
    Proposition Joe

    @tgmac
    I think you’re confusing the price-gouging practices of the insurance companies (an issue for the competition/regulatory authorities) and the fact that insurance is mandatory by law and thus imposed by government.
    Of course it has to be mandatory, otherwise the inevitable accidents would leave many innocent parties uncompensated for damage to their cars and themselves.
    But mandatory insurance can’t be seen in the same light as direct charges for government-provided services (road tolls, water & refuse charges, A&E charges, “voluntary” contributions to school funds, third level tuition fees) or the costs of substitute private services that the state should provide to a sufficient level of quality, but doesn’t (GP & dental fees, VHI premiums etc.)

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  8. tgmac Avatar

    @Joe, sure there’s nothing wrong with mandatory. It’s not really a confusing issue. It’s also a cost issue, and it is a political-economic issue. Reform or transitional overhaul of institutions that are gaming the middle and wage classes should be considered. When the money goes out of our pockets due to mandatory expenditures, we should demand the greatest efficencies and a system to deliver value costed to those affected.

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