Fianna Fáil has proposed raising the universal social charge on those earning over €100,000 as well as raising excise duty on cigarettes by €1 and bottles of wine by 50 cent, in its pre-Budget submission launched today.
Launching the document today, the main opposition party is calling for an overall adjustment of €2.4 billion which would be split 50-50 between tax rises and spending cuts.
One of the main proposals is to increase Universal Social Charge by three per cent for incomes over €100,000 which would yield in excess of €70 million. It also wants to cap tax relief on pensions which deliver an income of over €60,000 per annum.
Fianna Fáil has also proposed not levying the property tax next year but has not committed to abolishing it outright.
“The tax will really hurt people when a full year’s payment falls due,” the party’s finance spokesperson Michael McGrath said, adding: “We took the view in preparing this submission that the most honest thing to do was remove it from our numbers.”
Cigarettes and alcohol
The party also wants to apply excise duty on food products with high salt and sugar content as well as apply a 15 per cent levy on the sale of alcohol in the off trade.
Alcohol abuse is “causing huge damage across the country”, according to McGrath. The so-called ‘lid levy’ in off licences would raise around €180 million in a full year, the party estimates.
Other proposals include increasing Capital Gains Tax and DIRT from 33 per cent to 35 per cent which would yield €31 million and €35 million respectively.
The price of a packet of cigarettes would increase by €1 and would raise €149 million while excise duty on wine would rise by 50 cent a bottle, raising €27 million.
“We are committed to an objective of a smoke-free Ireland,” McGrath said adding that the party supports Health Minister James Reilly’s “war on tobacco”.
Public Expenditure and Reform spokesperson Seán Fleming said that the party wants to achieve savings in the area of procurement totalling €165 million in 2014.
Source: Hugh O'Connell, thejournal.ie, 10/10/13