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Interested in maladministration. Estd. 2005

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Human Rights in Ireland
Indymedia Ireland is a volunteer-run non-commercial open publishing website for local and international news, opinion & analysis, press releases and events. Its main objective is to enable the public to participate in reporting and analysis of the news and other important events and aspects of our daily lives and thereby give a voice to people.

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Lockdown Skeptics

The Daily Sceptic

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A summary of the most interesting stories in the past 24 hours that challenge the prevailing orthodoxy about the ?climate emergency?, public health ?crises? and the supposed moral defects of Western civilisation.
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The post An A&E Nightmare That Exposes the NHS as Anything But the ‘Envy of the World’ appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

offsite link The Covid Inquiry is Instantiating Lies That Make it Worse Than No Inquiry At All Mon Dec 15, 2025 17:53 | Will Adie
The Covid Inquiry has allowed itself to degenerate into a cudgel to flog the Tory government of Boris Johnson. But an inquiry that instantiates a lie is worse than no inquiry at all, says Will Adie.
The post The Covid Inquiry is Instantiating Lies That Make it Worse Than No Inquiry At All appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

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The post Dale Vince Links Bondi Beach Massacre to Israel appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

offsite link Labour Has Gone Beyond Lying to Bullshitting Mon Dec 15, 2025 13:32 | Sean Walsh
As he entered Downing Street, Keir Starmer told us he would "tread more lightly" on our lives. In 18 months Labour has gone from merely lying to bullshitting, losing all attachment to reality, says Sean Walsh.
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Voltaire Network
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Full employment: how the euro can work for Ireland, not against it

category national | worker & community struggles and protests | opinion/analysis author Tuesday April 30, 2013 11:44author by Gavin R. Putland Report this post to the editors

If you tax something, people buy less of it. If you tax labour, you get unemployment.

It's possible to shift the tax burden from labour to consumption without raising prices or widening after-tax wages relativities.

By eliminating taxes on employer-employee transactions, one can reduce the marginal cost of labour for employers -- so that they hire more workers -- without reducing nominal after-tax wages or widening after-tax wage inequalities.

In Ireland, the easiest way to do this is to let employers retain the PAYE income tax and Pay Related Social Insurance (PRSI) that they currently withhold from wages, while continuing to credit workers for the withheld tax as if it had been paid to the government, and to abolish employers' contributions to PRSI. For convenience I shall refer to all these imposts as PAYE tax.

Some of the lost revenue from PAYE tax would need to be replaced (some, but not all, because the rise in employment would reduce welfare expenditure). If it were replaced by an alternative tax paid by employers, the new tax would be paid out of the same pool of income as the old one, so employers would not need to raise prices. If the alternative tax were on anything but labour, it would not undo the reduction of the marginal cost of labour for employers.

These conclusions hold even if the "alternative tax" is an increase in the VAT. Whenever it is said that replacing personal income tax by VAT would raise prices, it is assumed that the personal income tax currently withheld by employers would instead be paid out in gross wages, so that the income needed to pay the VAT would need to come from elsewhere, namely higher prices. But if the PAYE tax were retained by employers as proposed here, it would be available to pay the VAT, so there would be no overall rise in prices of goods and services produced within the country.

This together with the preservation of nominal after-tax wages and the rise in employment would raise employees' aggregate demand for the products of their labour. Demand from overseas would also rise, because Irish exports would become cheaper: the fall in production costs due to removal of PAYE tax on labour would not be offset by the increase in VAT, because VAT is not applied to exports.

Of course the VAT would raise retail prices of imports. This is a small price to pay for the increased earning opportunities. It is austerity of the desirable sort -- austerity that gets you out of debt by inhibiting spending but not earning.

In a country with its own currency, such as Australia, a tax reform that promotes exports over imports would have its effect partly offset by a rise in the currency. That can't happen in Ireland, whose trade outside the eurozone is too small to affect significantly the value of the euro. If that means my idea gets more traction in Ireland than in Australia, so be it.

Related Link: http://www.grputland.com/2013/04/full-employment-how-euro-can-work-for.html
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