Public spending should be prioritised over tax cuts
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Our public infrastructure has been severely damaged by six years of one-sided austerity. Approximately €30 billion has been taken out of the State budget in the effort to cut the gap between revenue and spending. This was implemented on the basis that for every euro by which tax was increased, public spending was cut by two. At a very minimum, that ratio must now be reversed as resources become available, in a growing economy, over the next number of years. It is now critically important that we embark on a major investment programme to rebuild our public health, education and local authority services. Simultaneously, the State’s current capacity to borrow at near negative rates offers a unique opportunity to accelerate the public housing programme. Also the one-third of resources that would be allocated to tax alleviation should be concentrated exclusively to the advantage of those on low to middle incomes. There is absolutely no justification for using scarce public resources for the purpose of gifting the wealthy and those on higher incomes who could and should have contributed more to the fiscal adjustment. There is still room to raise revenue through a wealth tax and other levies on capital as well as on higher incomes. All of this should now be used to alleviate the burden on struggling low to middle income families, thus enhancing their living standards and affording them some capacity to spend in a manner that will re-enforce the momentum and sustainability of the economic recovery.
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