Showing posts with label Dublin: Working Parents Worst Hit By Harsh Budgets' Austerity: ERSI REPORT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dublin: Working Parents Worst Hit By Harsh Budgets' Austerity: ERSI REPORT. Show all posts

8 Oct 2014

Dublin: SCREWED: Council Tenants Now Face Property Tax Rent Increases

COUNCIL tenants face the prospect of paying the property tax from next year through a hike in their weekly rent bill. Local authorities have been told they are liable to pay the tax on properties they own, in a move that will affect up to 140,000 families throughout the State.
The Department of Finance has confirmed that city and county councils will escape the tax only in exceptional cases.

Where housing is provided for someone with special needs, such as the elderly or disabled, an exemption will apply.

The 34 councils nationwide own 140,000 houses and apartments which are rented to people who cannot afford to provide their own home.

The annual bill is likely to be more than €25m, which is based on each property being worth €100,000 and incurring a €180 annual tax bill.

Sources said that among the options being considered by councils was to pass the tax on to tenants, adding €3.50 a week to their rent at a time of spending cutbacks announced in Wednesday's Budget.

The move will also impact on voluntary housing associations which provide homes to the least-well off.

The Cluid Housing Association, which owns 3,500 homes, said the tax would have a severe impact on its finances.

"If we are liable for it, it will be a very significant cost to us at about €600,000," said head of policy Simon Brooke.

"It's not possible to produce social housing without a subsidy, because you are providing accommodation for people who cannot afford to buy their own homes.
"Because we're a social housing provider, we depend on a government subsidy to balance our books.

"We would be returning a significant portion of that back to the Government."

Worst-hit will be Dublin City Council, which has 26,500 homes. It faces an annual bill of more than €4.5m.

Cork County Council has 6,800 units and could be hit with a €1.2m bill, while the smallest local authority, Leitrim, will incur a bill of €180,000.

The Local Government Management Agency, which represents local authorities, said councils were only made aware of the details of the property tax and could not yet comment.

Irish Independent

3 Oct 2014

Dublin: Working Parents Worst Hit By Harsh Budgets, Austerity: ERSI REPORT

Working parents have been the hardest hit by consecutive harsh budgets and austerity.
According to new research from the Economic and Social Research Institute, households where both parents work have seen the biggest squeeze, with a 13% drop in disposable income since the recession took hold.
 Women have fared worse, suffering a 15% drop - due partly to a 25% cut to child benefit over the five-year period from 2009 to 2013. Child benefit is usually received by mothers.
The ESRI report also found that women were hit harder by adjustments to tax, welfare and public sector pay, because a higher proportion of women work in the pubic service and are more likely to be in receipt of a carers' allowance.

*New research has found that women have been hardest hit by austerity measures over the past four years.
The study, published today by the Economic and Social Research Institute and the Equality Authority, examined the effect of Budgets between 2009 and 2013 on men and women.
The report found that the impact of austerity measures in recent years on single women and men of working age, including public-sector pay cuts as well as tax and welfare changes were broadly similar, with average losses in disposable income of close to 10%.
There were losses of about 5% for single people of retirement age.
Couples of working age lost, on average, 12% of disposable income, while retired couples lost just over 4%.
Women in relationships saw sharper losses in individual disposable income compared with men at all income levels, about 14% for women and 9% for men.
According to the ESRI, a key factor is the reduction in Child Benefit payments, which are typically received by mothers.
Public-sector pay changes and other social welfare reductions also had a stronger effect on women.