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A MASSIVE GIVEAWAY Budget was announced yesterday that included a major cost-of-living package, with a value of €2.2 billion, and a number of welcomed tax cuts.
Some once-off payments will be received before the end of the year while others will include backdated clauses. Others have already kicked in or were extended during yesterday’s announcement.
So, here’s what to expect in the year to come.
Social Welfare
From 1 January, there will be an additional €12 to all weekly social welfare payments as well as double payments this month and at Christmas for long-term welfare recipients.
On the means-tested Carer’s Allowance, the means test disregard will increase to €625 for a single person and €1,250 for a couple from next year. Maternity, paternity, adoptive and parents’ payments increasing by €15, also from 1 January.
In November, a €400 payment will be made to those who receive the Carers Support Grant, Disability Allowance, the Blind Pension, Invalidity Pension and the Domiciliary Care Allowance.
St. Vincent DePaul welcomed the increases but said increased costs, such as energy, fuel, housing and childcare are “eroding” the money that recipients are left with.
“Households need to budget on a weekly basis and needed an adequate weekly increase in social welfare payments to reflect this,” Rose McGowan, SVP National President, said.
It was confirmed that two double child benefit payments will be made before Christmas and a €420 ‘baby boost’ scheme will be introduced for new parents after the birth of a child after 1 January.
The first double child benefit payment, which is paid monthly, will be made in November and the next will be paid out in December. Social Justice Ireland has taken issue with the fact that the base €140 rate was not increased for vulnerable and low-income families.
Cigarettes
Unlike most of the other measures, increases in the excise duty on cigarettes came in at midnight. From today, the price of the most-popular packet of cigarettes is €18.05 after a €1 increase was announced yesterday. The excise duty hike is double the usual increase of 50c.
Increases kicked in, on a pro rata basis, for other tobacco products from midnight as well.
Separately, a tax on e-liquid – used in e-cigarettes and vapes – will be introduced in the middle of next year. The fee will be 50c for every millilitre of e-liquid. The delay with the introduction is to the challenges of introducing what’s essentially a new tax.
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Finance Minister Jack Chambers and Public Expenditure Minister Paschal Donohoe announced new measures in Budget 2025 yesterday. Alamy Stock Photo
Alamy Stock Photo
The average disposable e-cigarette has 2ml of e-liquid and costs €8. The introduction of the new tax will increase the cost to €9.23.
The Irish Heart Foundation and Vape Business Ireland, which represents vaping retailers, have welcomed both taxes.
The representative body said it helps improve oversight of the market but that it should be complemented with support measures to make sure vendors, who it says are normally SMEs, can stay in business.
The Heart Foundation said the fees will help to deter the growing number of young people from purchasing e-cigarettes without impacting existing users.
It supplies new homeowners a deposit for a newly-built house or apartment and it can also be granted on a once-off basis to applicants who are building their own home.
Some charities believe not enough was included in yesterday's package to help those who are homelessness or to prevent homelessness. Shutterstock
Shutterstock
The rate of stamp duty applicable to residential property valued above €1.5 million has increase already to 6%. A higher rate of stamp duty on bulk acquisitions of houses increased from 10% to 15% with immediate effect after it was announced as well.
Separately, rent tax credits will increase to €1,000 per tenant next year, and it will be back dated to this year.
This means a couple who are renting a property can avail of €2,500 in total in rent supports. The rate credit was increased from €750.
Housing prevention charity Threshold has welcomed the housing measures but said it has concerns over the lack of funding for the HAP scheme, as rent prices “surpassed the HAP rates many years ago, HAP recipients are often having to make up the shortfall with money they do not have”.
The executive director of the Simon Communities, Wayne Stanley, said it was “extraordinary” that so much money could be expanded by Government this year but “so little done for those at the sharpest end of the housing crisis”.
Stanley also took issue with 10,000 social homes promised in this budget. “This is simply insufficient and we see another budget where the rhetoric of homelessness being a ‘top priority’ is not in evidence,” he said.
Speaking during a press conference yesterday, Minister for Housing Darragh O’Brien said he believed the Government have “never been found wanting when it comes to funding out housing”, but acknowledged that problems did remain.
Kevin McPartland, CEO of Fuels for Ireland – the lobby group for garages like Applegreen, Circle K and Maxol – told The Journal that Ireland is now paying the highest amount for fuel in the EU and his group are calling for a review.
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He added that the review could look at how Ireland can use fuel alternatives but should also determine the impact of the pricing.
Some critics said the carbon tax is unfair on consumers and said funds should be directed at improving public transport instead. Alamy Stock Photo
Alamy Stock Photo
“In truth, increases to the price of fuel does not have any impact – good or ill – on retailers,” McPartland said. He added that the only people who are impacted are consumers as garages rely on other revenue streams like newspaper and coffee sales.
The carbon tax increases are part of planned, incremental hikes to the use of fuel and other activities that emit CO2 into the atmosphere. Receipts go into climate action schemes but on Monday a report found 39% of the funds are not being spent correctly.
Elsewhere in transport, children under 9 will be allowed to use public transport for free from next year and those over the age of 70, who hold a commuter pass, will be allowed to have a companion join them free of charge.
For electric vehicles, benefit in kind (BIK) reliefs will remain in place, while an exemption from BIK tax for installing an electric vehicle charger will also be introduced from next year.
An amendment to vehicle registration tax will also be made next year, to ensure electric commercial vehicles can qualify for the €200 rate.
Padraic Deane, Publisher of the AutoTrade.ie, told The Journal that more investment needs to be put into charging networks for electric vehicles first, before measures to increase carbon taxes and give exemptions to EV owners are introduced.
“Their logic is again wrong,” Deane said, adding that higher taxes on cars need to be paired with better public transport systems and alternatives.
Energy
The reduced 9% VAT rate on gas and electricity will be extended until 30 April 2025. The cut was initially introduced to assist with the cost of living as energy prices increased in 2022 after the invasion of Ukraine.
Energy prices remain high for households and the energy credits scheme was welcomed. Shutterstock
Shutterstock
Additionally, all households are to get a €125 energy credit this year and another next year. Eoin Clarke of Switcher.ie, a free energy company comparison website, says that energy prices are still very high and “nowhere near” prices seen before 2022.
In addition to the energy credits, a further €300 lump sum will be made to recipients of the fuel allowance this November.
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@old man trucker: Since this affects the elderly most of all, it maybe be appropriate put some older prisoners, >60 or >70 years, in a facility where they can be better isolated from the virus. They should not and don’t need to allow fit young prisoners out.
@old man trucker: or they could let out prisoners who are in there for non-violent crimes since that’s what prisons are meant to be used for; people who are a threat to the rest of us.
@Bountyop: it’s very difficult to get put into prison in this country, letting violent criminals on the streets even for a short while just means these people will commit as much crime as they can to make up for lost earnings. Weld the cells shut and let them rot
Prison, it’s a place where you isolate dangerous people from society. I know it’s not PC to say it, but some people shouldn’t be part of society, and are beyond rehabilitation.
@Jesus Christ: Yes prison should be a place that it’s so awful that once your left free you will never want to commit a crime again, as you won’t ever want to end up back there. Nowadays they are treated so well they don’t care if they end up back in prison.
Have you considered that perhaps severe sentencing is a reaction to high levels of crime?
Countries who take a soft touch on prisons tend to be wealthy nations with low poverty rates and social programs. Releasing violent offendors benefits nobody.
Stupid conversation. It’s got nothing to do with what you or anyone else thinks prison “should be”. The system we have is the system we have and its not going to change into some draconian system because of the virus or comments on a Internet board. If you want to change the system run for office.
@Lochlainn Marcus: during the 1918 influenza pandemic, prisons either escaped completely or had severe outbreaks. Confined living means prisoners can quarantine themselves. Also, since this affects the elderly most of all, it maybe be appropriate only allow out some low risk elderly prisoners, >70 years, allow them to isolate at home. They should not and don’t need to allow fit young prisoners out.
They aren’t in there for singing too loud in mass!!!! They are already in a controlled and isolated environment. No advantage in releasing any of them. These people aren’t exactly going to play by the rules if released.
The right thing to do here is keep them in there and ban visitors for a period of time so no virus transmission either way. Releasing them makes zero sense if they already have underlying conditions would it be more dangerous for them to be exposed to the outside world?
@Wendy H: that can be done and has been done before for short periods. But the issue is you have guards, teachers, psychologists, deliveries etc all entering the prison daily and who knows what they’re carrying.
Gets better. Lock down some -then let’s let prisoners out just incase those poor souls get it but to hell with tax payers we will tell them to keep working – some public facing who are totally at risk of catching this virus! Why not just lock down prisons. We all need to do our bit and we are all going to experience hardships.
Would it not make more sense to ban prison visits and order prison officers to remain at home temporarily when not working. Last thing we need during a national crisis is petty thugs roaming the streets.
@Adam Conroy: the prisons are grossly overcrowded. It would be a better idea if the government came down harder on people who let their kids roam the streets in big groups , like a witnessed last night. Pubs packed yesterday for last day of Cheltenham. By next week this country will be on total lockdown because people just cant be trusted.
Prison officers are more than aware of the risks and are incredibly aware of the dangers of catching this s#it and bringing it home to their families , let alone bringing it into an institution
Death penalty for paedophiles or those on life sentence. Those who have abused children do not deserve to be treated as humans anymore so no human rights. Horrible thing to say but the law abiding public are more important
One would think a prison is one place the virus will never get into. Ensure your officers and staff do not infect the prisoners. Keep the 2 metre policy in place at all times. How hard can it be to control a virus in a prison. A sinch. If you are releasing prisoners make sure they are the white collar criminals.
Surly its easier to control covid in a controlled environment instead of letting them out to the general public. I suppose its one way of reducing the prisoner population.
So release more people who are “generally of worse health” into society and increase the risk of more people getting infected by them to resolve the problem??? Seriously? One these people are in prison for a reason and two they are far more likely to pick up the virus and spread it…I like most people have some level of sympathy but this makes absolute no sense.
@Dara O’Brien: of course they were or stealing food to feed their families! Not trying to compare just saying it is being done in other countries currently, obviously only persons that are no danger to society should be released early!
A significant amount of people enter our prisons every day so there is clearly a risk that the virus could be introduced. There is serious overcrowding so very few places to put dangerous prisoners in isolation if they have the virus. If they are seriously ill they would probably have to go to hospital under escort and be isolated there. Would be difficult to get staff to agree to supervise them. One option would possibly be to prepare the old Curragh Prison and prepare it as an isolation location for prisoners with the virus.
Wrong..putting them in single cells is a good way.no visitors..like a lot of us for next 2-3 weeks.living alone.and afraid enough with out criminals on the loose..it just gets better .today they said as few arrests as possible..on the telly.by a guard.
@Shirley Hollingsworth: How do you achieve that though if you have a prison with 170 cells but 320 prisoners ? (Real life scenario BTW…) Theory is wonderful but real life is a little more complicated.
@Doug Minihane: I’m not being rational or intelligent or fair because I’m not stupid .i didn’t run to the shop to buy toilet roll in a panic..I have real panic.there will be no good outcome here after this.and if prisoners are being left free.and courts are cancelled .and looting begins next week when no wages are given .making good decisions now will help a lot ..leave them there .and give all new prisoners to an army controlled building.bring home all soldiers we have an emergency here.and it will get worse..
@Shirley Hollingsworth: As few arrests as possible is a bit of a myth anyway. A Garda making an arrest must always consider if it’s necessary and appropriate to do so.
Don’t a lot of this community have self isolation imposed? Just manage visitor’s – zero contact! If Covid 19 is not already evident in the prison community why risk exposure? Staff should be the ones we are concerned about, there are the people who come and go daily.
Some people just didn’t read the full story,
It said people who are a risk to public safety would not be given temporary release,
I think it would be a good thing to release prisoners who would have been considered for temporary release anyway,
People have this attitude lock them up and throw away the key,
Which is the wrong thing.
The last thing that the prison service needs is anarchy,
I’m sure it is frightening enough to be separated from your family without having the thought of dying in a prison without seeing them again,
I think low category prisoners should be released immediately.
This thing is going to wipe out thousands of people.
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