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IRISH WORKERS may still avoid an increase in income tax in December’s Budget – but only if the government is able to renegotiate Ireland’s funding deal with the EU and IMF.
Speaking at the end of Fine Gael’s think-in yesterday, Enda Kenny said that while his government was committed to ensuring that income tax was not increased during its term of office, its hands were currently tied by the previous bailout agreement.
“The previous government… signed off on a situation where it agreed there would be €250m extra in income tax taken from the taxpayer for each of the next three years,” the Irish Examiner quotes Kenny as having told reporters. ”We now have to renegotiate that with the IMF-EU.”
The comments came after the Taoiseach yesterday said that “everything is on the table” for December’s Budget, and that the government was prepared to be “radical” in proposals for spending reforms.
Kenny failed, however, to equivocally rule out the prospect of tax increases – though he and Tánaiste Eamon Gilmore had affirmed, 100 days into their term of office, that income tax rates would not be increased nor social welfare payments cut.
The finance minister Michael Noonan, later speaking to reporters, said December’s Budget would be two-thirds as severe as last year’s – indicating that the potential adjustment could be towards the higher end of the €3.6bn to €4bn window outlined by Kenny.
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