Author Topic: Bendover part your cheeks they are going in Dry  (Read 1480 times)

john m

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Bendover part your cheeks they are going in Dry
« on: April 27, 2021, 01:07:59 am »
The Cabinet will be warned today that current levels of public spending are unsustainable at Ireland’s existing tax base.

However, fearing a political backlash, Ministers and senior officials have played down reports of troika-style austerity being introduced as the pandemic recedes and the economy recovers.

As Covid-19 bills mount, Government departments will bring a series of memos to this morning’s Cabinet meeting examining spending in several departments, while also making provision for extra spending in others.

Pandemic supports are burning through cash at a greater than anticipated rate due to the extended lockdown. But the Government will extend borrowing rather than impose cuts to existing budgets if these supports have to be extended beyond the summer.

Spending review
Ministers will hear reports from the departments of social protection, education, housing, higher education and justice as part of a new quarterly spending review instituted by Minister for Public Expenditure Michael McGrath.


Ministers from departments with significant budgets, either capital or current, have been asked to submit the quarterly reports.

The Department of Housing, the Cabinet will hear, has lost €160 million over revenue foregone due to the commercial rates waiver it granted local authorities.

Despite curtailed opportunities to work on direct building programmes for social housing, due to the shutdown of the construction sector, about €170 million has been spent elsewhere, including on property acquisitions, a voids programme and other programmes.

Minister for Social Protection Heather Humphreys will bring a memo detailing how €7 billion has been spent on the pandemic unemployment payments, as well as the level of spending on other supports.

Current spending
Minister for Education Norma Foley will tell colleagues that current spending is slightly under profile, due to school closures and savings on items such as substitute teachers.

Later today Minister for Finance Paschal Donohoe will reiterate to the Dáil’s Budgetary Oversight Committee that there will be no “cliff-edge” ending of Covid-19 supports when economic and social life begins to reopen. “Our public debt is approaching a quarter of a trillion euros,” Mr Donohoe will say, adding that the pandemic unemployment payment and supports for businesses and workers have cost about €13.5 billion.

     

Meanwhile, Taoiseach Micheál Martin is expected to tell the Oireachtas Finance Committee that the impact of the pandemic on the economy and public finance has been “severe”.

However, he will argue that the “enormous scale” of the Government intervention has prevented even larger falls in economic activity and higher rates of unemployment and he hopes this has “laid the foundations for a swifter recovery”.

Mr McGrath said yesterday that Government departments have been instructed to clearly identify Covid-19 spending from day-to-day public spending so that it can be carefully unwound over a period of time. The Covid-19 supports which are scheduled to conclude at the end of June, will not be brought to an abrupt end, he said. “It’s about making sensible decisions.”



LOOKS LIKE WE MIGHT BE ON 203 after JUNE .and expect new taxes in the budget .Dr Leos grandess of 350 a week for the unemployable means nobody wants to work minimum wage jobs  wait till the Covid coin gets cut and young people feel hard done by .

john m

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Re: Bendover part your cheeks they are going in Dry
« Reply #1 on: April 27, 2021, 01:14:24 am »
Social Protection Minister Heather Humphreys has been forced to ask for an additional €4bn to pay for the on-going cost of Pandemic Unemployment Payment (PUP) and other welfare supports linked to Covid-19.

The minister is seeking the funding to plug the gap in her Department’s finances after months of lockdown.

The Government has been spending around €130m a week paying unemployment payments to more than 400,000 people who have become unemployed due to Covid-19 restrictions. Fraudsters have also taken advantage of the lack of controls around the pandemic payment.

The process of tapering down the weekly payment is expected to begin as more people get back to work.

Pandemic support payment for 465,000 unemployed to be reviewed in June
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The payment has been extended in its current form since the beginning of the year due to the introduction of the Government’s third national lockdown.

Meanwhile, the cost of the Employment Wage Subsidy Scheme (EWSS) has also soared beyond what had been budgeted for this year.

An additional €2.6bn is needed to pay for the mounting costs of the scheme while an additional €1.5bn is required for the PUP bill. An additional €53m is needed to pay for the cost Covid-19 illness benefits.

The minister is also seeking an additional €10m for the Covid-19 Stability Fund for community and voluntary organisations. Meanwhile, Tánaiste and Enterprise Minister Leo Varadkar is seeking €250m to pay for a range of Covid-19 related business supports.


john m

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Re: Bendover part your cheeks they are going in Dry
« Reply #2 on: April 27, 2021, 01:48:37 pm »
Government Ministers are planning to slash PUP payments over the summer.

But People Before Profit want a guarantee the PUP (Pandemic Unemployment Payment) will be paid for as long as people are out of work because of Covid.

Richard Boyd Barrett has proposed continuing the full payments of the support, €350 a week, until at least Christmas.

Minister for Public Expenditure, Michael McGrath, gave a clear indication that the Government is moving to cut the PUP sometime after the end of June, admitting they would be “changed” after that.

He told reporters on the way into Cabinet on Tuesday morning: “At this point we have committed to not abruptly ending those supports at the end of June.

“These supports will continue after that, but perhaps in a changed way.

“But those changes have yet to be made and we’ll make those in the month of May to give people adequate notice.”

It was reported elsewhere earlier this week that the cut being considered is going to be €50 a week.

Offline mercenary for hire

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Re: Bendover part your cheeks they are going in Dry
« Reply #3 on: April 27, 2021, 01:56:09 pm »
Ooh 50 euro a week.

john m

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Re: Bendover part your cheeks they are going in Dry
« Reply #4 on: April 27, 2021, 02:12:39 pm »
Read an article yesterday said a lot of people lost out with the Covid Coin .If you were the sole earner in your bunker you got the max 350 but if you had kids you could of got the Dole and got more in basic dole plus dependent adult and kids money and fuel allowance and Qualified for a Medical Card and kids return to school grant .Makes you wonder how many people now they know whats available will not bother going back to a minimum wage job ?

Offline silverbullet

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Re: Bendover part your cheeks they are going in Dry
« Reply #5 on: April 27, 2021, 02:53:48 pm »
What I wouldn't do for €350 a week. I could collect and STILL tarmacadam driveways badly.

Offline Shallowhal

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Re: Bendover part your cheeks they are going in Dry
« Reply #6 on: April 27, 2021, 08:48:16 pm »
What I wouldn't do for €350 a week. I could collect and STILL tarmacadam driveways badly.
It's not all It's cracked up to be!!

 


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