Fine Gael's 5 Point Plan aims to get Ireland working again through job creation and economic growth. Point 1 focuses on growth and jobs. It proposes a €7 billion NewERA investment program in infrastructure like energy, water and telecoms to create jobs. It also aims to support SMEs, reduce business costs, and promote sectors with growth potential like education, digital media and renewables. The goal is to create 100,000 jobs over 5 years in line with forecasts. It also wants to reform education to create a system for the 21st century.
This document is the manifesto of the political party Fine Gael in Ireland. It outlines Fine Gael's 5-point plan to lead Ireland's recovery from its economic crisis, with the number one priority being job growth and creation. The plan includes focusing budget cuts over tax increases, investing €7 billion in infrastructure like broadband and energy through the NewERA plan, supporting small and medium businesses, reforming public services, and overhauling political systems to end cronyism. The manifesto argues Ireland needs fundamental changes to structures and systems to improve governance after the economic collapse damaged citizens' confidence in politics and institutions.
Fine Gael will invest €7 billion in key infrastructure projects over 4 years to stimulate the economy and create jobs. This will include investment in energy, broadband, water and communications. Fine Gael estimates this will directly create 20,000 jobs per year. To tackle emigration, Fine Gael will create 23,000 internship places, 17,000 second chance education places, 5,000 community employment plans, and 700 apprenticeship guarantees. Fine Gael believes these measures will provide opportunities for young people and stem the flow of emigration from Ireland.
Origin Financial A Guide To Budget 2012 SinglesOliver Taylor
The perfect marketing solutions to:
· Improve brand awareness with prospective clients
· Add value and build further loyalty with existing clients
· Generate increased referral leads and sales opportunities
· Use to add regular changing content to your website
· Attract and retain higher volumes of website traffic
· E-mail to clients, prospects and professional introducers
· Improve your website SEO success from organic searches
· Use the content to set-up an e-news alert service
· Extend your marketing to smartphone and tablet technology
This document is a budget submission from Young Fine Gael proposing policies for the 2015 Irish budget. It makes recommendations in key areas like housing, healthcare, education, taxation, and the banking sector. Specifically, it calls for temporarily abolishing VAT on new home sales, freezing prescription charges for medical card holders, allocating more funding to mental health services, protecting students by freezing third level contribution charges, reducing income tax rates, introducing a recycling levy, and removing 1-cent and 2-cent coins from circulation. The submission aims to provide hope for young people by stimulating investment and economic opportunity.
The document outlines the Jamaica Labour Party's 10-point plan to promote economic growth and job creation in Jamaica. The key points of the plan include establishing a Ministry of Economic Growth and Job Creation, simplifying the tax system, investing in water infrastructure, listing state-owned enterprises on the stock exchange, supporting small and medium businesses, and reforming governance. The overall goals are to facilitate investment, foster public-private partnerships, minimize bureaucracy, and put Jamaica back on a path of robust economic growth and employment opportunities.
The document traces the evolution of the US retirement industry from its origins to modern 401(k) plans. It discusses the development of pensions in the late 19th century, the establishment of Social Security in 1935, and the shift to defined contribution plans and 401(k)s in the late 20th century. It also outlines major laws like ERISA and key challenges around funding pensions and Social Security in the future given rising lifespans. Overall, the document provides a comprehensive overview of the retirement system's history in the United States.
This document provides an overview of the Irish Congress of Trade Unions' recommendations for Ireland's budget in 2008. It calls for investment in infrastructure, education, healthcare, social welfare, and supports for working families. It argues that workforce skills will be key to future competitiveness rather than low taxes. It recommends examining initiatives like Denmark's "flexicurity" model to make workers less vulnerable to global market shocks. Overall, the budget must strategically address deficits and lay foundations for an inclusive, generous future society.
The 2015 budget document outlines key points of the UK budget, including:
1) Introduction of a new Help to Buy ISA that provides a £50 bonus for every £200 saved up to £3,000 for a first home.
2) Increase to the personal allowance for income tax to £10,800 in 2016/17 and £11,000 in 2017/18.
3) Cut to the pension lifetime allowance to £1 million from April 2016 and above-inflation increases to income tax thresholds in 2016/17 and 2017/18.
This document is the manifesto of the political party Fine Gael in Ireland. It outlines Fine Gael's 5-point plan to lead Ireland's recovery from its economic crisis, with the number one priority being job growth and creation. The plan includes focusing budget cuts over tax increases, investing €7 billion in infrastructure like broadband and energy through the NewERA plan, supporting small and medium businesses, reforming public services, and overhauling political systems to end cronyism. The manifesto argues Ireland needs fundamental changes to structures and systems to improve governance after the economic collapse damaged citizens' confidence in politics and institutions.
Fine Gael will invest €7 billion in key infrastructure projects over 4 years to stimulate the economy and create jobs. This will include investment in energy, broadband, water and communications. Fine Gael estimates this will directly create 20,000 jobs per year. To tackle emigration, Fine Gael will create 23,000 internship places, 17,000 second chance education places, 5,000 community employment plans, and 700 apprenticeship guarantees. Fine Gael believes these measures will provide opportunities for young people and stem the flow of emigration from Ireland.
Origin Financial A Guide To Budget 2012 SinglesOliver Taylor
The perfect marketing solutions to:
· Improve brand awareness with prospective clients
· Add value and build further loyalty with existing clients
· Generate increased referral leads and sales opportunities
· Use to add regular changing content to your website
· Attract and retain higher volumes of website traffic
· E-mail to clients, prospects and professional introducers
· Improve your website SEO success from organic searches
· Use the content to set-up an e-news alert service
· Extend your marketing to smartphone and tablet technology
This document is a budget submission from Young Fine Gael proposing policies for the 2015 Irish budget. It makes recommendations in key areas like housing, healthcare, education, taxation, and the banking sector. Specifically, it calls for temporarily abolishing VAT on new home sales, freezing prescription charges for medical card holders, allocating more funding to mental health services, protecting students by freezing third level contribution charges, reducing income tax rates, introducing a recycling levy, and removing 1-cent and 2-cent coins from circulation. The submission aims to provide hope for young people by stimulating investment and economic opportunity.
The document outlines the Jamaica Labour Party's 10-point plan to promote economic growth and job creation in Jamaica. The key points of the plan include establishing a Ministry of Economic Growth and Job Creation, simplifying the tax system, investing in water infrastructure, listing state-owned enterprises on the stock exchange, supporting small and medium businesses, and reforming governance. The overall goals are to facilitate investment, foster public-private partnerships, minimize bureaucracy, and put Jamaica back on a path of robust economic growth and employment opportunities.
The document traces the evolution of the US retirement industry from its origins to modern 401(k) plans. It discusses the development of pensions in the late 19th century, the establishment of Social Security in 1935, and the shift to defined contribution plans and 401(k)s in the late 20th century. It also outlines major laws like ERISA and key challenges around funding pensions and Social Security in the future given rising lifespans. Overall, the document provides a comprehensive overview of the retirement system's history in the United States.
This document provides an overview of the Irish Congress of Trade Unions' recommendations for Ireland's budget in 2008. It calls for investment in infrastructure, education, healthcare, social welfare, and supports for working families. It argues that workforce skills will be key to future competitiveness rather than low taxes. It recommends examining initiatives like Denmark's "flexicurity" model to make workers less vulnerable to global market shocks. Overall, the budget must strategically address deficits and lay foundations for an inclusive, generous future society.
The 2015 budget document outlines key points of the UK budget, including:
1) Introduction of a new Help to Buy ISA that provides a £50 bonus for every £200 saved up to £3,000 for a first home.
2) Increase to the personal allowance for income tax to £10,800 in 2016/17 and £11,000 in 2017/18.
3) Cut to the pension lifetime allowance to £1 million from April 2016 and above-inflation increases to income tax thresholds in 2016/17 and 2017/18.
The 2015 budget document outlines key points of the UK budget, including:
1) Introduction of a new Help to Buy ISA that provides a £50 bonus for every £200 saved up to £3,000 for a first home.
2) Increase to the personal allowance for income tax to £10,800 in 2016/17 and £11,000 in 2017/18.
3) Reduction in the lifetime pension allowance to £1 million from April 2016 and above-inflation increases to income tax thresholds in 2016/17 and 2017/18.
The 2015 budget document outlines key points of the UK budget, including:
1) Introduction of a new Help to Buy ISA that provides a £50 bonus for every £200 saved up to £3,000 for a first home.
2) Investors will be able to withdraw and replace money from cash ISAs in the same tax year without affecting annual limits.
3) The pension lifetime allowance will be cut to £1 million from April 2016 and transitional protection rules will apply.
The Irish Tax Institute Fantasy Budget CompetitionSinead Feely
Budget 2015 made some changes aimed at easing the tax burden for low and middle income earners, but provided little relief for higher earners. It closed the controversial "Double Irish" tax scheme and introduced a water charges tax relief. However, the increased USC rate for high earning sole traders may discourage entrepreneurship. While foreign investment incentives were extended, the still high marginal tax rate makes Ireland less competitive for attracting internationally mobile businesses and executives.
The 2011 UK budget report included the following key points:
1) The main rate of corporation tax was cut to 26% and will be reduced to 23% by 2014. Personal income tax allowances were projected to increase to £8,105 by 2012/13.
2) Enterprise investment schemes and venture capital trusts received reforms, including an increase in the tax relief rate for EIS investments to 30%.
3) Non-domiciled individuals facing an increased annual charge of £50,000 if resident for 12+ years and wishing to use the remittance basis.
4) Various measures supported charities, including simplification of gift aid. The entrepreneurs' relief lifetime limit increased to
Cecil Nazareth, CPA: International Tax Planning & Update 2019Nazareth CPAs
Cecil Nazareth, CPA (www.nazarethcpas.com) deconstructs international tax planning issues at the New York State Society of CPAs (live session and webinar) in NYC.
This document summarizes the major tax legislation passed in 2010 and how it affects individuals and businesses. Key points include:
- The Tax Relief Act of 2010 extended the Bush-era tax cuts through 2012, keeping income tax rates at 2010 levels.
- It maintained the 15% capital gains and dividend tax rates and increased estate tax exemptions to $5 million through 2012.
- Business provisions like bonus depreciation deductions and R&D tax credits were also extended through 2011.
- The Social Security payroll tax was reduced to 4.2% for employees for 2011 only. Medicare taxes increased for high-income individuals starting in 2013.
- Incentives like section 179 expensing were increased
This document discusses potential strategies for Indonesia to accelerate economic growth post-pandemic. It suggests focusing on human capital development through improving education, increasing spending on research and development, and supporting small and medium enterprises. Education reform ideas include emulating Finland's approach of fostering creativity over rote learning. R&D spending in Indonesia is currently low at 0.22% of GDP and needs to increase. SMEs employ most workers but were impacted by the pandemic, so policies like the UK's furlough program could help prevent rising unemployment. Developing local consumption of domestic products would also support SME growth and investment. Mergers between major tech startups Gojek and Grab or Tokopedia are mentioned as possibilities to
Canada’s small- and medium-size enterprises
(SMEs) are collectively the largest employer in
Canada, employing about 55 per cent of
Canadians (based on Statistics Canada’s Survey
of Employment, Payrolls and Hours 2008).
When you take into account the fact that they
contribute 1.4 times the premiums their
employees do, this makes them the single
largest employer-stakeholder group in the EI
system today. SMEs employ Canadians in every
province and in every sector of the economy,
from the retail and service sectors to
manufacturing and primary industries. This
broad range of industries and employee
requirements make SME owners an excellent
judge of the efficacy of the EI system.
EI is becoming a more and more important
issue for SMEs. In fact, EI is one of the top
priorities for CFIB members across the nation.
This was highlighted in a survey conducted in
the first half of 2009, which found that 48 per
cent of CFIB members listed EI reform as a
priority for their business, behind only the
total tax burden and regulations and paper
burden, both of which are also directly related
to the EI system.
This proposal was a winning entry in The Irish Taxation Institute's annual 'Fantasy Budget' competition in 2015. The budget overview and original measure was submitted as a group project.
The Chancellor announced tax cuts and increased departmental spending in his Autumn Budget. Key measures included raising the personal tax allowance to £12,500 and higher-rate threshold to £50,000 in April 2019, increasing funding for the NHS, schools and social care, and boosting the annual investment allowance for businesses to £1 million for two years. The Chancellor also set aside over £4 billion for Brexit preparations and warned that next year's Spring Statement could become a full fiscal event if Brexit negotiations adversely impact the financial forecast.
This document outlines Fine Gael's plan to rebuild the Irish economy and create jobs between 2011-2016. The plan aims to generate 100,000 new jobs over 5 years by prioritizing jobs and competitiveness. Key elements of the plan include protecting investment and making tax rates competitive; helping Irish businesses grow their markets through new programs; reforming welfare to link it to re-entry to work; reducing costs, red tape, and bad regulations; and establishing a new department focused on jobs and economic planning. The overarching goal is to restore confidence and growth in the Irish economy through these various initiatives.
The document is a fiscal plan from Fine Gael, an Irish political party. It outlines their proposals to cut the budget deficit through lower taxes and spending reductions. Some key points include:
- Cutting the deficit to below 3% of GDP by 2014 and only borrowing for investment by 2016.
- Renegotiating aspects of Ireland's IMF/EU bailout deal to make it more sustainable.
- Investing €7 billion in infrastructure through a state-owned investment fund to support growth and jobs.
- Focusing budget cuts more on spending reductions than tax increases to minimize economic impact.
- Implementing reforms to improve competitiveness and support job creation.
The document outlines Fine Gael's three-phase plan to reform Ireland's healthcare system called FairCare. Phase 1 from 2011-2014 focuses on reforming the current system, including reducing waiting lists, IT reforms, and savings of over €1 billion. Phase 2 from 2014-2015 changes how hospitals work by breaking up the HSE and empowering local hospitals. Phase 3 from 2016-2020 introduces a system of Universal Health Insurance modeled after the Dutch system.
This manifesto sets out our plans for creating jobs and a future for all Ireland’s young people. Fine Gael’s main priority is to create the jobs that will allow our young people to stay at home in Ireland, where they want to be and where they want to create their future
Fine Gael and Labour, the two largest political parties in the State having achieved historic levels of support in the general election, now seek to use their mandate to
form a Government for National Recovery.
This document is Young Fine Gael's pre-budget submission for 2016. It proposes several measures to address issues affecting young people in Ireland such as unemployment, mental health, and third level accommodation. The key recommendations are to increase funding for mental health services, address the lack of student accommodation through incentives for student housing and tax relief for purpose-built accommodation, establish an independent budgetary office to cost opposition proposals, increase employment among graduates through mandatory work placements, standardize the minimum wage, remove certain business taxes, and introduce a recycling levy on bottles and cans. The submission aims to provide "a bright future for young Ireland."
Ireland needs to improve its competitiveness in key areas to continue prospering after the recession. The key elements that must be addressed are: reducing the cost of doing business through lower taxes and costs, maintaining macroeconomic stability and increasing public investment, developing skills and enterprise, and improving access to finance. Specifically, Ireland must make labor costs more competitive by reviewing taxes and social welfare, lower high energy costs, increase the supply of affordable housing and commercial properties, broaden its tax base, maintain a low corporate tax rate, and increase targeted public infrastructure investment.
The document discusses key elements needed for Ireland to regain competitiveness, including reducing costs of doing business, maintaining macroeconomic stability and public investment, developing skills and the enterprise base, and improving access to finance. It analyzes specific areas within each element that need to be addressed, such as labor costs, energy costs, property costs, broadening the tax base, increasing public investment, developing skills training programs, supporting entrepreneurship, and improving access to bank and non-bank financing. Regaining competitiveness is vital for Ireland's economic growth and job creation.
This document outlines Young Fine Gael's priorities for addressing issues facing young people in Ireland. It focuses on stemming youth emigration by creating jobs, reducing unemployment among young people, and keeping taxes low. It also emphasizes reforming government to increase efficiency and addressing issues in several departments impacting youth, such as education, children and youth affairs, and agriculture.
Slides from the Nevin Economic Research Institute's post Budget seminar. Speakers Michelle Murphy (Social Justice Ireland), Cormac Staunton (TASC) and Michael Taft (UNITE)
The 2015 budget document outlines key points of the UK budget, including:
1) Introduction of a new Help to Buy ISA that provides a £50 bonus for every £200 saved up to £3,000 for a first home.
2) Increase to the personal allowance for income tax to £10,800 in 2016/17 and £11,000 in 2017/18.
3) Reduction in the lifetime pension allowance to £1 million from April 2016 and above-inflation increases to income tax thresholds in 2016/17 and 2017/18.
The 2015 budget document outlines key points of the UK budget, including:
1) Introduction of a new Help to Buy ISA that provides a £50 bonus for every £200 saved up to £3,000 for a first home.
2) Investors will be able to withdraw and replace money from cash ISAs in the same tax year without affecting annual limits.
3) The pension lifetime allowance will be cut to £1 million from April 2016 and transitional protection rules will apply.
The Irish Tax Institute Fantasy Budget CompetitionSinead Feely
Budget 2015 made some changes aimed at easing the tax burden for low and middle income earners, but provided little relief for higher earners. It closed the controversial "Double Irish" tax scheme and introduced a water charges tax relief. However, the increased USC rate for high earning sole traders may discourage entrepreneurship. While foreign investment incentives were extended, the still high marginal tax rate makes Ireland less competitive for attracting internationally mobile businesses and executives.
The 2011 UK budget report included the following key points:
1) The main rate of corporation tax was cut to 26% and will be reduced to 23% by 2014. Personal income tax allowances were projected to increase to £8,105 by 2012/13.
2) Enterprise investment schemes and venture capital trusts received reforms, including an increase in the tax relief rate for EIS investments to 30%.
3) Non-domiciled individuals facing an increased annual charge of £50,000 if resident for 12+ years and wishing to use the remittance basis.
4) Various measures supported charities, including simplification of gift aid. The entrepreneurs' relief lifetime limit increased to
Cecil Nazareth, CPA: International Tax Planning & Update 2019Nazareth CPAs
Cecil Nazareth, CPA (www.nazarethcpas.com) deconstructs international tax planning issues at the New York State Society of CPAs (live session and webinar) in NYC.
This document summarizes the major tax legislation passed in 2010 and how it affects individuals and businesses. Key points include:
- The Tax Relief Act of 2010 extended the Bush-era tax cuts through 2012, keeping income tax rates at 2010 levels.
- It maintained the 15% capital gains and dividend tax rates and increased estate tax exemptions to $5 million through 2012.
- Business provisions like bonus depreciation deductions and R&D tax credits were also extended through 2011.
- The Social Security payroll tax was reduced to 4.2% for employees for 2011 only. Medicare taxes increased for high-income individuals starting in 2013.
- Incentives like section 179 expensing were increased
This document discusses potential strategies for Indonesia to accelerate economic growth post-pandemic. It suggests focusing on human capital development through improving education, increasing spending on research and development, and supporting small and medium enterprises. Education reform ideas include emulating Finland's approach of fostering creativity over rote learning. R&D spending in Indonesia is currently low at 0.22% of GDP and needs to increase. SMEs employ most workers but were impacted by the pandemic, so policies like the UK's furlough program could help prevent rising unemployment. Developing local consumption of domestic products would also support SME growth and investment. Mergers between major tech startups Gojek and Grab or Tokopedia are mentioned as possibilities to
Canada’s small- and medium-size enterprises
(SMEs) are collectively the largest employer in
Canada, employing about 55 per cent of
Canadians (based on Statistics Canada’s Survey
of Employment, Payrolls and Hours 2008).
When you take into account the fact that they
contribute 1.4 times the premiums their
employees do, this makes them the single
largest employer-stakeholder group in the EI
system today. SMEs employ Canadians in every
province and in every sector of the economy,
from the retail and service sectors to
manufacturing and primary industries. This
broad range of industries and employee
requirements make SME owners an excellent
judge of the efficacy of the EI system.
EI is becoming a more and more important
issue for SMEs. In fact, EI is one of the top
priorities for CFIB members across the nation.
This was highlighted in a survey conducted in
the first half of 2009, which found that 48 per
cent of CFIB members listed EI reform as a
priority for their business, behind only the
total tax burden and regulations and paper
burden, both of which are also directly related
to the EI system.
This proposal was a winning entry in The Irish Taxation Institute's annual 'Fantasy Budget' competition in 2015. The budget overview and original measure was submitted as a group project.
The Chancellor announced tax cuts and increased departmental spending in his Autumn Budget. Key measures included raising the personal tax allowance to £12,500 and higher-rate threshold to £50,000 in April 2019, increasing funding for the NHS, schools and social care, and boosting the annual investment allowance for businesses to £1 million for two years. The Chancellor also set aside over £4 billion for Brexit preparations and warned that next year's Spring Statement could become a full fiscal event if Brexit negotiations adversely impact the financial forecast.
This document outlines Fine Gael's plan to rebuild the Irish economy and create jobs between 2011-2016. The plan aims to generate 100,000 new jobs over 5 years by prioritizing jobs and competitiveness. Key elements of the plan include protecting investment and making tax rates competitive; helping Irish businesses grow their markets through new programs; reforming welfare to link it to re-entry to work; reducing costs, red tape, and bad regulations; and establishing a new department focused on jobs and economic planning. The overarching goal is to restore confidence and growth in the Irish economy through these various initiatives.
The document is a fiscal plan from Fine Gael, an Irish political party. It outlines their proposals to cut the budget deficit through lower taxes and spending reductions. Some key points include:
- Cutting the deficit to below 3% of GDP by 2014 and only borrowing for investment by 2016.
- Renegotiating aspects of Ireland's IMF/EU bailout deal to make it more sustainable.
- Investing €7 billion in infrastructure through a state-owned investment fund to support growth and jobs.
- Focusing budget cuts more on spending reductions than tax increases to minimize economic impact.
- Implementing reforms to improve competitiveness and support job creation.
The document outlines Fine Gael's three-phase plan to reform Ireland's healthcare system called FairCare. Phase 1 from 2011-2014 focuses on reforming the current system, including reducing waiting lists, IT reforms, and savings of over €1 billion. Phase 2 from 2014-2015 changes how hospitals work by breaking up the HSE and empowering local hospitals. Phase 3 from 2016-2020 introduces a system of Universal Health Insurance modeled after the Dutch system.
This manifesto sets out our plans for creating jobs and a future for all Ireland’s young people. Fine Gael’s main priority is to create the jobs that will allow our young people to stay at home in Ireland, where they want to be and where they want to create their future
Fine Gael and Labour, the two largest political parties in the State having achieved historic levels of support in the general election, now seek to use their mandate to
form a Government for National Recovery.
This document is Young Fine Gael's pre-budget submission for 2016. It proposes several measures to address issues affecting young people in Ireland such as unemployment, mental health, and third level accommodation. The key recommendations are to increase funding for mental health services, address the lack of student accommodation through incentives for student housing and tax relief for purpose-built accommodation, establish an independent budgetary office to cost opposition proposals, increase employment among graduates through mandatory work placements, standardize the minimum wage, remove certain business taxes, and introduce a recycling levy on bottles and cans. The submission aims to provide "a bright future for young Ireland."
Ireland needs to improve its competitiveness in key areas to continue prospering after the recession. The key elements that must be addressed are: reducing the cost of doing business through lower taxes and costs, maintaining macroeconomic stability and increasing public investment, developing skills and enterprise, and improving access to finance. Specifically, Ireland must make labor costs more competitive by reviewing taxes and social welfare, lower high energy costs, increase the supply of affordable housing and commercial properties, broaden its tax base, maintain a low corporate tax rate, and increase targeted public infrastructure investment.
The document discusses key elements needed for Ireland to regain competitiveness, including reducing costs of doing business, maintaining macroeconomic stability and public investment, developing skills and the enterprise base, and improving access to finance. It analyzes specific areas within each element that need to be addressed, such as labor costs, energy costs, property costs, broadening the tax base, increasing public investment, developing skills training programs, supporting entrepreneurship, and improving access to bank and non-bank financing. Regaining competitiveness is vital for Ireland's economic growth and job creation.
This document outlines Young Fine Gael's priorities for addressing issues facing young people in Ireland. It focuses on stemming youth emigration by creating jobs, reducing unemployment among young people, and keeping taxes low. It also emphasizes reforming government to increase efficiency and addressing issues in several departments impacting youth, such as education, children and youth affairs, and agriculture.
Slides from the Nevin Economic Research Institute's post Budget seminar. Speakers Michelle Murphy (Social Justice Ireland), Cormac Staunton (TASC) and Michael Taft (UNITE)
The document discusses the impact of budget cuts on local development companies in Ireland. It summarizes that local development companies rely on government funding but have faced cuts of around 45% since 2008. This has created issues in delivering services but companies have tried to maintain output by cutting costs. The document analyzes how these companies contribute to Ireland's national goals in areas like employment, research and development, climate change, education and poverty reduction. It highlights two core programs - LEADER and SICAP - that have faced significant funding reductions. The document provides recommendations around increasing and stabilizing funding levels, allowing flexibility in administration costs, and improving communication between government departments and local development companies.
Neri post budget reflections sinead pembroke 17 oct 18NevinInstitute
This document summarizes and critiques Ireland's 2019 budget. It finds that the budget does not do enough to increase social provision or taxation. It remains a low tax economy with low levels of social services publicly provided. Specific critiques include that the budget provides disproportionate benefits to high earners, does little to address housing shortages, relies too heavily on subsidizing private landlords for social housing, and does not go far enough on healthcare, childcare, welfare or raising the minimum wage to a living wage. The document argues future budgets need to increase taxation progressively and invest more in universal public services to address inequality and economic insecurity.
Leitch Review of Skills - Final Report - 'Prosperity for all in the global ec...The Pathway Group
Leitch Review of Skills - Final Report - 'Prosperity for all in the global economy - world class skills' talks about the
The Leitch Review was tasked in 2004 to consider the UK’s long-term skills needs. The UK is building on economic strength and stability, with 14 years of unbroken growth and the highest employment rate in the G7. Its skills base has improved significantly over the last decade with rising school standards and growth in graduate numbers. Despite this, the UK’s skills base remains weak by international standards, holding back productivity,
growth and social justice. The Review has found that, even if current targets to improve skills are met, the UK’s skills base will still lag behind that of many comparator countries
in 2020. The UK will run to stand still.
The global economy is changing rapidly, with emerging economies such as India and China growing dramatically, altering UK competitiveness. The population is ageing, technological change and global migration flows are increasing. There is a direct correlation between
skills, productivity and employment. Unless the UK can build on reforms to schools, colleges and universities and make its skills base one of its strengths, UK businesses will find it increasingly difficult to compete. As a result of low skills, the UK risks increasing inequality, deprivation and child poverty, and risks a generation cut off permanently from labour market opportunity. The best form of welfare is to ensure that people can adapt to change. Skills were once a key lever for prosperity and fairness. Skills are now increasingly the key lever. A radical step-change is necessary. The Review recommends that the UK commit to becoming a world leader in skills by 2020, benchmarked against the upper quartile of the
OECD.
There is a lot of criteria to be met if the report is to be successful in its recommendations however it sets a compelling case for further education and training improvements.
The document discusses the economic strategy and impacts of austerity measures by the UK coalition government. It argues that the scale of planned cuts to public services is unrealistic and will disproportionately impact the poor. Significant job losses are predicted as public sector cuts will induce further private sector job losses. The document proposes alternative policies like increasing taxes on corporations and the wealthy, nationalizing banks, and investing in renewable energy to create jobs instead of austerity measures.
The Ireland that works campaign maps out the key priorities for business in the next phase of the recovery and will form a central part of Ibec's activities to influence and shape the national debate.
With the Troika gone, Ireland has important decisions to make on how to build on the economic progress already made, tackle unemployment and drive growth across the economy. We need to get these right.
At Ibec we plan to lead the debate. We have identified five pressing issues on the national agenda that will have a major impact on Ireland’s success into the future:
1. We need to reduce the tax burden: Ireland is out of line internationally and our income tax rates, in particular, are too high. Irish consumers deserve a break.
2. We need better government: Poorly designed policy, legislation and regulation add to the cost of doing business and are an obstacle to growth and job creation.
3. We need to invest in the future: To meet our future economic needs, we need to spend much more on infrastructure projects and skills and education.
4. We need to extend Ireland’s global reach: International debates on tax and EU reform could have major implications for Ireland. We need to influence and shape the agenda.
5. We need to promote entrepreneurship: Business need to have access to effective enterprise supports, credit and export markets. Risk needs to be rewarded.
We hope the campaign priorities are relevant, challenging and resonant with your own ambitions for your business and for Ireland. Ibec will be rolling out more elements of the campaign over the coming weeks and months, and we'll keep you updated on our blog.
Download, share or embed this campaign brochure.
You can also join the conversation on twitter, #irelandworks @ibec_irl or on the Ibec Linkedin group.
AIB Outlook: Long Term Care in IrelandConversocial
Welcome to the ninth in our series of reports covering key sectors within the Irish economy. The aim of these reports is to analyse key components of the Irish economic landscape and provide opinion, guidance and advice from some of the stakeholders within each sector. They also provide some important insights into how AIB is working to support these sectors. For this report we have turned our attention to healthcare given its importance to the economy and more specifically to the long-term care sector. We are pleased to partner with Nursing Homes Ireland in the publication of this Long-Term Care Sector Outlook Report.
This document summarizes a presentation on health care reform in Ireland. It discusses:
1) Long-term perspectives on the Irish economy, demography, and politics, noting population growth and declining support for major political parties.
2) Comparisons of the Irish, Dutch, and German health care models, suggesting Ireland move toward a private model like the Netherlands.
3) Issues with rising health spending in Ireland that exceeds population and inflation growth, arguing spending is misdirected through centralized bargaining and a hospital in every town model.
EY Citizen Today - December 2009 - Arnauld Bertrand examines how French policy-makers are driving forward plans for a sweeping modernization of the state
This document outlines the policy priorities of Young Fine Gael for Ireland in 2014. It covers 14 areas of policy including local government, the economy and jobs, health, education, agriculture, and the environment. Within each section, it lists specific policies and positions of Young Fine Gael, such as supporting a directly elected Dublin mayor, tackling youth unemployment, improving mental health services, reforming third level funding, supporting young farmers, and addressing climate change. The overall document provides a comprehensive overview of the key issues and policy stances of Young Fine Gael heading into the 2014 local elections in Ireland.
1. 5
Point Plan to
Get Ireland
Working
Get involved and find out
more at www.FineGael.ie
Let’s get Ireland Working
2.
3. Table of Contents
Executive Summary 4
1 Growth and Jobs 6
NewERA: A €7 Billion Investment in our Future 6
Every Job Counts: Beyond the Smart Economy 7
Race to the Top: An Education System for the 21st Century 9
2. Fair Deficit Reduction 11
Protecting Jobs – Protecting the Taxpayer 11
Sharing the Burden: A Fair and Effective Banking Solution 12
3. Smaller Better Government 13
Smaller Government: €5 Billion of Savings 13
Better Government: An End to Command and Control 14
4. A New Politics 16
Abolishing the Seanad – Reforming the Dail 16
Empowering the Citizen: Real Power to the People 18
5. Healthcare for All 20
Radical Reform of the Current Health System (2011–2015) 20
Universal Health Insurance (2016–2020) 21
Making the Current Health System More Efficient 22
CONCLUSION 23
FIne GaeL’s 5 PoInt PLan For recovery l 3
4. Executive Summary
Fine Gael believes passionately that Ireland needs a new start. That the only way to save our country is
to change it. Fine Gael wants to do more than rebuild Ireland. We want to transform it. To create from
the ashes of the old a New Ireland that is better, stronger and fairer. An Ireland that has reclaimed both
its sovereignty and its self-confidence. An Ireland that can provide work and security for all. An Ireland
where our children are not forced to emigrate like countless generations before.
The chaos of the last few years, culminating in the humiliation of Ireland seeking an IMF/EU bailout,
has proved one thing beyond all doubt: the old Ireland, the Ireland of Fianna Fail and the Galway Tent,
isn’t working. Our nation is experiencing the deepest recession, the largest deficit and the biggest
banking crisis of any country in the OECD. But Fine Gael believes that the current crisis is not just a huge
challenge. It is also an enormous opportunity for Ireland to reinvent itself. We are a young country full of
talented, creative and energetic people. We can and will recover. But to do so we need a new vision. A
common mistake for communities hit by earthquakes is to build again using the same designs. Ireland
cannot make that mistake. If we want different results we have to start doing things differently.
This document is not a manifesto. But it does contain Fine Gael’s blueprint for building a New Ireland.
Each of the Five Points of our plan focuses on a particular area of concern. Together they form the most
ambitious programme for change since the foundation of the state. We believe that job creation must be
the Number One priority of the next Government. But we are also convinced that sustainable job creation
is only possible if supported by a comprehensive package of economic, social and political reform.
Points 1 and 2 of our plan show how a Fine Gael Government will achieve a return to
economic growth, reduce the deficit and create a dynamic Jobs Economy. We cannot allow
emigration to once again become a permanent feature of our nation’s life.
Points 3 and 4 outline how we will reform both the public sector and the political system
to cut costs, improve productivity and create a New Ireland. Ireland belongs to its people -
not to the insiders who have failed them so badly.
Point 5 summarises how Fine Gael’s FairCare policy will make the health system both
more efficient and fairer and help create a more Just Society. We believe economic renewal
and fairness must go hand in hand.
By Year 5 of a Fine Gael Government our plan will have helped deliver:
1: GROWTH AND JOBS. Fine Gael will invest an additional €7 billion through our NewERA programme in
next generation infrastructure – telecoms, energy and water – funded largely through asset sales. We
will also introduce a series of structural reforms to encourage growth, particularly in the SME sector
(Small and Medium sized Enterprises). These and other measures will help ensure that employment in
Ireland increases by a 100,000 over five years, in line with the ESRI’s recovery scenarios. Fine Gael will
also introduce a series of reforms to create an education system that delivers excellence and tackles
the continuing under-performance of disadvantaged pupils.
2: FAIR DEFICIT REDUCTION. Fine Gael will reduce the deficit to 3% of GDP by cutting at least two Euros
of spending for every Euro of additional taxes raised. We are convinced that the high tax policies of
other parties will destroy jobs. We will also do everything in our power to renegotiate the IMF/EU
bailout deal. We believe that the provisions of the deal forcing the next Government to continue with
Fianna Fail’s disastrous banking policy are bad for Ireland and bad for Europe.
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5. 3: SMALLER BETTER GOVERMENT. A Fine Gael Government will protect frontline services as much as
possible by cutting waste and reducing the costs of running government by €5 billion. We will address
the quality of these services by giving frontline staff and the public greater freedom over how they are
delivered.
4: A NEW POLITICS. Political failure lies at the heart of Ireland’s economic failure. To fix the economy
we must also fix the political system. Fine Gael’s New Politics will abolish the Seanad and reduce the
number of TDs by 20; reform how the Dail and local government work; introduce Open Government
legislation; and establish a Citizens Assembly on electoral reform. Our reforms will require changes in
the articles of the constitution dealing with the institutions of the state.
5: HEALTHCARE FOR ALL. Ireland’s health system is in crisis with record numbers of patients left on
A&E trolleys every day. Unless it is fundamentally reformed rising costs, driven largely by an ageing
population, will cripple the economy and make it even harder for poorer citizens to access healthcare.
Fine Gael’s FairCare plan will reduce costs and make the system fairer by shifting chronic disease
management from hospital to primary care, changing the way hospitals are financed and introducing
Universal Health Insurance (UHI) into Ireland.
Fine Gael is not offering any easy answers or quick fixes. The damage inflicted upon Ireland by Fianna
Fail is immense and the road to recovery will be both long and hard. In some areas it may take up to a
decade to fix that damage. Despite this Fine Gael remains fundamentally optimistic about the future. We
believe there is now a once in a generation opportunity to build a New Ireland that lives up to the best
hopes and aspirations of its founders, even as it looks forward with hope and determination to a better
tomorrow. The Irish people are resilient and have shown that they can overcome all obstacles placed in
their path. We are certain they can and will do so again.
FIne GaeL’s 5 PoInt PLan For recovery l 5
6. 1. Growth and Jobs
Fine Gael’s number one priority in Government will be Jobs. We will create up to 100,000 jobs, in line
with the ESRI’s recovery scenarios, by investing in key infrastructure and putting in place the right policies
for growth. Our fundamental goal is to make Ireland, as it was in the late 1990s, one of the best countries
in the world for doing business.
Over the last three years 300,000 people have lost their jobs – the biggest fall in employment in the
OECD. The only thing more shocking than this figure is the Government’s complete lack of a jobs plan. Its
only strategy has been to keep pouring billions into the banks, and to cut the deficit largely through job-
destroying tax increases. But no country has ever taxed itself out of recession.
Fine Gael cannot promise any quick fixes to Ireland’s jobs crisis. But we can promise to put in place a
clear and credible strategy for jobs and growth. For us there is no contradiction between growing the
economy and reducing the deficit. The savings rate in Ireland is currently very high, reflecting Irish
people’s deep anxieties about the future. Fine Gael believes that confidence can only be restored if
people are convinced that there is a credible plan in place to reduce the deficit (Point 2). Once this is
done spending should resume, boosting economic growth.
NewERA: A €7 Billion Investment in our Future
NewERA is Fine Gael’s plan to transform the Irish economy by investing in key strategic infrastructure. We
believe that significant drops in tender prices have created a unique opportunity for Ireland to invest in
its future in a cost efficient manner. The latest report from the National Competitiveness Council confirms
that Ireland lags major competitors in the quality of its infrastructure, severely damaging the country’s
competitiveness.
• New Investment. NewERA will invest an extra €7 billion in Energy, Communications and Water
infrastructure to create a 21st century communications and energy network and to upgrade our
antiquated water system. We envisage investing up to €2 billion in energy with the remainder spread
between water and telecoms.
• New Jobs. Although the majority of the proposed investment will be funnelled through the semi-states,
most of the new jobs will be created in the private sector through the sub-contracting of work.
• New Assets from Old. Fine Gael will fund NewERA largely through the sale of state assets. We will sell
Bord Gais Energy and ESB PowerGen & Supply, but only when market conditions are right. Fine Gael
will not sell a state asset which is either strategic or a natural monopoly. We will therefore retain the
electricity grid and Bord Gáis Networks in majority state ownership.
Since Fine Gael first published its NewERA plan in March 2009 we have received a great deal of support
for our strategy. However, a number of issues have been raised which we would like to address:
1. Can NewERA really create tens of thousands of new jobs?
YES - our projections for job creation use standard forecasting models and fully take into account the fact
that Ireland is a small open economy.
2. Can Ireland afford NewERA at a time of fiscal crisis?
YES – if it is financed correctly. NewERA will be funded off the Government’s books and will not require any
additional state borrowing.
NewERA will be funded through the sale of non-critical state assets and money from the National Pension
Reserve Fund (NPRF). Independent analysts have calculated that the sale of Bord Gais Energy and ESB
6 l FIne GaeL’s 5 PoInt PLan For recovery
7. PowerGen & Supply could generate up to €4 billion, while another €5 billion could be generated
from the sale of a minority stake in a combined electricity and gas network company. Any
additional funding generated from asset sales above that required by NewERA will be put back
into the NPRF.
3. Can an unreformed semi-state sector use additional resources efficiently?
NO – change is essential. We will radically reform the sector so that there are a smaller number of lower cost,
more focused and more competitive state-owned utility companies.
Energy. We will merge ESB Networks, Eirgrid and Bord Gais Networks into SMARTGRID, tasked
with upgrading the grid to help ensure Ireland’s energy security and meet its renewable and
climate change targets. We will merge Coillte and Bord na Mona into a new single renewable
energy leader, BIO ENERGY AND FORESTRY IRELAND, which will remain under 100% state control.
Telecoms. We will merge state-owned telecoms assets, which are currently spread between
a large number of state companies, into BROADBAND 21. It will work with the private sector to
accelerate the build-out of a next-generation broadband network across the country.
Water. As in Scotland we will establish a single state-owned commercial water company –
IRISH WATER – to rationalise the water functions of 34 local authorities. Exchequer funding will
gradually be replaced by new charges linked to water consumption above a “free allowance”.
Fine Gael will bring all of these companies under a single-holding company, which will co-ordinate their
activities and strategy. We will also make two additional reforms to ensure value-for-money:
• A Fine Gael Government will initiate a rigorous cost-benefit analysis of each of the proposed
projects for investment.
• Fine Gael will appoint a Bord Snip for the semi-states. It will identify ways to reduce costs and
improve efficiencies, so that the savings can be passed on to customers.
Every Job Counts: Beyond the Smart Economy
Fine Gael believes that the smart economy has a key role to play in our country’s future. Ireland needs
to attract firms operating in new high tech industries such as cloud computing. However, it must also
be recognised that the smart economy will create only a relatively small number of mostly high skilled
jobs. A more comprehensive approach is required to address the huge looses of jobs in more traditional
industries such as construction or tourism.
Fine Gael will support Ireland’s SMEs
Small and medium businesses are the backbone of the Irish economy and must be supported. 86,000
small businesses in Ireland employ over 700,000 employees, generate €90bn in turnover, and pay 37%
of total income tax receipts. As importantly they represent a huge commitment by individuals to invest,
take risks and create employment. A Fine Gael Government will do a number of things to support
Ireland’s SMEs, including:
• Establishing a new partial loan guarantee scheme and a start up fund for microfinance. We will
also introduce other reforms to encourage greater investment in companies from private sources of
equity, such as pension funds.
• Helping entrepreneurs and new business start-ups by simplifying tax compliance and continuing
social welfare cover for a limited period.
FIne GaeL’s 5 PoInt PLan For recovery l 7
8. • Exempting SMEs from some regulatory requirements designed for bigger companies and
streamline regulatory approval structures. We will also overhaul public procurement so that it is
much more supportive of SMEs.
Fine Gael will reduce business costs
While Ireland’s competitiveness has improved somewhat since 2005 its Harmonised Competitiveness
Index (HCI) is still 16% above that of 2000. A key reason for this is the continuing high level of costs for
business. A Fine Gael Government will introduce a number of initiatives to help reduce these costs.
Among other things we will:
• Halve employer’s PRSI on low paid workers. We will also decrease the VAT rate on labour intensive
services such as construction, hotels and catering from 13.5% to 12%.
• Cut the burden of red-tape by €500 million and reduce government charges on industry. We
will reduce the cost of red tape by rationalising business regulation and inspection activities, and set a
target of reducing government charges by at least 1% per annum. Local Authorities will be expected to
reduce commercial rates until 2014.
• Open up the closed sectors of the economy. We will focus in particular on the legal, medical and
accounting professions.
• Review and renegotiate the Employment Regulation Orders (ERO) imposed on various sectors
under the JLC system.
• Pass legislation to give all tenants the right to have their commercial rents reviewed in 2011
irrespective of any up-ward only or other review clauses.
Fine Gael will support domestic sectors with high growth potential
Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) has had a hugely positive impact on the Irish economy and Fine Gael will
intensify efforts to attract additional FDI, e.g., we will aggressively promote the IFSC to growing financial
centres in Asia. However, Fine Gael also believes that the job creation potential of our indigenous firms
has been ignored for too long. We will therefore introduce a series of initiatives to encourage growth in
key sectors. For instance:
• Education services: Fine Gael believes that more than 6,000 jobs could be created over 5 years and
an additional €900 million injected into the economy through a much more focused strategy to attract
international students to Ireland.
• Digital Media: Ireland has real strengths in the creative industries. We want it to become a global
base for digital media, creating thousands of new jobs over 10 years, by focusing on such areas as data
warehousing, rights, licensing, etc. With the right support digital gaming could also become Ireland’s
next big creative industry.
• Renewables. Forfas has calculated that 14,500 jobs could be created over five years if progress is made
in addressing a number of technical, regulatory and planning issues.
• Fine Gael will also introduce measures to support more traditional industries.
• Tourism: We will fully abolish the travel tax subject to Ryanair and Aer Lingus agreeing to
re-open closed routes and bring more tourists into Ireland. Our proposed reduction in VAT will
also help the tourist industry.
• Food: Fine Gael will introduce a number of proposals to position Ireland as the “Green Food
Island” internationally, including reform of the Department of Agriculture and a new-agri
payments system.
8 l FIne GaeL’s 5 PoInt PLan For recovery
9. • Construction: Fine Gael will accelerate the Home Insulation Programme and reform
government procurement so that small firms can tender more easily for work. Fine Gael is
broadly supportive of the Construction Contracts Bill 2010.
Fine Gael will introduce measures to help keep young talent at home
Emigration doubled in the last two years and, according to the ESRI, Ireland may lose up to 100,000
people over the next two years. As a response Fine Gael plans to create 45,000 additional work
experience, training, and internship opportunities.
• National Internship Programme (23,000 places). This will offer part-time one-year placements in
the public service, private sector and voluntary sector for unemployed graduates to gain valuable
experience while studying for a masters or diploma.
• Second Chance Education (17,000 places). This will offer former retail and construction workers that
did not finish school or to college ‘back to education’ placements for two years.
• Apprenticeship Guarantee (700 places). This will offer unemployment craft apprentices direct
employment by the state, agencies or semi-states until their apprenticeship is completed.
• Community Employment (5,000 places). This will offer community employment places to people
currently on the live register.
Race to the Top: An Education System for the 21st Century
Fine Gael believes Ireland needs a truly world class education system which will allow it to compete
successfully in the global economy of the 21st century. Unfortunately, the most recent OECD results
show that Ireland’s international rankings have fallen sharply since 2000. This is despite a doubling in
real educational spend between 1995 and 2006, compared to an average increase of 39% for the OECD.
In literacy Ireland has fallen from 5th to 17th place, the biggest drop of any OECD country, while it ranks
only 25th in maths!
In the early 1990s Finland experienced a major economic crisis. As part of its efforts to reinvent its
economy it introduced major educational reform. Finland’s education system in the 1970s and 1980s
shared many of the problems that Ireland faces today. Results were average at best while there was a
wide achievement gap between students from different socio-economic backgrounds. By 2006 Finnish
education was ranked number 1 in the OECD, helping it become one of the world’s most successful
knowledge-based economies.
The Finnish Model of education was created without massive increases in spending.
In fact, spending as a percentage of GDP declined from 7.9% in 1992 to 5.8% in 2006. This
compares to an average of 6.1% for the OECD as a whole in 2006 on a weighted basis. Finland
currently spends less per pupil than Ireland.
Finnish education also became much fairer. By 2000 it already had one of the smallest
variations in reading between schools in the OECD, a trend continued in the 2003 PISA survey
in mathematics.
The secret of Finland’s success is clear: Teachers are trusted and schools are given as much freedom
as possible. In Ireland, by contrast, education is rigorously controlled by the Department of Education.
Despite the excellence of so many of our teachers they are given little or no freedom to innovate. This
is not just bad for our economy – it is also damaging for our society. Great teachers don’t just impart
knowledge. They also foster creativity and encourage students to think for themselves. Our nation needs
well-educated citizens who are prepared to question the status quo and act as catalysts for change and
development.
FIne GaeL’s 5 PoInt PLan For recovery l 9
10. Fine Gael’s Race to the Top strategy for education is built on five key pillars.
1. Tackling Disadvantage. Fine Gael will maintain the free pre-school year in early childhood care and
education. As public sector reform savings are achieved through our Reinventing Government plan,
we will invest a proportion of these significant savings in an early childhood education programme
called ‘First Steps’ for disadvantaged children. This will build on existing targeted pre-school supports
for families most in need of assistance. The DEIS (Delivering Equality of Opportunity in Schools)
programme, which aims to overcome disadvantage in education has just been reviewed by the
Educational Research Centre. We will consider the recommendations of this review and use it as a
platform for new initiatives to deliver better outcomes for disadvantaged students in our schools.
2. Empowering Schools and Parents: Fine Gael will give schools greater control over their own budgets.
We will also introduce a series of reforms to increase the role of parents. In particular, we will hold a
National Forum on Education to allow all stakeholders, including parents, to engage in an open debate
on a change of patronage in communities where it is appropriate and necessary.
3. More Freedom for Teachers: Fine Gael will give teachers a great deal more flexibility in adapting
the curriculum to suit the needs of their students, as part of overall curriculum reform. We will also
reform and upgrade teacher training, and enhance Continuing Professional Development. Over time
we will move to a situation where teachers are qualified to Masters level in their area of expertise, as in
Finland. We recognise that this measure will take some time to implement but believe it will ultimately
benefit both the teacher and student.
4. Curriculum Change: Fine Gael will undertake a fundamental review of the Junior Certificate and
Leaving Certificate. We believe the current system is leading to a dependency on rote learning and is
not, as a result, adequately equipping students for third level and beyond.
5. Fair Funding for Higher Education: Fine Gael will develop a fairer funding system for third level to
ensure every student has access to a high quality education. This will involve a graduate contribution
from students of roughly a third of the cost of their course. The contribution will be made by new
entrants to publicly-funded third level institutions after the student graduates, enters employment and
reaches a defined income threshold. We will not increase the student registration fee further. Instead,
we will pursue greater pay and non-pay efficiencies in the third level system through greater flexibility
in working arrangements, in line with the Croke Park Agreement. As the student contribution model
begins to return funds to the third level sector, we will phase out the student registration fee as an
upfront charge. In the intervening period, we will establish a subsidised loan system for students and
their families that are struggling to pay the student registration fee.
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11. 2. Fair Deficit Reduction
Fine Gael is committed to fixing Ireland’s huge budget deficit primarily through reductions in spending
rather than increases in taxation. We favour this approach not for any ideological reasons, but because
the evidence shows that large tax increases will destroy jobs. We will also reduce the deficit by adopting
a very different approach to the banking crisis.
For the last two years Fine Gael has been arguing that the bondholders who lent so recklessly to the
banks must shoulder their fair share of the costs of bailing them out. Instead, the Government has
deliberately chosen to make the Irish people responsible for all of the losses. Had Fine Gael’s approach
been adopted, and sovereign investors reassured that the state’s exposure to the losses of the banks was
capped, it is entirely possible that the markets would still be open to Ireland. There would have been no
need for an IMF/EU bailout.
Unfortunately the current IMF/EU deal negotiated by Fianna Fail requires Ireland to continue with the
Government’s disastrous banking policy. Fine Gael believes this is simply not sustainable and we will seek
a clear mandate from the Irish people to renegotiate it.
Protecting Jobs – Protecting the Taxpayer
Fine Gael is committed to reducing the budget deficit to 3% by 2014, in line with the IMF/EU Programme
of Support. We want Ireland by 2016 to be borrowing only for investment purposes. Under a Fine Gael
Government tax increases will constitute at most one-third of the measures needed to reach this target,
with any tax increases focused on areas which have a minimal impact on employment. We will not
increase income taxes, the 12.5% rate of corporation tax or taxes on employment (employers’ PRSI). We
will, however, either eliminate or restrict all of the tax shelters and tax exemptions that allow the better
off to avoid paying their fair share of taxes.
The international evidence is clear: Spending cuts are a much better and more efficient way to reduce
budget deficits than raising taxes. The IMF’s latest research, which supports a host of other studies, shows
that tax hikes raise the unemployment rate by three times more than spending cuts. It also shows that
increases in taxation are twice as deflationary for domestic demand as spending cuts. In other words,
increasing taxes on income and investment further would be counterproductive. It would discourage
people from starting businesses, working harder, doing overtime and aiming for promotion. It would also
inhibit companies from creating and locating highly-paid knowledge economy jobs in Ireland. Finally, it
would push more self-employed people into the grey economy.
Some have argued that there is no further room for savings in Government spending. We disagree:
• First, Ireland’s spending as a percentage of GNP is higher than the EU average, even after recent budget
cuts.
• Second, a great deal of spending over the last few years has been wasted. Many state institutions, the
HSE being the most obvious, have seen huge increases in their budgets but relatively little improvement
in their services.
• Third, other countries such as Canada and Sweden in the 1990s have shown that it is entirely possible
to cut spending while still growing the economy and protecting frontline services. The secret of their
success was to ensure that spending cuts were introduced as part of a comprehensive reform of public
services. This is exactly the approach which Fine Gael will adopt in Government (see Point 3).
Our plan to cut down on waste and inefficiency also means that Fine Gael will not cut the Old Age
Contributory or Non-Contributory Pension. Working-age payments to carers, the blind and the disabled
will be maintained at current levels. Further reductions in job-seekers’ payments and other working age
social welfare payments will be minimised by getting more people back to work and by reducing the
FIne GaeL’s 5 PoInt PLan For recovery l 11
12. massive levels of fraud, mistakes and administrative cost associated with the current welfare system in
Ireland.
Sharing the Burden: A Fair and Effective Banking Solution
Fine Gael believes that the current IMF/EU bail-out deal has not and will not restore investor confidence
in our country and must therefore be renegotiated. It requires Ireland to continue with the present
Government’s disastrous banking policy whereby the Irish people are required to write whatever cheques the
banks require. This strategy has placed an intolerable burden on the Irish people, allows international investors
in the banks to evade their responsibilities, and threatens to drive our nation to the edge of insolvency.
The deal in our view is not just bad for Ireland – it is also bad for Europe.
• Bad for Ireland. The financial markets are closed to Ireland principally because of the Irish Government’s
decision to pump a colossal €100bn into the banks. Investors are concerned, and rightly so, that any
more capital injections will sink the Irish economy. Yet the IMF/EU deal requires Ireland to cover any
further losses in the banks, using funds that will have to be borrowed at a penal 5.8% interest rate.
• Bad for Europe. It is in the interests of our EU partners that Ireland returns to the financial markets as
soon as possible. However, it is difficult to see how this can happen unless the market’s concerns about
the banking bailout are addressed directly.
Fine Gael is not arguing that Ireland can or should shirk its responsibilities. The reality is that our
economic crisis was principally created at home by the reckless behaviour of Irish banks, appalling
regulatory failure and astonishing Government incompetence and cronyism. However, we believe that
three other realities must also be acknowledged:
First, imposing impossible burdens on the Irish people is neither fair nor sensible. The Irish
people have already provided the Irish banks with unprecedented levels of support. It is simply
not realistic to believe that they can continue to do so without tipping the Irish economy over
the edge. Such as eventuality would not be in the interests of either the Irish people or our
European partners.
Second, it is plain that the banks in a number of other countries lent recklessly to Ireland’s
banks, helping to fuel the bubble. While not denying the culpability of Ireland’s own banks, it
is one of the basic tenets of capitalism that reckless lenders should not be allowed to walk away
from their responsibilities.
Third, a large proportion of Irish bank debt has been sold on, at significant haircuts, to
private clients and hedge funds who hope to make a big profit from Ireland’s problems.
This debt sell-off suggests that a new deal on Ireland’s banks would not, in all likelihood, have
the negative consequences some fear.
Fine Gael believes that the best way forward is a renegotiated deal on the banks which involves some
element of EU recapitalisation of the Irish banks. Such a deal would require political commitment at the
highest EU levels, building on a renewed sense of European solidarity. Fine Gael is in no way dogmatic
about the details of such a deal. The terms of reference of the European Financial Stability Fund (EFSF)
and/or European Financial Stability Mechanism (EFSM) could, for instance, be renegotiated to allow the
funds to take equity stakes in systemically important European banks, such as AIB and Bank of Ireland.
Fine Gael cannot of course guarantee that a new deal can be reached with our European partners.
Unfortunately, Fianna Fail’s disastrous economic and banking policies have surrendered a great deal of
our country’s economic sovereignty, and hugely damaged our international reputation. However, we
believe that Ireland may be left with no option, in the absence of a renegotiated deal, but to write-down
the value of the bonds in the Irish banks, or face the prospect of a hugely damaging sovereign default.
12 l FIne GaeL’s 5 PoInt PLan For recovery
13. 3. Smaller Better Government
Fine Gael is convinced that the public sector has a crucial role to play in building a New Ireland. We
believe that public servants have been subjected to often unfair criticism for a crisis they did not create,
and reject the idea that their contribution to Ireland can or should be captured in a narrow profit and loss
statement. Public service is about enriching the lives of people and helping the most vulnerable in our
society, not about making a profit.
But Fine Gael also believes that reform is essential if the public sector is to play a key role in Ireland’s
future. While Fianna Fail and its banker and developer friends are principally responsible for Ireland’s
economic meltdown, the reality is that many state institutions have either under-performed significantly
or failed completely. That is why Fine Gael’s Reinventing Government document of November 2010 set out
over a hundred proposals to make the public sector both smaller and better.
• Government must become smaller. Ireland’s fiscal crisis means there is simply no other choice.
Government has to deliver better value in order to reduce the deficit, avoid job-destroying tax increases
and protect frontline services
• Government must perform better. All too often state institutions have prioritised the interests of the
providers and the insiders over the public interest.
Smaller Government: €5 Billion of Savings
Fine Gael believes that government under-performance has been driven primarily by a lack of reform
rather than a lack of resources. The current model of government fails the citizens it serves by not giving
them what they need, and the people it employs by trapping them in a system that simply doesn’t work.
Both Canada and Sweden, countries with a reputation for high quality public services, have shown what
real public sector reform can do. These countries were able to cut costs even as they enjoyed strong
economic recovery and largely maintained their public services.
• In the mid 1990s Canada’s Government cut its budget deficit from 9.1% of GDP to zero without affecting
the public’s assessment of the quality of key public services.
• The Swedish Government responded to its mid 1990s budget crisis by cutting 11% from its day-to-day
spending, again with no apparent damage to performance.
Canada and Sweden succeeded because, unlike Fianna Fail, they didn’t engage in slash and burn cost
reductions. Instead, they used reform to drive costs reduction. A Fine Gael Government will also cut costs
and increase productivity through a root and branch reform programme which will:
1. Generate a saving of over €5 billion in public spending, equivalent to 1 euro in every 10 spent by
public bodies. To do this Fine Gael will among other things:
a. Implement a majority of the non social-welfare recommendations from the McCarthy
Report. We will also follow Canada and Sweden by undertaking a full programme review
which will eliminate non-priority services. Non-core activities, such as driver testing, vehicle
licensing, land registration and passport applications, will be considered for outsourcing.
b. Establish new shared services for Human Resources, Information Technology and Legal
Services. This will allow 10% to be cut from the administration budgets of all departments
and public bodies. We will also establish an Office of Government Procurement and Property
FIne GaeL’s 5 PoInt PLan For recovery l 13
14. to achieve major cost reductions in procurement, property and infrastructure budgets within
5 years, in line with what was done in the UK. If cost inflation in Irish Government spending
had been kept at UK levels in 2000-07, the Irish taxpayer would have saved a total of €13
billion over this period; and
c. Deliver at least 80% of the spending savings recommended by the Local Government
Efficiency Review, e.g., through more centralised recruitment and shared services.
2. Abolish 145 state bodies and companies. This will include the gradual dismantlement of the HSE
and FÁS, and the creation of a single, more powerful Competition, Consumer and Utilities Commission
to champion the consumer
3. In a similar fashion to the USA, UK and Sweden we will establish an Independent Fiscal Council.
It will advise the Oireachtas on issues such as borrowing levels, debt reduction and taxation planning,
and will be accountable to the Oireachtas Finance Committee.
4. Cut the number of politicians and staff working in government departments by a third. Our
overall goal is to reduce total public service headcount by 30,000 by 2014 compared to 2010. We
will also set a salary cap of €200,000 across politics and the public sector and will implement the pay
reductions for the 650 most senior public servants, recommended by the Review Body on Higher
Remuneration in 2009.
Better Government: An End to Command and Control
Fine Gael believes that the “command and control” Whitehall model of government, which Ireland largely
adopted in the 1920s, needs major reform. A rigidly centralised system of government, designed in the
19th century to help control the “little people”, has in our view no place in a modern republic of equals.
It stifles innovation, promotes micromanagement, blunts accountability and turns citizens into passive
recipients of services from the state. We should instead look to the success of grass-roots organisations,
like the tidy towns’ competition and the GAA, which rely on local pride and entrepreneurial spirit.
A Fine Gael Government will:
• Give frontline staff greater freedom in how they do their job. State bodies generally, and hospitals
and schools in particular, will have much more flexibility – within a strict budgetary and accountability
framework – to set their own staffing needs and work practices in response to local needs.
• Ensure that citizens have more control over services delivered to them. Every citizen will have
access to a full range of information about the performance, services and standards of each publicly
funded body. We will create a “one stop shop” for all entitlements and introduce Personal Budgets for
individuals, particularly in health, so that they can choose the services they want and need.
• Open up government. All appointments at senior level will be opened up to external competition, with
one-third of appointments reserved for external candidates for a 5-year period. We will place particular
emphasis on the external recruitment of new high level specialists in banking, taxation and macro
economic forecasting to improve the Department of Finance’s capacity to deliver on key tasks.
• Make government more accountable. Ministers will sign Public Service Agreements with service
delivery bodies, specifying in detail what each will produce, while the annual work objectives of the top
1,300 civil servants will also be published online. There will be no “golden handshakes” for those who
fail to deliver.
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15. Fine Gael also believes that the state must confront, on behalf of citizens, unacceptable practices in the
private and semi-state sector. Never again can we allow conflicted directors, reckless bankers and get-rich
quick developers to bring our country to the verge of bankruptcy. Fine Gael will overhaul company law
and enforcement to:
• Stop former chief executives of publicly listed and state companies from assuming the role of
chairpersons of such companies;
• Introduce a new “conflicts of interests” regime to prevent an excessive overlap of directors between
boards of public companies/state/semi-state companies and any other companies or businesses;
• Prohibit directors and senior officers of banks obtaining loans from the financial institutions they
work for;
• Ensure that there are annual elections for all directors at financial institutions; and
• Give the Financial Regulator a veto over the appointment of auditors.
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16. 4. A New Politics
Fine Gael believes that Ireland’s broken political system is at the heart of its economic collapse. That is
why our New Politics, first published in March 2010, commits Fine Gael to the most fundamental reform
of politics since the 1930s. In any Republic the people are supposed to be supreme. Judged by that
standard Ireland today is a Republic in name only. The expressions “Golden Circle”, “Crony Government”
and “Crony Capitalism” all describe the same thing: The abduction of our state by both public and private
sector vested interests, aided and abetted by Fianna Fail.
Fine Gael’s approach to political reform is underpinned by three key principles:
• Change must start at the top. The political system cannot ask others to change and make sacrifices if it
is not prepared to do the same.
• Change must be fundamental and comprehensive. Modern Ireland cannot be governed by a system
of government originally designed for 19th Century Britain.
• Change must involve the citizens. The people must be consulted on and involved in the process of
political reform.
The New Politics will require significant constitutional change. A Fine Gael Government will hold a
referendum on CONSTITUTION DAY, within 12 months of assuming office, at which the people will be
asked to approve the abolition of the Seanad and changes to other articles of the constitution covering
the institutions of the state – principally the Executive, the Dáil, the Presidency and the Judiciary. This
referendum will not address the articles dealing with rights/social policy as we want the focus to stay on
political reform.
Abolishing the Seanad – Reforming the Dail
Fine Gael has taken the lead in calling for the abolition of the Seanad. Since Enda Kenny first called for
a referendum on the issue in 2009 other parties have either adopted Fine Gael’s proposal or are actively
considering doing so. But Fine Gael has always believed that the Seanad’s abolition can only be one part
of a wider reform package, including Dail reform.
Abolishing the Seanad
If a new constitution was being drafted today would a second house be included? Fine Gael believes the
answer is no. Ireland is the only small, unitary state in Europe with a second house. Other small European
countries, such as Sweden and Denmark, have abolished theirs. Globally the great majority of small
nations do not have second houses. All of which begs the question:
If other small countries can be governed effectively without a second house why can’t
Ireland? Other states have shown that it is perfectly possible to establish effective checks and
balances in a single chamber parliament.
Since Fine Gael announced its policy on the Seanad a number of proposals for reform have been made.
Some want the Seanad to be popularly elected. Others want it to become a more expert chamber, either
appointed or elected by a restricted electorate. Yet others want it to become a citizens’ forum. While each
proposal has its merits the fact that they are all, for the most part, mutually incompatible helps explain
why Seanad reform is so difficult. While there is almost universal agreement that the current Seanad
is not working there is little consensus about the shape of a reformed second house – even among its
defenders.
The fundamental problem with reform of the second house is this:
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17. • If a new Seanad is popularly elected and has real power it will be dominated by the political parties and
come to resemble the Dail, thereby undermining its role as a second house.
• If a new Seanad is either appointed or elected by special means to try and avoid its politicisation, it will
have little legitimacy and therefore little power.
Fine Gael’s conclusion is simple: the Seanad should be abolished.
Reforming the Dail
Fine Gael believes that an over-powerful Executive has turned the Dail into an observer of the political
process rather than a central player and that this must be changed. Some have argued in favour of a
new, more presidential-style system or much greater separation of the Executive from the Legislature.
Our view is that these proposed solutions create as many problems as they solve and that fundamental
reform of the Dail is the best way forward.
Fine Gael believes that a strong committee system that can hold Government to account is absolutely
essential, particularly in a single chamber Oireachtas. We will:
• Amend the constitution to give Dail committees full powers of investigation. The Abbeylara
Supreme Court decision currently limits the ability of Dáil committees to hold investigations into crucial
issues of public concern, such as the banking crisis.
• Reduce the number of committees and give key committees constitutional standing. The Dáil
needs fewer but stronger committees, resourced properly.
• De-politicise their work. Chairs of committees will be assigned on a more proportional basis, while
legislation will typically be introduced in a heads of Bill format. We believe that early review by
committees will increase the chance of cross-party support. We will also examine whether “weighted
majorities” should be used in some committee work to encourage a less-politicised approach to
legislation.
The legislative process is currently dominated by the Government. It has a near monopoly on introducing
legislation, controls the time of the house, and is able to use guillotines to ram through legislation. Fine
Gael’s reforms address all of these issues:
• Initiation of legislation. We will give committees the power to introduce legislation, while a new 10
Minute Rule will allow backbench TDs to introduce their own Bills.
• Dail timetable. Fine Gael will give backbench TDs a much bigger role in scheduling all non-Ministerial
backbench business. The principle here is very simple: Whenever possible time should belong to the
House and not the Government.
• Guillotines. Fine Gael will tackle the huge over-use of guillotines to ram through non-emergency
legislation. It is deeply undemocratic and makes it much more likely that poorly constructed legislation
is placed on the statute book.
Fine Gael believes that if the Dail and society more generally is to hold Government to account, we also
need strong Open Government legislation. We have therefore published an Open Government Bill that
will:
• Significantly strengthen Freedom of Information (FOI);
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18. • Establish a “whistleblowers charter”;
• Register all lobbyists; and
• Create a new Electoral Commission.
A Citizens Assembly on Electoral Reform
Fine Gael will establish a Citizens Assembly, along the lines of that used in the Netherlands, to make
recommendations on electoral reform. The Assembly will have up to 100 members who will be chosen
from the public to reflect the demographic make-up of the country. These members will be provided
with briefing papers and will have access to research staff and relevant experts. The Assembly will
hold meetings throughout the country while all of its proceedings will be streamed live on the web.
The Assembly will be asked to consider two issues: 1) Electoral reform; and 2) Measures to increase the
representation of women in politics.
Empowering the Citizen: Real Power to the People
Fine Gael believes that there must be a fundamental shift in power from the state to the citizen. We
believe that the massive over-centralisation of government in our country is not just inefficient. It is also
fundamentally incompatible with a healthy Republic.
Strengthening Local Government
Some have argued that a small country like Ireland doesn’t need strong Local Government and, in
defence of this position, they point to local corruption and waste. However, this argument ignores two
key points:
1. First, while it is clear that Local Government has many problems it is the centralised model of
Government that has primarily failed the Irish people.
2. Second, Local Government has been handicapped since Independence by a deliberate policy of
marginalisation by Central Government.
Fined Gael believes that:
• Local control over local services is essential. A Fine Gael Government will move many of the
functions currently being performed by agencies back to Local Government. This will increase
accountability and save up to €65 million in costs.
• Local Government needs greater financial freedom. Fine Gael will ensure that all property-related
revenues are part of the income stream of Local Government. We will also give local authorities greater
control over how money from Central Government is spent.
• Local Government needs to be efficient. Fine Gael will ensure that there is much greater sharing of
services and administration between local councils to lower costs.
• Local citizens should have a greater say. We will roll-out, on a pilot basis, a system of Participatory
Budgets under which local residents will be asked for their views on how local authorities should spend
money in their particular communities. As part of this process we will make much greater use of local
policing forums to determine, through consultation, policing priorities for each local community. Fine
Gael will also establish a website – www.fixmystreet.ie – to allow residents to report local problems
with street lighting, graffiti, maintenance etc., with a guarantee that a local official will respond within 2
working days.
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19. Supporting a Vibrant Civic Society
Ireland, like all western democracies, is suffering from a growing lack of citizen involvement in the
democratic process. But Ireland faces an additional challenge – the enforced emigration of many of its
citizens because of a lack of work at home. Fine Gael is firmly of the view that concrete action must be
taken to facilitate greater involvement by all Irish citizens in the political process – both at home and
abroad. In Government we will among other things:
• Reduce the voting age to 17, automatically register all 17 year olds to vote and give eligible
citizens the right to vote at Irish embassies in the Irish Presidential election. If this experiment is
deemed a success Fine Gael will consider extending this practice to general elections.
• Introduce a petitions system that will allow citizens to have their concerns directly addressed by
the Dail.
• Protect dissent by making key equality and rights bodies answerable to the Dáil rather than the
Government. This will prevent Government from putting pressure on the relevant body by threatening
its budget.
• Introduce new Social Investment Bonds to finance a new generation of “social entrepreneurs”
to work alongside the state in tackling many of the most difficult social problems, including obesity,
illiteracy and criminal recidivism
• Give citizens much more “Choice and Voice” in how public services are delivered (see Point 3). We
will also require departments to publish “Regulatory Impact Assessments” before decisions are taken,
creating a further channel to obtain the views of civic society on new rules and regulations.
Ireland and Europe
Fine Gael also believes that a great deal of work needs to be done to restore Ireland’s international
reputation. If elected to Government we will use all of the diplomatic organs of the state, and Fine Gael’s
membership of the European People’s Party (EPP), both to promote the country and to help shape a
much needed debate about the lessons that can be learned from the European fiscal crisis. Fine Gael is
certain that Ireland’s future is inextricably linked to that of the other nations of the European Union (EU).
However, it is also our view that the fiscal crisis, and the nature of the EU’s response to it, points to the
need for some reform in the architecture of the Union.
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20. 5. Healthcare for All
Fine Gael’s health plan, FairCare, represents the most ambitious plan for health service reform since the
establishment of the state. It is designed to reduce costs, increase access and make the system much
fairer. It will dismantle the dysfunctional Health Service Executive (HSE) that was created by Micheál
Martin in 2004, and end the efforts of Fianna Fail and Mary Harney to privatise the health system
by favouring private over public care. Our ultimate goal is to establish a system of Universal Health
Insurance (UHI), based on the very efficient Dutch model – but adapted to Irish circumstances. The
underlying philosophy is that the patient should be treated at the lowest level of complexity that is safe,
timely and efficient.
Once UHI is introduced the unfair and inefficient two-tier health system will be eliminated. Patient will be
treated on the basis of medical need – not on the basis of how much money they have. There will be one
strong public health system, where the state guarantees the level of service and quality and competing
insurance companies are responsible for much of its administration.
Fine Gael believes it will take up to ten years to fully reform the health system and, as result, our
programme for change is divided into two parts.
Radical Reform of the Current Health System (2011–2015)
• Fine Gael will ensure that more patients, especially those with chronic conditions, are treated in
the community. This reform will allow an increasing number of patients to be treated near or at their
homes and will save the health service several hundred million Euros annually once fully introduced.
This increased patient flow will, in turn, provide GPs with the incentives and resources to expand their
services. Fine Gael will see to it that a network of purpose built Primary Care Centres is delivered by the
end of our first term in Government. These new centres will cater both for chronically ill patients as well
as patients needing X-rays, blood tests or treatment for minor accidents or illnesses.
• Fine Gael will reduce waiting lists. We will establish a Special Delivery Unit (SDU) in the Department
of Health, reporting directly to the Minister, to eliminate existing long waiting times. The SDU’s role
will be to ensure that targets are met, and to act as a source of expertise for healthcare professionals
and managers. Key personnel may need to be seconded from other health care systems that have
successfully reduced waiting lists. A similar-type system in Northern Ireland reduced waiting times
significantly over four years with little or no additional money.
• Fine Gael will increase productivity by changing the way hospitals are paid. We will pay hospitals
for the number of patients they treat rather than, as is currently the case, giving them block grants. This
system, which is known as Money Follows the Patient, should increase hospital productivity by between
5% and 10% and will make the system much more transparent and accountable.
• Fine Gael will widen access to GP care. As part of our preparation for UHI we will look at a number
of ways to widen access to free GP care as finances permit, including increasing the number of people
who have a GP Visit Card. Fine Gael will also enter discussions with the insurers to see how cover for GP
care can be extended by them to their clients at reasonable cost. We will open up the General Medical
Services (GMS) contract to all suitable qualified doctors to increase competition and reduce costs.
• Fine Gael will prioritise the roll-out of key Information Technology (IT) to reduce costs. We have
looked at how other health systems, such as Sao Paolo in Brazil and the Veterans Administration in
the US, have significantly increased efficiency through the proper use of IT. Fine Gael will establish a
separate IT agency for all of the public sector which will work directly with the SDU in order to ensure
that projects are implemented on time and on budget. The HSE’s track-record on IT to date is very poor.
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21. • Fine Gael will end the failed strategy of co-location: More than five years since the announcement
of Minister Harney’s co-location plan, not one of the promised beds has been put in place. Fine Gael
will end the Government’s efforts to make the two-tier system even more unfair by allowing private
hospitals to develop on the lands of public hospitals.
• Fine Gael will protect A&E: No A&E services will be withdrawn unless a demonstrably better service is
put in place and is seen to work.
• Fine Gael will reform the insurance market. We will introduce a system of risk equalisation to ensure
that the Irish insurance market works more effectively.
Universal Health Insurance (2016–2020)
Under UHI every citizen will have health insurance from one of a number of competing insurance
companies, which will provide equal access to a comprehensive range of hospital and medical services.
The insurance companies will take over much of the burden of administering the system. The State’s role
will be to:
• Pay for children/students and those on medical cards (and their families). It will also subsidise those on
low income;
• Require all insurance companies to offer a standard package of health insurance that will cover all
key service such as hospital care, GP care, maternity care, etc. A system of Community Rating will be
introduced which will ensure that no insurance company can discriminate on the basis of age, sex or
health status; and
• Be responsible for regulating the system, ensuring that safety and quality are maintained, and funding
services that are not covered through UHI such as long term care, mental health, disease prevention,
etc. Public hospitals will remain under public ownership but will be given much more freedom to run
themselves.
FairCare will split the HSE into two before the introduction of UHI:
• A Healthcare Commissioning Authority (HCA) for the acquisition of “cure services” – hospital care, GP
care, etc.
• A Care Services Authority (CSA) for the acquisition and provision of “care services” for the elderly,
disabled, children, etc.
Once UHI is introduced the HCA will cease to function and the majority of the people it employs
will instead be employed directly by the hospitals. Professionals whose work is not directly related
to hospitals will have their employment contracts switched to the CSA. Fairness and respect for
employment conditions will be central to this transition, and will be negotiated with trade unions.
• Fine Gael will open up the insurance market: UHI will double the size of the health insurance market.
This will attract new entrants, increasing competition and choice for customers.
• Fine Gael will reform the VHI: Fine Gael believes that the VHI can provide a “public option” for
customers once UHI is introduced. However, we believe it should be slimmed down considerably so
that it no longer has a dominant market position.
• Fine Gael will give Local Hospitals more control: Under FairCare individual or networks of hospitals
will be managed by hospital trusts, where patients, staff and members of the local community have a
real say in the services delivered and in the development of the hospital.
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22. • Fine Gael will gradually introduce free GP Care for all once UHI is established: People with medical
cards and GP visit cards will, as now, be entitled to free GP care from Day 1 of UHI. Free GP care will
be extended to everyone else in a second term of a Fine Gael Government as the country’s finances
improve.
Making the Current Health System More Efficient
FairCare’s cost reduction programme will protect front line services as much as possible even as we see
reductions in the health budget as a result of the fiscal crisis.
• Fine Gael will reduce management and bureaucracy: Fine Gael will reduce HSE staff numbers by
8,000 by 2014 through a combination of natural wastage and voluntary redundancies. Compulsory
redundancies will therefore not be required.
• Fine Gael will focus on waste and inefficiency: Significant savings will be found by reducing the cost
of agency staff, taxis, absenteeism and non-core pay such as overtime and allowances for example.
• Fine Gael will reduce the cost of drugs: Fine Gael will introduce Reference Pricing and reduce the cost
of generic medicines in order to make savings to the State drugs bill. Private patients will benefit from
cheaper medicines in their local pharmacies.
• Fine Gael will improve efficiency by 5-10% by introduce Money Follows the Patient.
• Fine Gael will cut costs by transferring chronic disease management from hospitals to primary
care.
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23. CONCLUSION
On the 28th of November 2010 Brian Cowen announced the details of the IMF/EU bailout for Ireland.
Almost a century after the 1916 Proclamation of Independence an Irish Government was effectively
signing away a large part of Ireland’s economic and national sovereignty.
Fine Gael believes there should be a two-fold response to this humiliating surrender:
• In the short term the right policies need to be adopted to ensure Ireland’s speedy return to the financial
markets and the restoration of our national sovereignty.
• In the longer term the goal should be nothing less than the creation of a New Ireland in which the
interests of the citizen, and not those of the public or private sector elites, are placed at the centre of
politics and policy.
Fine Gael has a very clear vision of this New Ireland. By 2016, the 100th anniversary of the Irish rebellion,
we want to create:
• A new republic that serves the Irish people and not the insiders.
• A new politics that our people can be proud of.
• A new public sector that gives our people the services they need at a price they can afford.
• A new health service that offers all of our people fair and equal treatment.
• A new jobs economy that can keep our young people at home.
For too long parties in Ireland have copied British laws and British ways of doing things without asking
the really crucial question – can policies and institutions designed to serve such a large nation really
suit a small country like Ireland? All too often the answer, in Fine Gael’s view, is no. We have therefore
adopted a very different approach. We have looked beyond our neighbour to examine what other
successful nations have done.
• We have looked to the Netherlands and its very successful health system;
• We have looked to Finland to study the economic and social transformation brought about by its
education reforms;
• We have looked to various countries, including Sweden and New Zealand, when putting together our
proposals for political and public sector reform.
But Fine Gael has also looked back to the founders of the state, to all that was good and true in their
vision of a proud, independent Ireland. The net result is the most comprehensive programme for reform
of any party in the history of this state. A programme that will transform our country by combining what
is best in Ireland with best practice from other nations. Fine Gael, the party that established the state
and declared it a Republic, is proposing nothing less than an economic, political and administrative
revolution. A revolution that will reclaim Ireland for its people and prepare it for the enormous challenges
that lie ahead.
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