Skip to main content
Normal View

Dáil Éireann debate -
Wednesday, 12 Oct 1994

Vol. 445 No. 7

Written Answers. - PAYE Statistics.

Proinsias De Rossa

Question:

177 Proinsias De Rossa asked the Minister for Finance the average amount of income tax paid by PAYE workers, farmers and the self-employed, respectively, in each of the past five years. [1117/94]

Following is the information requested:

Year

Average tax payment made by

(a)

(b)

(c)

PAYE

Farmers

Other self-employed

£

£

£

1989

3,122

804

2,505

1990

3,266

754

2,587

1991

3,527

601

2,562

1992

3,628*

789*

3,241*

1993

(i)3,885*

860*

3,714*

(ii)3,884*

842*

3,631*

*Provisional — subject to revision.
(i) Includes the effects of the tax amnesty in 1993.
(ii) Excludes the effects of the tax amnesty.
Notes on table
Column (a)
(i) The average tax payment for each year is obtained by dividing the net receipt of PAYE tax in each calendar year by the number of taxpaying units effectively liable to tax in the income tax year in which the calendar year ends, e.g. the 1989 net receipt is divided by the number liable to tax in 1989-90.
(ii) The figures in column (a) of the table are based on income tax collected through the PAYE mechanism which covers more than income tax on ordinary wages and salaries. It includes tax paid by directors of close companies who are akin to the self-employed as well as tax on "other income" of employees such as rent and other investment income. It also includes the tax paid under PAYE on the income from employment of farmers and other self-employed individuals.
Column (b)
(i) In calculating the figures in this column the estimated net receipt of income tax paid by full-time farmers in each calendar year has been divided by the number of full-time farming tax units which were formally assessed for tax on their farming profits in the year of assessment in which the calendar year ends, e.g. the 1989 receipt is divided by the number assessed for the year 1989-90, irrespective of whether tax was actually payable in all cases.
(ii) Unlike previous calculations, the current figures for averages do not take into account the tax attributable to the farming profits of farmers who, or whose spouses, carry on another trade or profession. Farm tax represents a fraction of their overall tax liability and the emerging average farm tax payments could not be regarded as representative of the normal average tax yield from the farming sector.
(iii) Income tax on farming profits is collected with Schedule D tax generally and the figures shown for tax payments by farmers are, to some extent, estimated.
Column (c)
The figures contained in this column are obtained by dividing the estimated net receipt of income tax in each calendar year from tax units whose main source of income is from self-employment, other than full-time farming, by the estimated number of those units assessed to tax in the year of assessment in which the calendar year ends as explained in note (i) for column (b).
General notes
(i) A married couple who has elected or has been deemed to have elected to have the income of both spouses assessed on the husband is counted as one tax unit.
(ii) Some figures in the columns differ from those given previously. This is due to more accurate information becoming available in the meantime.
(iii) Receipts of deposit interest retention tax and tax deducted by building societies under the former composite rate arrangements are not included in the calculations. Basic data are not available which would enable the amounts of these taxes referable to interest paid or credited to particular classes of taxpayers to be ascertained.
(iv) The yield in 1991 from farmers and other self-employed was reduced by the once-off effect of deferring payment of the balances of 1990-91 tax from 1991 to 1992. Ordinarily these balances, amounting to about £50 million, would have been paid in 1991 but were deferred to 1992 as a transitional effect of introducing the Current Year Basis of assessment for self-employed persons in 1990. The yield from farmers in 1991 was further reduced because of a decrease in farming profits.
(v) For the purposes of these calculations, the yield in 1993 under the 15 per cent incentive amnesty in respect of declared amounts of income and gains has been attributed solely to the self-employed. The breakdown of this yield between farmers and other self-employed is assumedpro rata with their ordinary tax payments.
Top
Share