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Seanad Éireann debate -
Tuesday, 13 Oct 2015

Vol. 242 No. 9

Budget 2016: Statements

I welcome the Minister of State, Deputy Simon Harris.

I am very pleased to be in the Seanad to have the opportunity to contribute to the debate on budget 2016. As Senators will be aware, the Minister for Finance, Deputy Michael Noonan, and the Minister for Public Expenditure and Reform, Deputy Brendan Howlin, presented the Government's fifth budget to Dáil Éireann earlier today. The budget marks another major milestone in Ireland's recovery from the crisis conditions that prevailed just a few short years ago. It confirms that in 2015 Ireland will have corrected its "excessive deficit" with a headline budget deficit of 2.1% of GDP, well inside the original 2015 budget target of 2.7%. What this means is that we have now complied with the recommendation that the European Council of Finance Ministers, ECOFIN, made to Ireland way back in late 2010 to bring the deficit below 3% of GDP. The estimated deficit in 2015 was in fact the lowest since 2007. This is a very significant achievement and one that attests to the determined, disciplined way in which the Government has managed the public finances on behalf of the people in recent years. It is also a testament to the character of the public in recognising the need for the necessarily tough actions entailed in restoring the public finances to a sustainable position.

A consequence of this achievement is that budget 2016 has been framed under the rules of the preventive arm of the Stability and Growth Pact, rather than the corrective arm which set the context for the Government's previous four budgets. While this is a better place to be, it will bring its own challenges. The rules to which we have to adhere under the Stability and Growth Pact are somewhat more complicated, but they are about ensuring the public finances are managed in a sustainable way.

The key objective for fiscal policy is now to achieve a balanced budget in structural terms. I am happy to say budget 2016 is compliant with the requirements of the preventive arm. These relate to the required improvement in the structural or underlying budget balance, and the so-called expenditure benchmark which limits growth in public expenditure to the economy's potential growth rate. This speaks to an important point which was emphasised by the two Ministers in their statements today, namely, that we are not going to go back to the bad old ways of the boom and bust cycles. It sends an important signal to the people and to the wider world that, having extricated ourselves from a very difficult fiscal position, we are embracing the necessary disciplines that will ensure we avoid such damaging mistakes in fiscal policy in the future.

As well as getting the deficit under control, we have started to make a lot of progress in reducing our elevated government debt level which has represented a key risk to the economy. At the end of 2015, the general Government debt had fallen to some 97% of GDP. Again, this signifies the achievement of a critical milestone - the point where our debt level is below the annual value of the goods and services produced in the economy. The Department of Finance is projecting that our debt ratio will fall further next year to 93% of GDP, around the eurozone average, and to below 80% of GDP by 2021. A falling debt ratio is not just a statistic; it is important in enhancing the economy's resilience and in reducing our vulnerability as an economy and as a country to future external shocks.

I will move on from the public finances to the broader economic background to the budget. As Senators will be aware, the economic recovery that has been under way for a number of years has gathered significant momentum of late. The pace of economic growth accelerated in the first half of the year when GDP grew by some 7% in annual terms. Importantly, this growth was broadly based with both the export sector and the domestic economy performing strongly. The recovery in the domestic economy is evident from the fact that spending by households on goods and services increased by 3.25% while investment rose by almost 22%. Taking account of the latest trends and an assessment of the international economic outlook, the Department of Finance has revised upwards its forecasts for economic growth. The Department is now projecting growth in GDP of some 6.2% and growth of 4.3% is forecast for 2016. These are numbers that would have been unimaginable a couple of years ago. Importantly, these forecasts have been endorsed by the Irish Fiscal Advisory Council.

Of critical importance is the fact that this strengthening economic performance is carrying through to the labour market, with more jobs and reduced unemployment. We have experienced ten consecutive quarters of gains in employment with total employment in the economy some 133,000 higher than the low point reached in early 2012. Similar to the trend we are observing in the composition of economic growth, employment is growing across most sectors of the economy. This again points to the broad based and sustainable nature of the economic recovery. Looking ahead, the Department is forecasting that 48,000 jobs will be created in 2016 and that we will have more than 2 million people in work. The growth in employment is feeding through to reductions in unemployment which has fallen from a peak rate of more than 15% in 2012 to 9.4% in September. We are projecting an average unemployment rate of 8.3% in 2016 and an end-year rate of 8%. These reductions in unemployment are key to ensuring the benefits of the recovery are widely shared. What better way to ensure somebody shares economic recovery than by ensuring he or she can have a job. Looking further ahead, the Department's assessment of medium-term growth prospects suggests unemployment will fall steadily towards 6% by 2021.

That leads me to the key objectives and priorities of the budget. I have outlined the strength and breadth of the economic recovery. Above all else, the budget is about protecting and sustaining that recovery. It cannot be put at risk. There is still a job of work to be done. The journey must continue to full employment. This can be seen in some of the key budget priorities outlined by the two Ministers to the Dáil, including making work pay, ensuring fairness, encouraging entrepreneurs and fostering innovation.

I have commented on the remarkable progress we have made in recent years in creating jobs and reducing unemployment. There is more to do on this front. Getting people into work is critical to ensure the fruits of economic growth are felt by every family. As the Minister for Finance emphasised, this means that we must ensure work pays for each family. To this end, the Minister continued in the budget with the approach he adopted in budget 2015 of targeting the majority of the resources available for tax reductions on low and middle income families. As Senators will be aware by now, the Minister has announced an increase in the entry threshold to the universal social charge and has also reduced the three lowest USC rates. The effect of these changes is that the marginal tax rate for middle income earners under €70,044 will fall below the critical 50% threshold. This will be the first time in many years that middle and low income earners will see the threshold fall below 50%. The changes announced by the Minister are such so as to restrict the benefit to earnings up to €70,000. In this way, the budget will increase the incentive to work, while maintaining and enhancing the progressivity that is already a key feature of the income tax system.

The OECD measures the progressivity of income tax systems by comparing the tax wedge at different levels of earnings. By the most widely used of the measures, Ireland had the second highest progressivity outcome of OECD member countries in 2014 and the highest among all EU member states. The progressivity of the income tax system contributes substantially to redistributing income. According to the latest available data, the reduction in Ireland's Gini coefficient - a standard measure of income inequality - due to the tax system is the third largest in the OECD and the largest among EU members. The data also indicate that the reduction in inequality due to the welfare system was the largest in the OECD. Combined, Ireland's tax and welfare system result in the greatest redistribution of income among all OECD countries. I trust we can have an honest debate around the budget in this regard. The figures speak for themselves in terms of the progressivity of the measures being pursued by the Government. It is evident that, compared to other countries, the Irish tax system is strongly progressive and that the tax and welfare systems combined contribute substantially to the redistribution of income and the reduction of income inequality. These key features of the tax and welfare systems have been preserved and enhanced in budget 2016.

I will now set out the social protection measures announced in the budget. I was pleased that my colleague, the Minister for Public Expenditure and Reform, was in a position to announce an increase in pension payments of €3 per week in 2016, as well as an increase in the fuel allowance of €2.50 per week. While the Government did not cut pensions and preserved the pension rate, we are now in a position to increase the pension rate. These targeted increases are important for the groups concerned and will help to ensure the benefits of recovery are widely spread. The Minister also indicated that the Government would implement the recommendation of the Low Pay Commission to increase the minimum wage from €8.65 an hour to €9.15 from 1 January 2016. Given the changes in the USC I have outlined and the increases in the threshold for family income supplement, it is clear that the budget has a strong focus on ensuring work pays, particularly for those on modest incomes and those with children.

The child care measures announced by the Minister for Public Expenditure and Reform and my colleague, the Minister for Children and Family Affairs, Deputy James Reilly, are also important, not least in helping parents who wish to participate in the labour market. Of course, as the Minister pointed out, child care investment offers both economic and social returns. In economic terms, it helps to promote participation in the labour market. As the population ages and the increase in the working age population starts to slow down, increasing participation and labour supply will be important for long-term growth. Moreover, strong international evidence points to long-run educational and social benefits for children participating in preschool education. This evidence base provides strong support for the decision announced by the Minister in the budget to extend eligibility to free child care to children from three years of age until they reach five and a half years or until they start primary school. The budget also includes additional funding of €15 million to allow for the full participation of children with disabilities in the early childhood care and education scheme, something I imagine Senators on all sides will welcome.

The Minister also announced the intention to legislate for statutory paternity leave of two weeks in recognition of the role played by fathers in families. This will take effect from next September. It will complement the child care measures and help parents to reconcile the demands of work and family life.

Another major theme in the budget relates to the need to encourage new entrepreneurs and further support existing ones. It is well known that we have been successful in attracting foreign direct investment to Ireland and we will continue to compete to attract new investment and jobs. We also need to focus on improving the conditions for those who run the small and medium-sized enterprises that are so important for employment throughout the country. As well as making work pay, we need to ensure enterprise pays and that the tax system does not act as a disincentive to those who wish to start their own business. Following a public consultation launched earlier this year, the Minister for Finance has announced a number of significant taxation changes in the budget to support entrepreneurs. Of particular note is the introduction of an earned income tax credit for those with earned income but without access to the PAYE credit. As the Minister put it, this is an important first step in levelling the playing field between entrepreneurs and employees and removing a distortion in the tax system that was highlighted by the Commission on Taxation. The Minister also announced a revised capital gains tax relief in the form of a reduced rate of 20% on the disposal, in whole or in part, of a business, as well as an extension of the three-year tax relief for certain start-up companies. This is an important package that sends a signal to those thinking of establishing a new business or moving into a new business venture. It will boost entrepreneurship and complement the other measures included in the budget aimed at supporting key sectors including tourism, agrifood and retail. These two measures, the reduction in capital gains tax and the introduction of an earned tax credit for the self-employed, came up consistently in the public consultation held by the Department of Finance on taxation and entrepreneurship. In addition, a key focus of the activity of the enterprise agencies next year will be to ensure the recovery in employment about which I spoke reaches all parts of the country. The IDA Ireland regional property programme aimed at supporting the regional action plans prepared earlier this year can and will play an important role in meeting this objective.

The Minister for Finance has emphasised the role of the budget in fostering innovation. Encouraging innovation is vital for an advanced economy such as ours. The key to long-term growth is getting more out of our resources through higher productivity and finding new and better ways to do things. For the future, our growth model needs to be about getting more out of what we have rather than using more resources. The role of research and development in driving innovation is well-recognised by economists. To further support research and development, we will introduce a knowledge development box in the finance Bill in what will be the first OECD-compliant knowledge development box in the world. This is an important initiative that will complement Ireland's existing suite of research and development supports including the research and development tax credit and the various grant supports for enterprise-level research and development. It will help position Ireland to attract the type of knowledge-intensive innovation-driven economic activity that will be critical to long-term growth. It sends a message to major international companies and start-ups to come to Ireland, undertake research and innovation, create jobs and employment here and benefit from our knowledge development box in the process.

While I am on the theme of innovation, I draw the attention of Senators to the provision for new additional teaching posts announced in the budget by the Minister for Public Expenditure and Reform. If we are going to build the kind of knowledge-driven economy and society that we aspire to, we must ensure the education system is delivering for young people and equips them with the skills and competencies they will need to participate in the knowledge economy. The measures announced today, including a reduction in pupil-teacher ratios at primary and secondary level and the allocation of new 600 new resource teachers, are particularly welcome in this regard. As well as reducing class sizes, it sends a strong message to those studying teaching in our many colleges and universities as well as those who studied and felt the need to go abroad to get a job that they can now have a realistic expectation of getting a job in this country and, in the process, help to contribute to the education system.

Senators will be well aware of the problems we are experiencing in the housing market, particularly in the greater Dublin area and some of the other large cities. The shortage of supply of new housing in cities presents economic and social policy challenges. It is clear that there is market failure in the provision of new housing, especially in the greater Dublin area, and, as the Minister for Public Expenditure and Reform noted, a dysfunctional housing market represents one of the worst legacies of the economic crisis experienced by the country. Against this backdrop, the announcement by the Minister for Finance of new targets by NAMA for the delivery of 20,000 residential units by the end of 2020 is most welcome. This will amount to approximately 80 new homes a week. Some 90% of these units will be in the greater Dublin area and approximately 75% will be houses, mainly starter homes, which are the areas of acute need. As the Minister indicated, this initiative by NAMA is entirely consistent with its existing commercial mandate to deliver the best financial return to the taxpayer.

The Minister for Public Expenditure and Reform has also announced a number of additional measures in the social housing sphere building on the Government's social housing strategy. This includes measures to enable local authorities to secure accommodation for an additional 14,000 households and an additional €17 million for emergency accommodation for homeless people. The affordable housing pilot scheme that the Minister announced is also an important initiative as we look at new innovative ways to increase the supply of affordable rental accommodation in the years ahead.

Another issue that I realise is of concern to Senators on all sides of the House concerns the fact that the Government reopened the Garda College in Templemore and has recommenced the recruitment and training of members of An Garda Síochána. In the budget we have provided funding for up to 600 additional gardaí. This will play a major role in combating crime in the country.

As I said and as the two Ministers stressed in the Dáil, the budget is fundamentally about fostering our economic recovery, an economic recovery that was hard won and achieved through determined policy action on the part of the Government and the willingness of the people to make the sacrifices necessary for a better future. That economic recovery must not be squandered. By managing the public finances in a sustainable way by making work pay, investing in essential public services, promoting entrepreneurship, fostering innovation and ensuring fairness, this budget will help to secure and prolong our economic recovery. I look forward to the debate in the Seanad and commend the budget to it.

I welcome the Minister of State and thank him for outlining the summary of the main budget measures. I will refer to the measures in the budget that I find positive. I agree with the Minister of State's comment that this last, or fifth, budget from the Government must be taken in the context of previous very regressive and most unfair budgets whereby those who could afford the least paid the most.

The extension of the early childhood care and education scheme is certainly welcome. The emphasis on allowing full access for children with disabilities is also very welcome. I have spoken about this, with my colleagues and many Senators across the House. How confident is the Government that the €15 million set aside in this regard will actually meet the demand in this area?

To stay on the subject of education, the reduction in the pupil–teacher ratio at both primary and post-primary levels is also welcome. I hope that when the Minister for Education and Skills examines this in more detail, there will be a particular emphasis on primary education. It is most important to give children the best start that they can possibly be given.

Putting two weeks paternity pay and leave on a statutory footing is certainly welcome. Colleagues on many sides of the House have called for this. Senator Michael D'Arcy should note that, based on the statement of the Minister for Finance, Deputy Michael Noonan, in the Dáil, there is no getting away from the fact that some men will not be able to excuse themselves from carrying out their responsibilities.

With regard to the local property tax, my colleague in the other House, Deputy Michael McGrath, and I have been calling consistently for a freezing of the revaluation in 2016. The fact that the Government has announced this is certainly welcome. Since the tax is value-based, it is important that there be mitigation in urban areas such as Dublin, Cork and Galway. There is an extension of the exemption for homeowners whose houses are affected by pyrite. Again, this is a matter that my colleagues and I have raised here on numerous occasions. I have included this in the submission my party made. I am looking for clarification on this because the Minister of State referred to houses with significant pyrite damage. I put it to him that any house with pyrite is valueless. Until such houses are actually fixed, they should be exempted on a self-assessment basis. I would like to see how the exemption can be put into practice. If people are required to have a main test of their house, the exemption from the property tax will not pay for it. This is a matter we can tease out in more detail.

The €3 increase to the old-age pension will not even cover the Government's increase in the prescription charge and the abolition of the telephone allowance and the bereavement grant. The Government has increased the fuel allowance somewhat. A €3 increase in the context of the cuts the Government has made in the past few years is miserly in the extreme. This issue should be revisited.

Having mentioned positive aspects of the budget, I will outline the aspects of which I am critical. The employment figures are good; we all want to see increases in employment. When the Minister of State concluded his statement, he mentioned the Government's policy platform in the previous four years. The previous Government, in making 70% of the adjustments required and in making some of the very tough decisions required to rein in spending and increase tax, also laid the foundations for some of the recovery that we see. We need to see a fair recovery. The proportionate increases in net take-home pay for low and middle income families by comparison with higher income families owing to the reductions in the universal social charge need to be re-examined. Those on low incomes will have a 0.8% increase, while those on higher incomes, earning between €50,000 and €75,000, will have increases of 1.7% and 1.9%. This seems to be somewhat unbalanced.

In the statements of the Minister of State and the Minister, Deputy Noonan, there was no reference to those in mortgage arrears. I cannot see any mention of reinstituting the mortgage interest supplement, which would help those who now fear losing their homes. A legacy of the Government will be that it has allowed repossessions to take place and has made it easier for banks to repossess. One of the direct supports that was seen as very effective was the mortgage interest supplement, but it has not been reinstated. No measure has been taken in real terms in regard to variable mortgage rates. Thousands upon thousands of people are paying over and above the odds. I hope the Government will seek, perhaps in the context of the Finance Bill, to beef up the code of conduct on mortgage arrears that it watered down over its term in office to afford proper protection to those affected.

The Minister of State said the proposal for NAMA to deliver an additional 20,000 residential units by the end of 2020 was very welcome. I hope he does not mind my being a little sceptical about this because NAMA has not delivered in this area to date. Any future Government will need to take this on board because, if we are to depend on NAMA to address the imbalance in the housing market in Dublin and the rest of the country, we must realise it will not happen.

The Government has stated it is to deliver 14,000 additional social housing units in the next five to six years. I remind the Minister of State that in Dublin city and county in the past four years, the Government has delivered 388 social housing units. In my area, Fingal, the Government has the fantastic honour and record of having delivered two social housing units in the past four years.

The Minister of State did not mention the waiting lists for social housing when he said he hoped to deliver 14,000 houses. Some 90,000 people - some would say 120,000 - are waiting. What I am looking for is a little more vision. We have had proposals in the past on social housing and the delivery of housing that have not come to pass. I hope that any future Government will see through the promises made in the statement today.

There is a massive housing problem, including in terms of homelessness. I have not seen any reference to raising the rent supplement, although I could be wrong. I have looked for one in the short time I have had to go through the Budget Statement and documentation. Perhaps this is something the Minister for Social Protection will implement. It is of grave concern, given that there is a rent crisis in the country, particularly in regard to rent supplement.

The Minister of State referred to 600 additional gardaí. That figure is welcome, but it will only just make up for the number who retired in the period in question. Last year we had 300. There is no mention of bringing back parity of salary and allowances for new gardaí who pass out of the college n Templemore with their colleagues who may have been there for two or three years at the same rank but who are earning less. It is about fairness. These are the matters I would like to see addressed. Despite thie budget which I acknowledge contains good measures, I would like a better focus on those who need assistance such as those who are struggling to pay their mortgages, those subject to repossession orders and those who have civil bills lodged against them in the courts on a weekly basis. I am surprised that there was no mention of them in either statement. They are the ones who really need the Government's assistance.

I would welcome the Minister of State's comments on my contribution and look forward to the continuation of the debate on budget 2016.

I welcome the Minister of State. I also welcome Senator Darragh O'Brien's contribution which was positive in the main, which is good. We tend to have less eating of one another in this Chamber than in the other House.

A falling debt ratio means very little to the public. The truth of the matter is that most people do not understand it. I spoke to a gentleman yesterday who said we were closer to the next recession than we were to the last one. When one hears a statement like that, one realises how true it is. We have got to get the debt ratio down and explain to the public what that means. To put it into context, in 1997 the State spent €18.5 billion at budget time. A decade later, the then Government spent €63.5 billion. That was spending gone mad and the era in which we lost the run of ourselves. What we have done today is put into place the final budget of this Administration but as has been mentioned, we are only half way through the process. This Administration said very clearly on day one that a ten-year programme was required, which is why the Taoiseach has said the Government will run until spring 2016.

He should go to the park.

I appreciate that and believe he is doing the right thing.

We must look at the headline figures. Our receipts in 2015 from taxes were €44.6 billion, while receipts for 2016 are expected to be over €47 billion, an increase of almost €3 billion. VAT receipts are up by €750 million, corporation tax receipts are up by €500 million, capital gains tax receipts are up by €250 million, while income tax receipts are up by €1 billion. These figures suggest growth that has started will continue, which is essential because if we do not grow the economy, we are at nothing.

I heard my colleague from the banking inquiry, Deputy Pearse Doherty, say the State was not redistributing wealth. However, according to figures released today, the income tax take will be €19.15 billion, while the welfare budget will be €19.6 billion. Every penny that comes in through income tax is going back out in a direct payment. I ask people to look at the figures and understand them because some are coming out with uninformed, mean-spirited and silly comments.

As illustrated on page 100 of the expenditure booklet, of the €19.6 billion referred to, €7 billion is spent on old age pension payments - the biggest payment from the State. A further €2.6 billion is spent on child benefit. That means that we are spending €9.6 billion, or almost half of the Department of Social Protection budget on payments for old people and children. I believe that is appropriate. The next largest payment is to carers, who receive €3.5 billion. The people concerned do an outstanding job on behalf of the State. A sum of €5 billion is spent on working-age employment and income supports, that is, on people who are unemployed. These figures need to be broadcast because there is such a lack of knowledge of this issue.

I was trying to find figures for family income supplement payments and perhaps the Minister of State might help me out in that regard. I have consistently said work must pay. I have been saying this for years and I am glad that others are now agreeing with me. We had a report from Professor Richard Tol from the ESRI, which was very quickly retracted, which indicated that families on welfare were better off than those on low pay. Finally the Government is trying to do something about this. The politics I espouse is about allowing people to earn more, not about impoverishing those on welfare and reducing rates of pay. That said, one must ask how one does this. Does one increase the minimum wage? Employers may not like it because 50 cent an hour for a 40-hour week will cost €20 gross per employee. That will, of course, be allowable against income tax. We are allowing people to earn more and to be taxed less. I welcome the changes to the universal social charge, USC, particularly the removal of tens of thousands more people from the USC net. Our colleagues on the other side of the House introduced the USC as an emergency measure. It yields €4 billion to the State. Therefore, when that amount is reduced, the money must come from somewhere else.

I support the reduction in the pupil-teacher ratio at primary level. However, there is no mention of the DEIS programme, but perhaps that will come later. DEIS schools were so designated at the beginning of this century - in 2002 or 2003. It is an outrage that this has not been reviewed because there are some schools which have DEIS status but which no longer require it. Areas have evolved, children have grown and moved on. At the same time, there are schools in other areas which badly need DEIS status, but they are excluded.

It has been re-evaluated.

That is what I am saying. It needs to be-----

No, I said it has been re-evaluated.

We must target the money to ensure it goes to the children who require it most.

I welcome the changes to the early childhood care and education, ECCE, scheme. That is money well spent. All of the longitudinal studies show that money spent on early education is superbly well spent.

The local property tax freeze will not be welcomed by our friends in opposition who tried to scare the daylights out of people by claiming it would increase by between €500 and €2,000 and that they would receive nothing for that money. If one looks at the figures, 40% of properties are in band 1, which means that owners are liable for €90 per year. It is welcome that the rates are being frozen. I accept Senator Darragh O'Brien's point about properties in Dublin. That said, in Dublin there is a far larger spend on education, transport and so on, which cannot be ignored.

What about metro north?

I spoke with an older gentleman earlier this week who said he had been around for countless budgets. He does not count them in ones or twos but in tens. He said that in his experience, money was given with one hand and taken back with the other. However, for the last seven budgets, no money was given back - it was all taken. On this occasion, I welcome the opportunity to give people back some money in order that they can spend more and revitalise the economy.

I will not deal with NAMA now, but I would like to welcome the €10 million fund for an affordability housing pilot scheme. I know what it means to be displaced from one's own area. The population overspill in the greater Dublin area is displacing people in other areas. While it is important that there is a focus on homelessness and social housing, there must also be a focus on the affordability of housing for working people.

I wish to refer to an issue mentioned by the Minister for Public Expenditure and Reform, Deputy Brendan Howlin, namely, the €500 million for IDA Ireland for regional property solutions. County Wexford but specifically Wexford town, one of the finest towns in the country, was excluded by IDA Ireland. That decision should be revisited. The concept of the south east is outdated. There is no longer a south east but a Dublin corridor from Louth to Rosslare and the rest of the country. Wexford should be considered in this context. I hope the Minister of State will relay that point to the Ministers for Finance and Public Expenditure and Reform.

I welcome the Minister of State. Today Ireland has money to spend. As it is the peoples' money, it must be spent properly, for all of the people. It must be spent in a way that ensures those who suffered most in the austerity years will benefit more than those who suffered less. That is the formula to tackle inequality and to spread the money fairly in order that more people can participate in driving the economy.

No one wants a charity model for the economy. The young, the long-term unemployed, third level graduates, people who are disabled and the elderly do not want charity, they just want a level playing field. I spoke with a woman in Tallaght last week who said her widow's pension had been reduced by €78 per month in the past three budgets. I do not see that increasing in the figures for 2016, which were released today. I know many of the people who are in the one-in-seven category of the population who live on an income which is less than that which marks the official poverty line. Of these, 15% are people who stay at home - mostly women - and another 15% are students. Not surprisingly, 20% of those who are unemployed live below the poverty line, which, in monetary terms, is the equivalent of €202 per week. Even more surprising is the fact that the 12% of these individuals who are at work are poor. I question how the budget improves their living standards. Will they be better off proportionally than those who did not suffer as much? I do not think they will if we have a 50:50 split to spend the people’s money by reducing taxation and increasing investment in public services equally. This was not the ratio used when we cut €30 billion out of both the economy and society between 2008 and 2014. We took €30 billion out by cutting public services by 70% and increasing taxes by 30%. I think a better rule of thumb for equality would have been a 70:30 split to ease the burden and offer hope to those whose living standards are below the fairness line.

I am not sure I heard the word "poverty" being used in any of the preceding contributions but perhaps I missed it. It does not appear until page 75 of the expenditure report, and that is in the context of reducing poverty and hunger in Third World settings, which is telling. I welcome the added funding to tackle homelessness, but I wish these funds could have been made available earlier in the year. We have over 1,300 homeless children in Dublin and throughout 2015 an average of 250 people per month in emergency accommodation in South Dublin County Council. We are all aware of the immeasurable social costs which accrue when a child has to spend a year in emergency accommodation. My question is: when did we become aware that our revenue streams would be significantly higher than were forecast – we are €2.3 billion better off in that regard - and was there an opportunity to act sooner? Many households that rent in the private sector will be disappointed that the reported rent certainty package is not included in today’s budget. Rents are rising and we need to stabilise the market. However, we need to remember that the landlords involved mostly on a small-scale basis are struggling too. The unaffordable, unstable rental market need to be reformed in a mutually beneficial way. That is why I put forward policy and investment proposals to stabilise rents through the introduction of a number of voluntary tenancy agreements to provide more rent certainty for tenants and tax incentives for the landlords who sign up to them. My proposals include social and solidarity tenancy schemes, both of which could unlock supply considerably quicker than the magic wand of NAMA. The proposals could offer something for those landlords in negative equity and people who are homeless right now and who are obliged to “self –accommodate”, that is, those who - even in the light of the support available from the various homelessness teams and authorities - take on the responsibility of seeking a place in which to live. Those schemes are also being put forward for the thousands who will soon be seeking refuge on our shores. The proposals are being costed by the Department of Finance. Perhaps some of the additional €69 million for social housing announced earlier today might be used to fund them.

I would like increased funding to be provided for Traveller housing, for permanent accommodation and to ensure safety in order that tragedies such as the fire at Carrickmines will not happen again. While flying flags at half-mast represents a very appropriate response regarding the grief of the nation, the requisite deeds should follow this symbolic act if it is to the mean what it should mean. From 2007 to the present, funding for Traveller housing has been reduced from €70 million to €4.1 million.

I now turn to the issues related to child care and early education for children. I have advocated in favour of investment in affordable early years education and care for the past 15 years. I wholeheartedly welcome the Government's decision to invest in children and working families by means of the extension of paternity leave, the provision of €15 million for children with disabilities and the focus on evidence-based care. The sector will require additional funding to meet the increased demand and I acknowledge the Minister referred to the restoration of capitation fees, which are essential in the context of delivering quality services. As it is critically important to provide appropriate pay and working conditions for those in the sector, I look forward to reading the fine print of the Minister’s proposals. Many people who work in the sector are obliged to go on the dole in the summer months because they do not have yearly contracts. If the capitation rates have not increased sufficiently for stability and professionalisation of work in the sector it will not be possible for the sector to provide the kind of quality for children from the age of three years as put forward in the budgetary proposals today. It may not even be possible for the sector to provide the additional places from September 2016, places that the Government and I agree we so dearly want.

I will conclude on the budget changes relating to lone-parent supports. This is another welcome initiative. In the six previous budgets, lone-parent supports were cut repeatedly and disproportionately and this resulted in more than 60% of those living in lone-parent households experiencing deprivation. The rate in this regard is 30% higher than that which obtains among the rest of the population. The controversial measures to restrict the eligibility to one-parent family payments were met with public outcry. I organised a public forum in Leinster House for lone parents and brought their concerns and views forward in a Private Members' motion which called on the Government to engage in a comprehensive review of its policies. One of the key requests from lone parents was that the income disregard for those on the jobseeker’s transitional arrangement would be brought into line with the other one-parent family payment. I am glad the Government listened. I still believe, however, that it is a relatively small step after the six years of disproportionate cuts experienced by this group.

I welcome the reduction in teacher ratios in primary and post-primary settings. I also welcome the encouragement for entrepreneurs and the support for small businesses. As I have done in the past, however, I request that the supports for entrepreneurs and small businesses be extended a little more generously to those who are operating within the social entrepreneur sector, particularly within their own communities.

Overall, this is a good budget. The response to it has been good because we have been able to turn the economy around in the years that we have been in government. Ours is the fastest growing economy in Europe. The latest ESRI forecast indicates that the Irish economy will grow by 6% this year.

Last year the Government introduced the first expansionary budget in some time, with a net €500 million invested in the economy, in tax cuts and in expenditure increases. That represented a €2 billion turnaround because we took €2.1 billion out of the economy the year before. This year we are seeing a turnaround in that we are now putting €1.5 billion back into the economy. This represents a €3 billion turnaround from last year. I understand there is supplementary expenditure in the region of €1.5 billion; therefore, what we are actually seeing is €3 billion additional expenditure into the economy. People must remember that €30 billion was taken out of the economy over nine successive budgets and supplementary budgets . The economy was absolutely on its knees. It is wonderful that we have reached the point where we can now do the things we want to do and we must all be grateful for this.

Other Senators and the Minister have made the point - we all agree - that the best route out of poverty is a job. The Government is determined to return the economy to full employment by 2018 and has made significant progress in that regard. The budget goes a significant way towards making work pay. We have given a commitment to increase the national minimum wage by 50 cent. This means that the national minimum wage will have increased by 20% during the Government's term of office.

A number of people have said the Government’s budgets have been regressive, but that is not correct. The tax and welfare systems have been highly effective in reducing inequality during the crisis. A study indicates that Ireland is among the top three OECD countries - it is to the fore among European member states - in terms of progressivity. Ours is now a more equal society than was the case at the beginning of the crisis.

It is worth mentioning that even though there have been successive budgets in which we had no option but to cut, we maintained and improved equality in society and that was in the face of extraordinary fiscal pressures. We maintained core welfare payments supporting a basic standard of living for welfare recipients, but today the Government has gone further. I particularly welcome the move to restore child benefit and the Christmas bonus and the €3 per week increase in pension benefits. There are many others - the restoration of the carer's support grant, the increase of €2.50 in the fuel allowance, the increase of €5 per week in the family income supplement threshold for each of the first two children and so forth. This is a family-friendly budget. That does not include the various measures that have been taken in the area of education, the improvement in the pupil-teacher ratio and the changes that have been made to the ECCE scheme in terms of child care.

Something that has not been mentioned and which I think is very important because it impacts on many people is that the Government has placed the fair deal nursing home scheme on a fully funded demand-led basis and has committed Government funding of €944 million in 2016 in order that everyone who needs a fair deal scheme arrangement will be approved within four weeks. That is important. We live in an ageing society and I do not know one single family in this country that does not have to deal with the issue of support for elderly parents or relatives.

We could and certainly can say it has been a wonderful budget and we have had money to spend and so on, but I have to point to two issues where I believe we have not provided the support we should have done. I mention the situation of people under the age of 26 years. A number of Governments, including those in opposition when they were in government, reduced their entitlements to benefits over a number of years. The reasoning behind this was to encourage young people into employment, education and training. I do not and never have favoured discriminating against people simply because they are under the age of 26 years. Will the Minister of State take a message back to the Government that now that we have resources to spend, we must treat all the people of the nation equally and that includes the younger members of society?

I am very disappointed by the housing package presented in the budget. I left this point to last because I did not want it seem as though I did not welcome the budget. I had been hopeful, as many Members know, for a housing package that included a number of measures, including rent certainty proposals to limit the rate of rent increases for those living in rented accommodation. One in five families lives in rented accommodation and the budget is a missed opportunity to provide relief for low-income tenants. A minimum wage increase of 50 cent per hour is very welcome, but it will have little effect for those people who face monthly increases of €200 and €300. It is vital the Government introduces rent certainty measures sooner rather than later to make a real difference to the lives of families who face the prospect of homelessness. We are in the middle of a crisis. The extent of the housing crisis threatens to derail our economic recovery. Recently some international firms have brought to our attention the issues they have in terms of accommodation for their staff. While I welcome the increased funding for homelessness services, our priority must be to prevent homelessness in the first place. More than 700 families in Ireland are homeless. Threshold, the organisation of which I am chair, has estimated that we face the prospect of another 700 families presenting to homelessness services over the winter months. They will be in crisis if we do not put a stop to the runaway train we have in the rental market.

This is not a problem of success; it is a problem of failure. These families are not homeless because of our economic recovery. They are homeless because of our failure to regulate greed and manage the housing market. Let me be clear: these families have been economically evicted. They are homeless because they could not afford to pay rent increases. Rents in Dublin rose by 35% between 2011 and 2014 and increases are between 10% and 15% in 2015. This is not uniform. These are average rent increases. Services see 20%, 30%, 40% and even 50% rent increases. There is legislation drafted and proposals before Government to introduce a form of rent certainty into Irish law. I know that these measures have the full support of the Minister for the Environment, Community and Local Government, Deputy Alan Kelly. The Minister for Finance has concerns about interfering with the market, but we interfere with markets every day of the week. There is not a single market in which we do not interfere. More important, the Government has a moral duty to deal with homelessness. I argue that there is also a constitutional imperative to deal with the housing crisis in the interest of the common good. I understand there will be discussion of this issue in the next week and urge both Ministers to come up with a package of measures to deal with the rent increases or to take the moral responsibility of facing every family who become homeless because of their inaction. These families will remain homeless and more will join them if we do not deal with this issue.

I welcome the Minister of State. The Minister for Public Expenditure and Reform, Deputy Brendan Howlin, said the increase in public expenditure would be just under 4% higher than in 2014 and he contrasted this with earlier times of more spendthrift operations. Those of us who sit on the Joint Committee of Inquiry into the Banking Crisis know how much that has cost and I welcome the increase in the banking levy that has been announced in the budget because we will need that reserve unless there is evidence that banks have reformed themselves and are unlikely to crash again. The Minister expects to take in €750 million from a bank levy in the next five years. That is important and while I welcome that levy, it is not sufficient for people to come in and say they are sorry. Have they reformed? Have we guarantees that they will not do it again?

The increase in the minimum wage is worth about €1,000 a year. That is more than most of the other benefits announced. One might conclude that the Minister is better at giving away other people's money than he is at giving away his own. Somebody else will bear the cost of the minimum wage increase.

The Minister for Finance referred to "keeping the tax base as broad as possible". That is the thinking that lies behind the vexed question of the water charge. Part of the case made was that too many people were allowed out of the income tax net by former Minister for Finance, Charlie McCreevy, in particular. When one looks in the Budget Statement at the effective tax rates on average earnings, the effective tax rate after today on a gross income of €15,000 for a self-employed person will be 10.7% and when it increases to €120,000, it will be 43%. That is the progressivity people have mentioned all day today. Senator Aideen Hayden has also mentioned it. The problem with the water tax is that it is a poll tax. It is a fixed sum, regardless of consumption or income. We should look at this. To say it broadens the tax base neglects the fact it has serious adverse impacts. The people I have seen on water marches seemed as though they could not afford a lump sum of €260, even if they get €100 back. It is important to reduce the tax burden on those on low incomes and to keep targeting them.

The pension fund levy is gone. It was ironic that people who had unfunded pensions advised the Government to put a levy on people with funded pensions to help to pay for the crisis, but we have done away with it.

To encourage entrepreneurs and support small businesses, a reduced capital gains tax rate of 20% will apply.

The Minister of State said this relief would represent a simplified and up-front benefit for individuals who proposed to sell their business. He is about to become an ex-entrepreneur, if he says "have a tax break" to become an ex-entrepreneur. That seems a very strange measure - if one such person sells a business, the Government will give him or her a tax break for doing so.

I agree with the Minister of State in his misgivings about continuing the special VAT rate, in particular, on hotel rooms in Dublin. I think he warns them that this will be reviewed. I have heard of rates that have doubled and we have heard more in terms of special events. When the Exchequer had nothing, we gave the hotel sector a break and the hotel sector in Dublin, in particular, ought to remember this.

The taxation of heavy goods vehicles by gross weight is a proposition we put twice to the Minister for the Environment, Community and Local Government, Deputy Alan Kelly, and the then Minister of State, Deputy Fergus O'Dowd, and I am glad the Minister is coming around to appreciating that what is on the truck damages the road. That is what we are trying to do to recoup the cost of roads. I note from the details that it is based on the weight per axle rather than the gross weight of the vehicle, but the current method of taxing heavy goods vehicles never made economic sense. We have made the point here a couple of times and I am delighted it is being taken on board.

In regard to reform of the public service, we need to enhance the way in which capital projects are appraised. The document published last week in respect of €27 billion lacks appraisals and conviction that these are projects that will benefit society as a whole. Therefore, a stronger input is required from the Government's economic and evaluation service.

In his Budget Statement the Minister for Public Expenditure and Reform, Deputy Brendan Howlin, mentioned the minimum wage and referenced €1,000 per year and measures to restrain the growth of public expenditure to ensure we did not get into trouble.

There is one point on which I seek clarification from the Minister of State, namely, the proposal at primary level to reduce the pupil-teacher ratio from 28:1 to 27:1. The an bord snip report, on page 43, mentions a pupil-teacher ratio of 16:1. I wonder if there has been a mistake in that calculation. At post-primary level the staffing schedule was 16:1, as stated on page 43 of the report.

It is at primary level.

This one is correct.

What was mentioned today was a ratio of 28:1. I do not know what is the difference between the two figures, but what we want is a ratio of 16:1. That is what I commend because all the evidence, as several speakers have said, is that the early years of education are vital and valuable in the development of the next generation. Perhaps the Minister of State might check those figures.

On the issue of social housing, we have had developers at the banking inquiry admitting they had priced themselves out of a market. A traditional house was available in Ireland for two and half times average earnings but this became 12 times average earnings. Is now six times average earnings, which is still above the European and OECD average, as has been pointed out by the OECD. What can we do with the stock of housing? We have evidence from daft.ie that houses in Longford cost less than one third of what they cost in the Dublin area. Some 90% of the building programme is in the Dublin area. Is there scope for making the stock of empty houses, so-called ghost estates, attractive? They will always costs less than in cities, but there are other disadvantages. Perhaps one of the ways in which we can develop the midlands to attract industries there is by people having much lower housing costs. I see no need to keep the developers who wanted to live in Ballsbridge and buy Aristotle Onassis's yacht for wedding purposes and so on. What we need is people who can produce houses again to two and half times average incomes. That is where the emphasis should be. The overall emphasis in the budget is correct. There will also be parts of a budget where this House will make suggestions to Ministers. As the Leader pointed out when the abolition of this House was being debated, that is a function of the Seanad. A good dialogue was started by the two Ministers in the Dáil Chamber today. I welcome the Minister of State continuing it.

I understand the Leader, Senator Maurice Cummins, is sharing time with Senator Paul Coghlan.

Last week Senator Mark Daly, as acting Leader of the Opposition, was looking for extra expenditure in many areas and at the same time accused the Government of borrowing to fund services. That is typical double speak from the other side of the House. As the Minister of State has pointed out, borrowing and the budget deficit were 12.5% of GDP when we took office. This year the figure will be down to 2.1% of GDP and we hope to attain budget surpluses by 2018.

The last few budgets have been hard, but they have made it possible for Ireland to exit the bailout, reduce our debts and move into real recovery which we see now. The top priority for the budget was to keep that recovery going, while providing relief and better services. It includes steps such as a cut to the universal social charge, more nurses and doctors for the health service, more affordable and quality child care and ending the unfair treatment of the self-employed. These are sensible and affordable steps that will keep the recovery going and bring its benefits to more households. The increased entry point for the universal social charge at €13,000 will bring to more than 700,000 the number of low earners who are exempt from the charge. The cuts in the lower universal social charge rates and bands will also help the lower earners and make work pay.

Tax cuts will encourage our emigrants to come home and are key to attracting foreign investment. Over five budgets the Government has restored the public finances without taxing jobs, a key election promise, and helping to create 125,000 jobs since An Action Plan for Jobs in 2012.

I turn to one positive point I saw in the budget in respect of the road haulage sector. As a person who worked in the shipping and transport sector, I welcome the significant changes in road tax for the road haulage sector. It addresses the major discrepancies which necessitated companies having to set up in, for example, Northern Ireland. This is a very positive step which will be accepted by all concerned in the road haulage sector.

Let us look briefly at the Sinn Féin budget book which, if it were on sale in a bookshop, it would certainly be in the fiction category. It proposes €1.1 billion of new taxes, even though the recovery is fragile. It opposes the Government's tax cuts for ordinary working families. In the Sinn Féin plans there would be no universal social charge cut for any person earning over €19,500 - just over the minimum wage. Its proposals to abolish the 41% tax relief on pension contributions would hit private and public sector workers. Public sector workers are obliged to pay pension contributions. Independent experts have calculated that a garda or nurse on €40,000 would lose approximately €800 per year under the Sinn Féin proposals. The Government has reduced inheritance tax, while Sinn Féin would increase it, hitting middle Ireland.

A son or daughter inheriting a house would be considerably worse off under Sinn Féin.

At the next general election people will have a choice between securing our recovery and gambling on policies that would create instability and put our future at risk.

The budget is all about fairness and will be broadly welcomed by all fair-minded people, as it was by Senator Darragh O'Brien in his own way. As the Minister of State noted, we must secure and enhance the recovery and abide by the fiscal rules. The budget will benefit everyone because the reductions in the universal social charge from 1.5% to 1%, from 3.5% to 3% and from 7% to 5.5% and the increase in the USC entry threshold mean we will all have more money in our pockets. Retailers, publicans, farmers and people with trades will gain. I also greatly welcome the commitment to progressively abolish the charge in the next five years.

As someone from County Kerry, I greatly welcome the retention of the 9% VAT rate on the tourism and hospitality sector. I concede the point made by the Senator Sean D. Barrett that Dublin is making a case for having it removed in the sense that every Member from outside the Pale is well aware of increases in hotel rates in the capital. That is, however, a matter for another day.

I also welcome the proposal by the National Asset Management Agency to develop 20,000 houses in the next five years. These will be mainly starter homes, 90% of which will be located in the greater Dublin area, where they are needed most as a result of the serious supply problem here. The threefold increase in the Christmas bonus for hard-put recipients of social welfare payments is also welcome because people are always stretched at that time of the year and face additional impositions.

The Government promised to fix the public finances and restore growth in the economy and it has done so. It promised to make work pay and has lived up to that promise.

I also strongly welcome the removal of the pension levy, which was an unfair measure that was imposed through necessity. I am grateful it is gone.

I welcome the Minister of State. I am pleased to have an opportunity to make a few points about the budget. It is great to have a budget that gives something rather than takes more away. I do not want to disappoint anybody, but that will be my only positive comment.

I expected the Senator to get at least a minute out of it.

It seems the new word in everyone's vocabulary is "space". As Senator Sean D. Barrett will be aware, the Chairman of the banking inquiry constantly spoke about space. In any case, the recovery has provided fiscal space in the economy. Ultimately, this is a people's recovery, rather than a Brendan Howlin, Michael Noonan, Fine Gael or Labour Party recovery. People sacrificed so much in recent years that we now have room for manoeuvre.

The recovery occurred for two reasons, namely, external factors such as low oil prices, low interest rates and high export growth and the implementation by the Government of the four-year plan drawn up by the former Minister for Finance, the late Brian Lenihan. Having opposed the plan in its entirety in advance of the previous general election, the Labour Party and Fine Gael in government implemented every aspect of it. The Taoiseach, the Minister for Finance and, to a lesser extent, the Minister for Public Expenditure and Reform travel the world on a back-slapping trail collecting accolades that arguably belong to the late Brian Lenihan. They then return home and blame Fianna Fáil and everyone else for everything that occurred. As Senators Sean D. Barrett and Michael D'Arcy will confirm, the Minister for Finance informed the banking inquiry that the Government had implemented Brian Lenihan's four-year plan when he described it as a pretty good plan which he decided to stick with.

Senator Aideen Hayden argued that the Government's previous five budgets were not regressive. The Economic and Social Research Institute, not the Fianna Fáil Party, concluded that the previous five budgets were regressive in that they focused on the higher paid and returned a little more to that group than to other groups. The same applies to the current budget. For example, to take the changes in the universal social charge, a person with an income of €18,868 will pay the same rate of USC as a person on 3.5 times that income. That is not equal.

While certain things have improved in statistical terms, the Government's greatest failure has been the two-tier recovery. Of the jobs created through foreign direct investment, FDI, 95% have been in the greater Dublin area. One can imagine how such statistics sit with the more than 50% of the population who live outside Dublin in rural and regional areas, especially when considered against the backdrop of an allocation of a whopping €30 million over the next six years to offset the difficulties the recession caused in rural areas, where only 5% of FDI jobs have been created.

In the case of housing, a dividend from the National Asset Management Agency will result in the construction of 20,000 houses by 2021, of which 90% will be built in the greater Dublin area. This will leave 2,000 new NAMA homes for the rest of the country. If the Government were to alleviate the housing problem in County Sligo by addressing the waiting list of 1,000 people, only 1,000 new homes would be left for the other 24 counties outside Dublin. One can understand the reason this would create an issue.

The Senator should provide some facts. He has spoken only of the NAMA element and omitted to mention 90% of Government investment in housing.

Perhaps the Acting Chairman might like to regain control of the Chamber.

Please allow Senator Marc MacSharry to continue, without interruption.

The budget does not contain measures to reduce hospital waiting lists. The decision on whether to hold the election in November or March 2016 has been a topic of discussion. I wonder what will be the Government's view in January when the waiting lists are even longer.

There are 171 vacant consultant posts because consultants will not stay in Ireland. Despite being trained here to the highest possible standard at a cost of hundreds of thousands of euro per annum, consultants are choosing to move abroad for big money. The Government is recruiting people from other countries who, arguably, are educated and trained to a lesser standard than the graduates of our medical schools in University College Dublin, the National University of Ireland Galway, University College Cork, the Royal College of Surgeons and elsewhere. They are being educated to the highest standards, undergo consultant training for five years and are then exported to earn $800,000 or $900,000 abroad. This is not a racist comment but a statement of fact. For example, more than 50% of the physicians in Sligo Regional Hospital are from other countries.

That sounds a little racist to me.

Is the Senator arguing that we should pay consultants $800,000 or $900,000?

Please allow Senator Marc MacSharry to continue, without interruption.

They are the facts.

I am sure pensioners are delighted with the derisory €3 increase in their weekly pension. Will it pay for a cup of coffee and a scone? Perhaps it will in Sligo, but I doubt it would pay for coffee and a scone on St. Stephen's Green. I wonder what they think of the increase of €800 per week in take-home pay that some people will receive? Did the Government prioritise to the extent it should have prioritised? Did it take the opportunity of spending an additional €1.5 billion on trying to address the issues that need to be addressed? The answer is "No".

This was a continuation of the classic set piece which started in the 1970s and of which all parties, including Fianna Fáil, were guilty. I would like to think my party is learning from its mistakes, having correctly paid for them the hard way. Following all the lies we were told in advance of the previous general election, the Government delivered the plan produced by the previous Minister for Finance, the late Brian Lenihan, and has sought accolades that are owed to him. It has botched the opportunity afforded by a fiscal space of €1.5 billion, to use the Government's terminology, by failing to prioritise the people who are most in need. It has cast aside rural and regional areas and the elderly, who received a derisory €3. It did nothing for people in mortgage arrears and, as Senator Aideen Hayden noted, it did nothing for people paying rent. On the contrary, the Government has presided over 1,000 repossessions in the past year, of which 616 were family homes. Since 2011 it has been possible to protect family homes, but the Government does not care about that issue. Its only care is being re-elected; that is all that counts. It has thrown €1.5 billion at those areas that it believes will produce the most votes. Sadly, this budget will underpin the divide between the haves and have-nots.

The the greatest failure of the Houses of the Oireachtas in the past five years has been presiding over a two-tier recovery and that is set to continue.

I was beginning to wonder whether I was still in the Seanad Chamber or had suddenly found myself at the Kilkenomics comedy festival or something. The argument from Fianna Fáil, particularly from Senator Marc MacSharry, to whom I have been listening for five years, seems to be that when Fianna Fáil was in government the Opposition decried calls for increased public spending and now that we are in government Fianna Fáil is stating something else. It seems that when Fianna Fáil is in government, it is in opposition and now that it is in opposition, it seems to be in government. The Senator's analysis has very little to do with reality at all.

No punditry. Come on. Tell us the facts. Leave the punditry to the pundits.

Senator John to continue, Gilroy without interruption.

If the Acting Chairman was as quick to reel in his colleague, I might listen to him.

As if I needed it to be proved.

Come on. We are listening.

Less of the theatrics, please, and proceed.

I thank the Senator. She is excellent.

Yes, absolutely. Let us do it.

That is very helpful.

I listened to the Sinn Féin contributions in the other House and read some press releases afterwards. One point referred to how the budget treats young people, in terms of how they were ignored and cast adrift. A clear example of the difference between the policy pursued by this Government and that which might be pursued if Sinn Féin was ever in government is illustrated in those statements. The best and surest way out of poverty is to create jobs. The Government has facilitated the creation of almost 100,000 jobs since it took office. The young people about whom the Sinn Féin Members have spoken are often not in full-time education and in the most precarious of jobs, such as those with zero-hour contracts and minimum wage rates. One cursory glance through the figures today shows that somebody who is on the minimum wage of €17,000 a year who is likely to be one of these young people will be €708 better off each year. We are ambitious for young people. As far as I can see, everything Sinn Féin has stated about trying to get young people back to work and give them opportunities and education involves giving them more dole money.

Fianna Fáil has accused us of trying to buy the election. The figures show that we have increased public spending by 4%. Similar figures from Fianna Fáil, which tried to buy elections in the 2001 budget, for the 2002 election, and in the 2008 budget for the 2009 election, show that spending increased by an incredible 139%. Is it any wonder that it has no credibility at all when it comes to the economy? The party that used to cod us all by saying and repeating that it was the party of economic competence turned out to be the party of absolute incompetence. Fianna Fáil has to make these arguments because it is in opposition. The budget is progressive and the Opposition needs to criticise something. It is our job to sit back and listen to the Opposition scrambling for something to criticise.

Let us take a look at some of the figures that have been announced today with regard to the reduction in debt. In 2012 our debt repayments were €12 billion. This year the reduction has been in the order of €3 billion and the figure will decrease to approximately €1 billion next year. Those in opposition said four, three and two years ago that this could not be done. They did not have the ambition for Ireland that we had.

The Government did not create this great recovery; rather, it was the people of Ireland. For Fianna Fáil and Sinn Féin to say otherwise is to insult the electorate. Surely in the run-up to an election, or at any time, it is imprudent to do that. Senator Marc MacSharry referred to 20,000 houses, but he failed to mention the €2.2 billion in capital investment. He also failed to mention the €69 million that brings the total this year to €414 million for local authorities to acquire 14,000 houses. He missed the €500 million for the social housing strategy and the €17 million for homelessness, bringing to €70 million the total spent on homelessness between this year and last year. These figures are conveniently ignored by the Opposition. It instead focuses on one element to the exclusion of everything else.

The full package of investment in social and other housing is in the region of €2.5 billion in the medium term. We have figures to show that by 2021 an additional 20,000 extra houses will have been built. By any standard, we have to say this is good. I am not sure we are claiming credit for it, because it is, after all, the money of the people of Ireland, but surely it is good that we are delivering on these promises.

The reason for the continuation of the homeless crisis is twofold. One reason is that Fianna Fáil allowed the housing bubble to expand to such a degree that every builder was put out of business. The second is that-----

The Government did nothing.

Were we in government? Was the Senator in government? The same argument applies to him.

The Government has been in place for four and a half years and has done nothing.

The second reason is the over-reliance by the Fianna Fáil Government on Part 5 of the Planning Act to deliver social housing. The amount of investment-----

The Government has done nothing since.

Senator Ó Clochartaigh must have joined Fianna Fáil, or must be about to, given his vociferous defence of it.

The budget is progressive and decent. It is a good start; it is prudent and it sets the parameters for discussion and investment for the next three or four years. We should consider the record of those in government because past performance is an indication of future performance. Those who were in government before made a mess of things. We have been prudent. If we are to continue with this, we need to be returned to government next time in order to implement a full five-year programme. We will go to the people in the fullness of time.

Senator John Gilroy mentioned that the Opposition would be scrambling for something to criticise. Unfortunately, some people did not have to look very far to find criticism in the budget. I will go through some of that later.

The key to any budget day announcement is that there should be some long-term programme because only then will we be able to see how the details of any budget service that programme. I do not think that has been done today, or in the capital plan announced a number of weeks ago. Long-term planning is not sexy and does not roll off the tongue when one is on the doorsteps talking about elections, but, ultimately, it is the stuff of economic and social prosperity. When people ask us what difference it will make to them, it is the absence or presence of housing waiting lists, patients waiting on trolleys, special needs provision and disability services.

Looking to services in the next couple of years, the State faces demands for higher expenditure in the areas of health, education, social protection and pensions as the composition of the population changes. In addition, the cost of providing the existing level of public services is likely to rise in line with the forecast general rise in prices and wages in the economy.

A number of weeks ago during the pre-budget debate in this House, I mentioned the capital programme announcement. The economist Michael Taft has said the projected €27 billion expenditure on public investment between 2016 and 2021, as outlined, actually represents stagnation. In 2015 public investment was about 1.8% of GDP, and the €27 billion package over six years represents around 1.9% of GDP. That means that between this year and 2021 the average annual increase will be less than €250 million.

The best way to describe the budget is that it is like déjà vu. If we cast our memories back to a time when, for example, corporate taxes were slashed, capital gains tax and inheritance tax were halved and the effective personal tax rate fell by 25%, we could see ourselves back in the 1997 to 2007 era. At the time that was grand. The money was rolling in in property tax revenue and then came the crash. We were exposed and our hollowed-out tax base which hid behind the fig leaf of property taxes and development was exposed.

Let us now consider budget 2016 and all the little goodies being dangled before us. We are hoping the shiny distraction of tax cuts, tax relief and buzzwords will distract the people from the reality of what is happening.

The 50:50 split between tax and spending cuts is more of the same old idealists' budgetary policy that benefits high earners in the main and strips public services of desperately needed investment. The cut to USC and changes to PRSI will put three times more in the pocket of someone earning €70,000 compared to the average worker. The Minister is giving those earning €25,000 a meagre €227 annually, yet he has put over €900 back into the pockets of individuals earning over €70,000. By reducing the USC in an inequitable way, cutting the rate of CGT and raising the threshold for CAT and reducing corporation taxes, the Government is hollowing out the tax base for the long term and reducing the State's coffers. It is deeply dishonest.

While some money has been put back into people's pockets, the Government is exacerbating the notion that people are only consumers. These tax cuts are coming very much at the expense of critical public investment. The Government might be giving a feel-good budget, but the people will be forced ultimately to shop for their pensions, education and health care in the future. We are not seeing that long-term programme about which I was talking. We are seeing the creation of some kind of shopping centre with the menu of tax breaks and the famine of real investment.

I sat attentively while listening to the budget being delivered, waiting to hear what would be done for young people, and yet again there was nothing. It highlights the Government's apathy towards young people. Senator John Gilroy mentioned that the Sinn Féin policy was merely a policy of giving young people an extra few euro, but Sinn Féin policy, like that of the Labour Party's own youth wing which lobbied Deputies, Senators and councillors in the Labour Party and last week even met the Minister for Public Expenditure and Reform, Deputy Brendan Howlin, is one of welfare equality. Senator Aideen Hayden was on the Labour Youth Facebook page this week mentioning that those under 26 years had to pay rent and cover their living costs just like everyone else and that what we ended up doing was pushing young people into poverty for no justifiable reason. That is an important point. I was very annoyed that we did not see the restoration of jobseeker's allowance rates for young people. Not everyone of the Minister of State's age and mine is fortunate enough to have the salaries and expenses of an officeholder. Both the Minister of State, Deputy Simon Harris, and I were under 25 years when we came into these Houses, but jobseeker's allowance for young people was cut both by this and the previous Government. It is important that it be restored and that we achieve both welfare equality and equality right across the board for young people. The Minister of State mentioned, for example, that the Minister for Public Expenditure and Reform was in a position to announce an increase in pension payments and an increase in the fuel allowance. He stated: "These targeted increases are important for the groups concerned and will again help to ensure that the benefits of recovery are widely spread." We need to see a recovery for young people also.

The Minister for Finance, at the end of his statement in the Dáil, stated, "Today's announcement will be further developed if we are returned to Government." When one makes a such comment, who needs an election manifesto? Perhaps that might win over some but as they start to get their water bills or see their relatives on trolleys, waiting for hospital appointments, living in sub-standard accommodation or, worse, dying on the streets from homelessness, he can be assured that this spoonful of sugar will not help the medicine go down.

I am sharing time with Senator Hildegarde Naughton.

I welcome the Minister of State, Deputy Simon Harris. It is good to welcome him for the 2016 family-friendly budget. We have had many a tough time here in this and the other House where we had to introduce budgets that none of us really felt comfortable doing. It was a significant challenge to us, both on the social and economic fronts, to have to do that. It is a good and a joyous occasion to be here when we can put money back into people's pockets. After four budgets which were crucial to regaining economic stability in the country, we are now in a strong enough position to invest again in our social services and support the developing fortunes of the nation's working people.

Throughout the life of the Government, many Members have stood and proposed alternative economic approaches in this House, but it is obvious from the economics of today that the Fine Gael Party and Labour Party approach to managing our finances has paid off. The budget deficit has been reduced from 12.5% to 2.1%. Unemployment is down from over 15% to 9.4%. We enjoy the highest level of economic growth in the OECD. As a country coming from where we were, that is something of which to be proud. Sustainability is the key to progress and, as Senator Maurice Cummins stated, stability in government is key to forward growth for the country.

I will not have time to mention all the positive measures that I would like to comment on in the budget, but there are elements that I have been working on for over 20 years. I wholeheartedly welcome the preschool and early childhood education programme. The education and welfare of our children is a top priority for all in the country and all of the Departments. I welcome the budget increase in the Department of Children and Youth Affairs allocation of €1.1 billion. Children will be eligible for free preschool from the age of three to five and a half years - until they go to school. We know the benefit of early childhood education. It is good for the country, it is good for the child and it is good for the family. More women back to work is good for the family and work life as a whole. It is a better package where all children will be able to afford to go to preschool. Not too long ago, even five or ten years ago, only the children of the rich could go.

I wholeheartedly welcome €15 million extra for preschool for those with special needs. That amounts to €33 million in a whole year for the special needs programme to ensure that children with special needs who could not participate because there was not really any support for preschool teachers in that regard can do so in early childhood education. We have provided an increase in the preschool capitation grant. I hope this will enable better wages to be paid to those working in preschool also.

The two weeks paternity leave sets a precedent on how families are understood in this country. Gone are the days of the marriage bar. The future looks more equal for all the family, both men and women.

Some €3 million is provided for after-school services for 8,000 places in community child care settings and private child care providers will be able to look to provide some of them also. I note the roll-out of free GP care to children under 12 years, the 2,260 new teaching posts and the reduction in the student-teacher ratio. I hope Senator Marc MacSharry who has left is listening.

I will let him know.

On the homeless and housing, I note the increase of €500 million. As has been stated, the increase of €69 million for social housing will enable local authorities to source accommodation for an additional 14,000 households and the 500 modular units. I note that there is a €17 million increase in funding for emergency accommodation and the use of €10 million from the sale of Bord Gáis Energy for the affordable housing scheme. Obviously, it is not enough and we will have to keep on doing more because homelessness and housing are a priority.

Regarding the Lansdowne Road agreement and the restoration of wages for the public service, I want councillors, as public servants, included. I ask the Minister of State to refer to that aspect.

I welcome today's progressive budget and the Minister of State.

Time does not permit me to go into all the areas that were raised today in the budget but, in general, I welcome the 2,260 extra teachers, the reduction in the pupil-teacher ratio for both primary and secondary schools, the respite care grant restoration which is a key area and the reduction of the USC right across the board, as well as supports for the self-employed.

I will focus on the area of child care provision and the €85 million injected today under budget 2016. These are the first steps to ensuring we have a quality and affordable child care system in Ireland. I recently held a public meeting in Galway where many of the issues mentioned today were raised. We now have the situation where the free preschool year will be extended. It is currently available for 38 weeks per year and this will be extended by 23 weeks on average. That will mean that, on average, parents will make a saving of €85 per week per child. That is a significant figure for families who are struggling, trying to work and to find child care services for their children.

There will also be three times during the year when a child can enter the preschool system - September, January and April - not only in September as it currently stands. It makes preschool more flexible for parents. One is looking at children who will be turning three or four years at different stages during the year.

The two weeks paternity benefit is a positive step for fathers and families. Also, the capitation grant for preschools was a major issue for many child care providers who wanted it to be restored.

In addition, for child care providers who wanted to improve their qualifications, the learner fund is being increased by €1.2 million.

Will the Senator, please, conclude?

I will finish shortly.

This is very unfair.

Finally, I wish to refer to a very important issue. I know the Minister of State has a special interest in the area of special needs provision. I welcome the €15 million allocated in budget 2016 to improve supports for special needs children.

Tosóidh mé leis na dreamanna nach bhfuil ró-shásta, b'fhéidir. I find it amusing to hear the talk about child care in the budget. My understanding of the early childhood care and education scheme is that it amounts to three hours per day. It is preschool, not child care. As a father of five, I know that there is a major difference between child care and preschool.

Preschool is also an education support. The attempt to sell a couple of extra hours per day as child care is incorrect.

Should we take it back?

Another group of people who are very disappointed today, I imagine, are lone parents who have suffered savage cuts under this Government, in particular, the cuts introduced by the Minister for Social Protection, Deputy Joan Burton, last year. She reduced the age of eligibility to seven years. It is a shame that something was not done in that area. Since we are discussing child care, it is a shame there has been no announcement around the Scandinavian child care system we were promised when the cuts were made.

Obviously, there are positive things in the budget, but I am very disappointed. I spoke in a debate with the Minister of State, Deputy Joe McHugh, earlier on Raidió na Gaeltachta. I remarked on the complete and utter disdain the Government had shown for the Irish language and the Gaeltacht areas once more in the cuts the Government had made in Gaeltacht areas, including a 20% cut for Foras na Gaeilge and a practical cut for Údarás na Gaeltachta at a time when we were trying to maintain jobs in Gaeltacht areas. Why are the increases being granted to Enterprise Ireland and IDA Ireland not being granted to Údarás na Gaeltachta to create jobs in Gaeltacht areas? Are we second-class citizens?

Rural areas cannot see much benefit in the budget today. It was unfortunate that an increase in the farm assist programme was not provided for and that more spaces were not made available under the rural social scheme.

Education is another area where people are going to be very disappointed. One of the headlines I saw today was to the effect that it was not a budget for those under 25 years of age. The Government has not addressed the the astronomical fees students at third level are being asked to pay. This was a great opportunity to put to right that wrong and bring down the astronomical costs that are driving people out of the education system, especially those from socioeconomic groups that do not have much cash.

Several other cuts could have been reversed. The Government could have re-examined the cuts to the bereavement grant, the telephone support or the back-to-school allowance. These should have been redressed in the budget.

It is farcical to hear Senators on the Government side calling this a progressive budget. It is progressive for those who are on higher incomes. Approximately 50% of those in the workforce are on wages of €28,500 or less.

It is the opposite of regressive.

Let us consider the analysis done by the Department of Finance on the way this will impact on people. We can see that those earning over €50,000, €60,000 or €70,000 benefit. The top 14% of earners are going to get three times more money back into their pockets than people on the lower levels. How is that progressive or fair? People on low incomes are finding it difficult to make ends meet, yet the Government has decided on this policy. The Labour Party has backed the Fine Gael Government with its Tory-style economics to try to put three times more money back into the pockets of people who have far more money to begin with. It is totally disgraceful on the part of the Government.

I note that fishermen seem to have been hammered also. There has been a cut in the capital grant available for fisheries. This has not been touched on in the commentary so far.

The Government has shown its true colours today. Those in the Labour Party have shown that they buy into the Fine Gael school of economics. In fairness to Senator John Gilroy, much of it follows on from the model proposed by Fianna Fáil previously. Certainly, it is not the type of budget Sinn Féin would have brought forward. We would have brought forward something more fair.

We are more interested in curing the ills than maintaining them.

We have shown that the Government has a great battle on its hands, especially on the water issue. There is nothing in the budget to assuage any of the people who have not paid their water charges and who have no intention of paying them.

There is nothing in the budget to show me that the Government has a real strategy to end the crisis in the health system, for example, the number of patients on trolleys or the number waiting for outpatient appointments.

There will be extra nurses and doctors.

There will be extra gardaí, too. Sinn Féin does not like that part of it.

There is nothing in it either to show me that there is a clear strategy for ending the crisis in housing provision. If anything, the strategy is putting more and more resources into the hands of private developers and allowing the market to rule itself. We have seen what a disaster that can be.

When we were making an analysis of the figures on Raidió na Gaeltachta earlier, we noticed that there appeared to be a cut in the money available for the rental accommodation scheme. Although there is a crisis in that sector, it appears that there will be less money available under the RAS next year than this year.

That is not true. It is the opposite.

That is not the case according to the figures we have seen. This was not denied by the Minister of State at the table with us at the time.

That is wrong. The Senator should read it.

The Minister of State should tell us what is in this for small and medium-sized enterprises. There is little for rural areas. For farmers, it is simply an extension of what is in place. The Government is hammering the Gaeltacht and Irish language organisations. It has carried on Tory economics. The Labour Party is on board with that agenda. The Government has let down under 25 year olds. Those on the Government side should be ashamed of themselves.

I wish to share time with my colleague, Senator Michael Mullins.

I could talk for three hours, such is the bounty of the goodies. I welcome the reduction in the pupil-teacher ratio at national and secondary school levels. The 600 new resource teachers are most welcome. Fully €1.25 billion has been invested in school buildings under the Government's watch. A total of 102 new schools have been built and 71 large-scale school extensions have been provided. Fully 2,260 new additional teaching posts, including 600 new resource teachers, will be filled, in addition to an extra 610 special needs assistants and 190 resource teachers.

I welcome the significant reduction in transportation costs, as has my colleague, the Leader, Senator Maurice Cummins. Transportation costs are a major issue for every business in Ireland. The commercial motor tax rate reductions are most welcome. Road tax for large goods vehicles is far too high when compared with Northern Ireland rates and those in the rest of the United Kingdom. There are 20 existing commercial road taxes to be reduced. I am pleased to note that this will be reduced to five. They range from €92 per annum to €900. This change will have effect from 1 January next. The most significant reductions are concentrated on the large goods vehicles, a major industry in the north east and along the Border counties. The maximum rate of commercial motor tax will be €900 per annum, down from €5,195. The latter figure was in no way comparable to the rates in the United Kingdom, including Northern Ireland. This will represent a major boost to the road haulage industry. I could say more, but I congratulate the Minister State.

I welcome the Minister of State. Those of us who came to the House four and half years ago could not have believed that by now we would have exited the bailout, started to reduce our debts and started moving to real recovery. The priority in the budget is clear: to keep the recovery going, while providing better services for the people. This includes cuts in the universal social charge, more nurses and doctors for the health service, more affordable and greater quality child care, as well as an end to the unfair treatment of the self-employed. These are sensible affordable steps that will keep the economy going and bring benefits to more households. It is a good budget for children. We have seen further investment in education, more teachers and a reduction in the pupil-teacher ratio. It is good for older people in that we have seen an increase in the pension and the fuel allowance and the restoration of the Christmas bonus. It is a budget that will make it pay to work.

It is welcome that the Minister for Justice and Equality, Deputy Frances Fitzgerald, has announced that 600 new gardaí will be recruited in 2016. There will be increased funding for Garda surveillance of criminal activity and special operations and the budget for Community Alert and Crimestoppers is to be doubled.

As we all know, there is a major issue with rural crime throughout the country; therefore, this is a significant investment. A measure of whether the budget was good or bad is contained in a press release issued this afternoon by the European Anti-Poverty Network in Ireland. This alliance of over 250 national and local organisations has welcomed the provisions in the budget which, it states, will mitigate some of the worst impacts of the policies of the past eight years for those on low incomes. In particular, it has welcomed the announcement of a number of provisions for homeless services and housing, the partial restoration of the Christmas bonus, the increase in fuel allowances, the emphasis on the reduction of the USC for the lower paid and the increased provision of preschool care. That is a much more reasonable assessment of the budget than what we have heard from some Opposition spokespersons here today. The Ministers, Deputies Michael Noonan and Brendan Howlin, have done a good job. I hope we will see the economic recovery escalate as we head into 2016 and beyond.

Some things included in the budget are welcome, while I am disappointed about others. It is good to see a move on the USC to bring the rate of taxation under 50%, but it is still a major tax. There has been no move on the pension levy for PAYE workers, which is appalling. There is a move for the self-employed but not for PAYE workers. I know a young nurse who pays €108 every two weeks by way of the pension levy, yet only €8 towards her own pension.

I am glad to see a freeze on the local property tax, which is essential, given the management charges some people are paying. The Minister for Finance has said that, on average, a person will gain one week's pay. That was his assessment, but is that a gross or net weekly figure? Is it true that a person on €35,000 per year will only gain €57 per month, whereas a couple on €105,000, three times that income, will gain more than three times the benefit? Why is the gain not proportionate?

It is really disappointing that the telephone allowance has not been restored for older people and those with disabilities. They feel insecure owing to rural crime and because the mobile network is unreliable.

Child care allowances are not so good for all families. I welcome early childhood investment, on which I have produced a report. However, the allowances will not reduce costs for parents with young children. The early childhood care year allowance only covers three hours per day. What parent works for only three hours a day? If we want to relieve the cost on families, we should cover an eight-hour day; therefore, the provision is not great.

The situation is appalling for third level students because there is no move on the €3,000 student contribution charge, while the rental sector is out of control. There is nothing in the budget for families with children in third level education because the Minister has not touched these sectors.

I welcome the provision for extra teachers, but is there something for career guidance teachers? Can a teacher be appointed as a career guidance counsellor within that measure?

The Minister is giving the health sector the same figure of €13 billion, but there is nothing in the budget about outcomes, reducing waiting lists or the elective lists.

When will one new extra house be built for the homeless? How long will the modular programme houses last and who will get the contract? If NAMA is to be a new housing agency, that is fair enough, but I presume we will need new legislation to differentiate between the roles in that regard.

I was hoping for a little imagination concerning carbon emissions. We are in danger of not meeting our carbon emissions targets by 2020. We have an excellent opportunity to offer some tax incentives to corporations to reduce their carbon footprint and invest in public transport. We need better public transport in Galway city and rural areas.

I must ask the Senator to conclude.

There is much to say, but it is appalling that only two hours were offered for a budget review.

I call the Minister of State to reply.

This is grossly unfair.

I come here time after time-----

The Senator could have proposed an amendment to the Order of Business today. Did he do so?

Did the Senator propose an amendment to the Order of Business?

-----you have allowed speakers to go over time.

There is no need to stand up.

Members like me who sit here for hours-----

We all sit here for hours.

Nobody went over time when I was in the Chair. The Senator is wasting the Minister of State's time. Will he, please, let him reply?

I am sure the Minister of State would love to hear the compliments I have to pay on the budget. It would be refreshing from this side of the House.

The House agreed to the Order of Business today.

It might be his only opportunity to speak to the budget.

The rules of the House were laid out today on the Order of Business. I call on the Minister of State to reply.

The Leader could propose an amendment. I ask him to do so in the interests of fairness. With all due respects to the Minister of State-----

Will the Senator, please, stop interrupting the Minister of State?

-----I appreciate that he is caught by this rule, just as I am, but this is outrageous.

The Minister of State does not make the rules. The House made the rules this morning.

There were two hours allocated and the Acting Chairman let half of the Members who spoke to go over time.

I thank Senators for engaging in a useful debate which has been productive.

The Minister of State missed my part.

I think the Senator missed my first part. He should not miss the second part.

I hope and expect that we will have significant opportunities to debate the specific measures to be included in the Finance Bill and the Social Welfare Bill. I know that sincere views are held by Senators on all sides and I look forward to teasing them out.

We have had many reasonable contributions. To sum up much of what I have heard, it is a realisation of the fact that there are many social challenges. Members on both sides of the House can list things that they would like to have seen included in the budget but, quite simply, it was not possible to do so because of the fiscal space. We had parameters of €1.5 billion which the Government decided to divide 50:50 between tax cuts and expenditure. We decided to do this on the basis of continuing to embed the recovery and reach full employment.

There is one aspect that grates with me when I hear it and it is when people talk about how money that could have been used for spending has been given back in tax cuts. The facts of the past year do not bear out that assertion. In budget 2015 we decided to reduce income tax and take more people out of the USC net. What happened was that we took in more in tax revenue. That has enabled us, by way of Supplementary Estimates, to invest more in health, education, transport and the Christmas bonus and provide more gardaí. The Minister for Finance feels strongly that if one uses tax as a vehicle for growth and job creation, not just redistribution, one can end up with more money in the coffers.

I will not have time to go through all of the points raised. I will have to return to a number of them. As regards the key fiscal parameters, however, it is important to recognise that we will still borrow about €2.1 billion in 2016. We all have a collective duty in the Houses of the Oireachtas to move towards a balanced budget. We now have a plan to reach that position.

A number of important measures have been welcomed by Members on all sides of the House, including the investment in social housing and taking on 600 more gardaí. We have a capital plan and Senator SEan D. Barrett said it was important to implement it. It will be implemented and every single measure in it will have to comply with the public spending code.

I was asked about family income supplement. some 59,000 families will benefit from the increase in the thresholds announced today.

Regarding the fair deal scheme, there is a significant change. We are moving to a demand-led scheme, whereby there will be funding for anybody who needs the nursing home scheme. That funding will be available within four weeks.

A number of issues were raised about rural Ireland. There are many measures included in the budget in favour of rural Ireland. I encourage people to read the budget documentation and we can then tease out the issues.

The Minister of State is being allowed to go over time.

He is not over time; he is actually under time. The Senator is interrupting him again.

I thank Senators for their contributions. I look forward to discussing these matters further with them.

I ask the Leader when is it proposed to sit again?

Ar 10.30 maidin amárach.

The Seanad adjourned at 7 p.m. until 10.30 a.m. on Wednesday, 14 October 2015.
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