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Tax Code.

Dáil Éireann Debate, Wednesday - 23 June 2004

Wednesday, 23 June 2004

Questions (80)

Breeda Moynihan-Cronin

Question:

79 Ms B. Moynihan-Cronin asked the Minister for Finance the progress made to date with regard to the commitment given in An Agreed Programme for Government to remove all those on the national minimum wage from the tax net; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [18596/04]

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Written answers

An Agreed Programme for Government states that over the next five years our priorities will be to achieve a position where all those on the minimum wage are removed from the tax net. The five year period mentioned commenced two years ago when the Government was elected to office. I should also point out that the commitment to exempt the minimum wage from tax is given in the context of a broader economic and budgetary strategy which provides, among other things, that the public finances will be kept in a healthy condition and that personal and business taxes will be kept down in order to strengthen and maintain the competitive position of the Irish economy.

The current national partnership agreement, Sustaining Progress, contains a commitment in generally similar terms. The statutory minimum wage is an average hourly rate of gross pay for an employee as defined under the National Minimum Wage Act 2000. The wage currently stands at €7 per hour having been increased on 1 February 2004 from the previous amount of €6.35 per hour. The annualised equivalent of the present minimum wage is just under €14,200.

I would remind the Deputy that it was the current Government parties who legislated for the introduction of the statutory minimum wage which came into effect in April 2000. At that time less than 64% of the annualised figure of €11,330, £8,923, was exempt from taxation. In the 2002 budget, 90% of the minimum wage became exempt from tax and this position has been maintained in the 2003 and 2004 budgets even though the minimum wage has increased twice in the intervening period. Currently, the position is that a single PAYE person may earn up to €12,800 — 90% of €14,200 — without paying tax.

In my reply to a question from Deputy Costello on 6 May 2004, I indicated that the question of when those earning an amount equivalent to the statutory minimum wage annualised will not be liable for income tax is a matter for consideration in the context of annual budgets over the next number of years consistent with the Government's overall economic and budgetary strategy and with the Government's commitments in An Agreed Programme for Government and Sustaining Progress. That remains my position.

Question No. 80 answered with QuestionNo. 8.
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