I move: "That the Bill be now read a Second Time."
We are here to start our consideration of the Finance (No. 2) Bill 2023, which will give the necessary legal basis to the decisions announced in the budget and make a number of other necessary changes to tax legislation. I will begin by outlining the aims of the Bill and move on to highlighting certain key measures before discussing the more granular contents.
In my Budget Statement two weeks ago, I noted Ireland’s positive economic performance. Inflation is persisting, however, and many households and businesses are facing considerable challenges due to rising prices. Accordingly, budget 2024 will provide further support to individuals, families and businesses at a time when the cost of living remains high. The total budget 2024 package amounts to €14 billion, comprising a core expenditure package of just under €5.3 billion and a tax package of more than €1.1 billion, which give a total core budget package of €6.4 billion. This is in line with the budgetary parameters set out in the summer economic statement last July. There is also a package of one-off cost-of-living measures of €2.7 billion, net of windfall revenues from the energy sector. In addition, there is non-core expenditure of €4.75 billion, including an additional €250 million for the public capital programme funded by windfall corporation tax receipts.
The Bill will make a number of changes to tax legislation to reflect international developments, with a large portion dedicated to the implementation of the EU minimum effective tax rate for large groups and companies. The Bill will implement a range of targeted tax changes including the cost-of-living supports to families and businesses, introduce new measures and amend existing measures specifically targeted at supporting the housing market and encouraging investment in certain businesses. It also contains a number of administrative changes and seeks to protect and enhance the integrity of our tax code. I look forward to bringing this important Bill through the Oireachtas over the coming weeks.
For the third year in a row, the Government has provided a significant income tax package. The package I announced on budget day, I believe, helps avoid a situation whereby an individual would end up paying a higher burden of tax as their income rises. The changes are in line with the programme for Government and will ensure people at all income levels benefit. The €1.3 billion package for 2024 includes raising the personal, employee PAYE and earned income tax credits by €100 each to €1,875. The standard rate cut-off point for income tax will also increase by €2,000 to €42,000 for a single person, with commensurate increases in the bands applying to married persons and persons in civil partnerships. Furthermore, the Bill will increase the home carer tax credit to €1,800, in line with the programme for Government commitment to support families. Likewise, the single-person child carer credit will increase to €1,750, while the incapacitated child tax credit will increase to €3,500.
To take account of the national minimum wage increase, which will apply from 1 January 2024, the 2% rate band ceiling for the universal social charge will increase to €25,760. Moreover, the 4.5% rate of universal social charge, USC, applicable to incomes between €25,761 and €70,044 per annum will reduce to 4%. The Bill will also extend the concession for those who have a medical card and earn less than €60,000 per year, such that those individuals will pay a reduced rate of USC until the end of 2025.
Other elements of the Government’s cost-of-living support package include a 12-month extension of the reduced, 9% VAT rate for gas and electricity. Estimates indicate consumers using electricity will save an additional €90 on average during this period, while those who use gas will save an additional €62. Given the recent volatility in international oil prices, the Bill will also defer the final tranche of fuel excise increases, which were due to happen at the end of October. A phased restoration will take place in two equal instalments, on 1 April and 1 August 2024.
In respect of the benefit-in-kind, BIK, regime for company vehicles, the Bill will extend for a further year the temporary universal relief of €10,000 on the original market value, OMV, on vans and certain categories of cars. Additionally, the Bill will provide for a temporary suspension of the tapering of the preferential BIK relief for battery electric vehicles. This will maintain the existing €35,000 OMV reduction for 2024 and 2025, followed by a reduction to €20,000 in 2026 and €10,000 in 2027, supporting Government policy to incentivise the transition to electric vehicles while allowing lead-in time for fleet planning by businesses.
Indigenous businesses are the backbone of our economy. As such, one of the budget priorities this year was to create and maintain an environment that allows businesses to thrive. The Bill, therefore, will bring a number of changes to existing tax measures to support enterprise, such as in respect of the research and development tax credit, and increase the credit from 25% to 30% so as to maintain the net value of the credit for businesses subject to the new 15% minimum effective tax rate.
It also delivers a real increase for companies that do not fall within the scope of that new regime. Further, the Bill doubles the first year payment threshold from €25,000 to €50,000 to provide valuable cashflow support to companies engaged in research and development projects. I plan to introduce a new targeted relief for angel investors to offer additional funding support for innovative start-up SMEs. This will apply a reduced rate of capital gains tax to gains up to twice the value of the initial investment. While not included in the Bill as initiated, the necessary provisions will be introduced by means of a Committee Stage amendment. In the same vein, the employment investment incentive scheme provides SMEs and start-ups with an alternative source of funding. The Bill enhances the scheme by standardising the investment period to four years and doubling to €500,000 the amount of relief an investor can claim. These enhancements will help unlock more equity investment in smaller, early-stage businesses, which are typically most in need of funding.
As farming is the lifeblood of rural communities across Ireland, the Bill also augments a number of important agricultural tax reliefs. These reliefs provide important supports to our farmers and the farming sector generally. For example, the registered farm partnerships stock relief is generally limited to a maximum threshold of €15,000 per claimant over a three-year period. However, as facilitated by revisions to the EU’s agriculture de minimis regulation, the Bill increases this threshold to €20,000. The Bill also increases the maximum aggregate lifetime limit of a number of farm-related reliefs from €70,000 to €100,000, to reflect recent changes to the agricultural block exemption regulation. These are the young trained farmer stamp duty and stock reliefs and the relief for succession farm partnerships. In addition to these changes, I propose to bring forward an amendment on Committee Stage in respect of the existing tax exemption for certain income arising from the leasing of farmland. As I announced on budget day, my intention is to restrict eligibility to ensure that those who purchase land on or after 1 January 2024 must own the land for a period of at least seven years before they can avail of the relief.
The Bill complements the important Government interventions to support the availability of housing, whether for purchase or rent. With regard to supports for tenants, section 11 increases the amount that can be claimed under the rent tax credit for 2024 and 2025 from €500 to €750, or from €1,000 to €1,500 for a jointly assessed couple. In addition, the Bill extends eligibility for the credit to parents who pay for their student child’s tenancy in the case of rent-a-room accommodation or a digs arrangement. This change applies retrospectively to the years 2022 and 2023. A further amendment restricts claims for the credit by Members of the Oireachtas who receive certain allowances in respect of a tenancy otherwise eligible for the credit.
Section 21 provides for a residential premises rental income tax relief. This relief can reduce the tax due on a landlord’s residential rental income by up to €600 in 2024, €800 in 2025 and €1,000 in the 2026 and 2027 years of assessment. An important condition of this measure is that the rental properties held by the claimant must remain in the rental market for at least four years, otherwise the full amount of the relief can be clawed back.
In light of the impact of rising interest rates and mortgage costs on many households, section 13 introduces a temporary one year mortgage interest tax relief, capped at €1,250 per property. This measure will assist homeowners who had an outstanding mortgage balance of between €80,000 and €500,000 on their primary dwelling house on 31 December 2022. The relief is available in respect of the increased interest paid on the mortgage in 2023, as compared with that paid in 2022, at the standard rate of 20% income tax. Although housing remains one of the biggest challenges facing the country, the tax system is just one lever in a whole of Government approach toward addressing this challenge. Nevertheless, as I will detail later, the Bill contains a number of other provisions, such as the help-to-buy scheme and the vacant homes tax.
To take a step back and consider the Bill as a whole, I recognise that it is the largest Finance Bill introduced since 2012. This is primarily owing to the large volume of legislation required to transpose the EU minimum tax directive. This directive contains the rules regarding the so-called pillar 2 reform - a system of top-up taxes to ensure a 15% minimum effective corporation tax rate on a defined tax base.
I will now provide more detail on the specific contents of the Bill. I have spoken to a number of key measures already, but as the Bill runs to 270 pages, Deputies will appreciate that I cannot detail every section in the limited time available. However, I will outline some of the other contents of the Bill.
Section 6 extends the help-to-buy scheme to the end of 2025, to provide certainty to prospective home buyers and to the market. The scheme is also being amended to ensure that the affordable dwelling contribution received through the local authority affordable purchase scheme is taken into account when calculating the loan-to-value requirement for the help-to-buy scheme. This will facilitate access to help to buy for a greater number of local authority affordable purchase scheme buyers.
As recommended by the interdepartmental group on pension reform and taxation, section 19 makes the necessary legislative changes to allow pension retirement savings accounts, PRSAs, to be used as a whole-of-life pension product. Previously, following retirement, PRSA holders could draw down the funds over time until they turned 75. The Bill removes this age limit.
Section 28 increases the exemption from tax on income arising from domestic microgeneration of electricity which is supplied to the national grid.
The Bill will increase the amount of the income tax exemption from the first €200 to the first €400 from 1 January next and will extend the exemption to the end of 2025.
Section 29 extends the accelerated capital allowances scheme for energy efficient equipment to the end of 2025. The scheme allows companies and unincorporated businesses to deduct the full cost of expenditure on eligible equipment from their taxable profits in the year of purchase.
Section 30 extends the farm safety scheme for a further three years to the end of 2026. This scheme provides accelerated capital allowances at a rate of 50% per annum over two years for farm safety equipment.
Section 35 includes legislative measures to introduce new defensive measures applying to certain outbound payments towards jurisdictions on the EU list of non-co-operative, no tax, and zero tax jurisdictions. These measures are aimed at the prevention of double non-taxation to meet commitments contained in Ireland's national recovery and resilience plan.
Subject to EU State aid approval, section 39 provides for an increase in the project cap on qualifying expenditure under the existing film relief. The cap will be increased to €125 million to provide additional support to the continuing development of the creative film sector in Ireland and enhance our reputation as a centre of excellence for screen production. This applies to films certified after 1 January 2024 or after the commencement of the section, whichever is later.
Retirement relief supports the intergenerational transfer of businesses and farms. While retirement relief can be claimed from the age of 55 onwards, currently a higher consideration is eligible for the relief when the business assets are disposed of before the age of 66.
Section 47 extends the upper age limit for the relief from 65 until the age of 70. From 1 January 2025, the reduced relief, which is currently available on disposals from age 66 onwards, applies from age 70. The section also implements a recommendation from the Commission on Taxation and Welfare to introduce a limit on retirement relief to children up to the age of 66. A limit of €10 million will apply from 1 January 2025 for disposals from age 55 up to the age of 70.
Section 50 increases the excise duty on a packet of 20 cigarettes by 75 cent, with a pro rata increase on other tobacco products. These increases support the public health objective of a tobacco-free Ireland by 2025.
In recognition of the role that fiscal incentives continue to play in delivering on the electrification of the car fleet, section 52 extends the vehicle registration tax relief for battery electric vehicles with a value of up to €50,000 for a further two years to the end of 2025.
Section 55 increases the existing VAT registration thresholds for businesses to €40,000 for services and to €80,000 for goods from 1 January 2024 in line with EU limits.
While modest, these changes will provide more latitude to small businesses whose turnover is close to the existing thresholds.
On the basis of macroeconomic data received from the CSO and the Revenue Commissioners for the period 2021 to 2023, from 1 January 2024 section 59 adjusts the flat-rate VAT scheme for unregistered farmers from 5% to 4.8%. Section 62 reduces the VAT rate on e-books from 1 January 2024 to match the zero rate of printed books. It also provides that the zero rate applies to audiobooks.
As Deputies may recall, earlier this year I introduced a measure in the Finance Act 2023 to reduce the VAT rate on the supply and installation of solar panels for private dwellings to zero from 1 May 2023. Section 63 extends this measure to schools with effect from 1 January 2024.
Consanguinity relief is a vital measure which supports the transfer of farms from one generation to the next. This relief applies a reduced rate of stamp duty where agricultural land is transferred to certain close relations. Section 67 extends this relief to the end of 2028.
Section 70 introduces a revised form of the bank levy for 2024. It provides that this levy is based on a measure of deposits held by Bank of Ireland, PTSB and AIB, which includes EBS. My intention is to review the levy again next year to ensure it remains appropriately calibrated.
In line with the Commission on Taxation and Welfare recommendation, section 76 amends existing legislation to ensure foster children can avail of the group B capital acquisitions tax threshold based on their relationship to their foster parents.
Tackling vacancy in the housing sector is a priority for this Government. For this reason, section 86 increases the vacant homes tax, which was introduced last year, to five times the property’s existing base local property tax rate. The increase takes effect from the next chargeable period, commencing next month.
Having regard to the important work done by Irish museums in conserving our heritage, section 87 increases the maximum aggregate value of items that can be donated under the donation of heritage items scheme in any one year from €6 million to €8 million.
The residential zoned land tax is an important action under the Government’s Housing for All action plan. However, it is also important that affected landowners have sufficient opportunity to engage with the mapping process. Therefore, section 88 extends the liability date of the tax by one year.
As precast concrete products represent a significant and innovative export sector for the State, section 89 amends the defective concrete products levy to exclude the value of pouring concrete used in pre-cast concrete products with effect from 1 January 2024. A refund scheme to reclaim any levy already paid on such concrete will be introduced for four months from that date.
Sections 90, 91 and 92 implement the pillar 2 minimum effective corporation tax rate. The new provisions apply to multinational and large-scale domestic businesses with global annual revenues of €750 million and above in at least two of the preceding four years.
There is still a small number of matters under consideration, which may be brought forward as amendments during future legislative stages. The Bill will give effect to the tax measures announced in budget 2024. In doing so, it will offer valuable support and certainty to taxpayers across the country. I commend the Bill to the House.