SERVING MORE PEOPLE, AND SPENDING LESS...A
BIG ACHIEVEMENT
There were some interesting points made in
the commentary on last weeks Irish budget proposals for 2014.
Minister Brendan Howlin drew attention to
some of the push factors that are driving spending levels upwards.... Since
2008,
+ the numbers in schools and universities have risen by 8%,+ the number of medical card holders(entitled to free healthcare on income grounds) has risen by 40% and+ the number of people of pensionable age has risen by 13.5%
Meanwhile, the number employed in the
public service has fallen by 10% and the size of the public service pay bill
has fallen by 17%. So there are fewer people who have to do more. This is a
considerable managerial achievement for which all Ministers can take a lot of
credit.
JOB NUMBERS INCREASING
Minister Michael Noonan drew attention to
another very positive development, the fact that there is now a net increase in
jobs in the Irish economy of 3000 per month.
On
public spending, Michael Noonan said there will be a ceiling on public
expenditure of
+ 51.5 billion euros in 2015, and
+ 51.9 billion in 2016.
Given the ongoing, demand led, upward
pressures on spending, referred to by Minister Howlin, these caps will require
policy changes in future budgets.
Michael Noonan said Ireland would still
have a budget deficit of 4.8% of GDP in 2014, which he intends to reduce to
2.9% of GDP by 2015.
MOST OF THE DEBT CAUSED BY DEFICITS, NOT
BANK RECAPITALISATION
As Pat Leahy put it in the Sunday Business
Post, the Irish state is spending 13 billion euros more than it raises in taxes
this year, and its debt is scheduled to reach 205 billion next year. He says
that only 60 of the 205 billion is due to
bank recapitalisation, the rest is due to simply spending more than revenue on an
ongoing basis.
This is a fact that those who say they are
against “austerity” fail to deal with. What would they/we use for money if
they/we spent more? Who would provide it, and on what terms?
FISCAL COMPACT WILL STILL APPLY AFTER
BAILOUT EXIT
The Department of Finance’s own figures see
the debt reaching 211.6 billion euros by 2018, when the Fiscal Compact will
come into force.
From
2018 on, we will be obliged to move towards a structural deficit of no more
than 0.5% of GDP (as against out structural deficit of 5% in 2013).
My own sense is that the burden of interest
on our over 200 billion euro debt is going to get higher, rather than lower.
Global interest rates will eventually rise. So we need to reduce the debt, and
remove factors that push spending upwards.
Against that background, it might have been
better to use the 200 million euro proceeds of the sale of the National Lottery
to reduce the national debt.
Free GP care is to be made available for
all children under the age of 5. This will benefit only the 60% of families,
whose incomes are above the medical card income limit. The under 5 year old children
of medical card holders get free GP care already.
This
is a step towards free GP care for everybody, which again would only give
something new to those whose incomes are above medical card limits. Unless free
GP care proves to have no net cost because it saves on hospital treatment, it
will add a new, long term, challenge to the many unfunded, and demand led,
spending challenges Irish Governments already will have to meet, based on the
combination of demographic trends with existing policies on health, pensions
etc.,( along the lines mentioned by Brendan Howlin in his speech).
As
noted in an earlier post on this site, these 2014 draft budget proposals will
be subject to peer review by the other Governments of the EU, before their final
adoption at the end of the year. So also will be the budget proposals of every
other EU government.....large or small, and whether in a bail out or not.
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