Oireachtas Joint and Select Committees

Wednesday, 8 February 2023

Committee on Budgetary Oversight

Report of the Commission on Taxation and Welfare: Discussion (Resumed)

Mr. Ian Talbot:

I thank the Chair and committee members for the invitation both to make a submission and to be here this afternoon.

Broadly, Chambers Ireland supports the recommendations of the chapters of the report of the Commission on Taxation and Welfare that we are investigating today. Specifically, we agree it is necessary to broaden the tax base. When taxation focuses too much on a narrow range of economic activities, this can lead to erratic Exchequer returns when even minor economic shocks affect them. Given that Ireland is a small, open economy we experience far more economic volatility than is to be expected in other states. Consequently, a prudent approach to take regarding our tax base would be to ensure it is even broader than what would be typical of a larger, less trade-reliant country.

As we saw following the housing bust of the late 2000s and the associated crash in stamp duty payments, relying disproportionately on any particular sector makes Government finances fragile. Chapter 9, Promoting Enterprise, is the area where we have the strongest views. It is hard for us to comment on promoting enterprise without mentioning commercial rates and other sources of local government funding, such as local property tax. We hope to have a future opportunity to discuss these matters which are covered in other chapters.

Ireland’s continued over-reliance on the corporation taxes receipts of a handful of companies to support current expenditure means that even when our economy is strong, our national accounts are brittle. Changes in US domestic tax codes could greatly impact our State’s capacity to deliver services for our people.

While there is a need to diversify our tax base, diversity can take many forms, and Chambers Ireland’s position is that our domestic economy underperforms. That underperformance of our domestic economy is part of our overreliance discussions. Government and the State need to have a greater focus on ensuring our cities and towns become attractive places to live and work. A diversified, thriving domestic economy will leave us less vulnerable to external shocks.

A feature of Irish public enterprise policy has been an overly tight focus on early-stage high-risk businesses. While those firms are an important part of the economy, that strategy will not create a broad and robust public finance environment as very few companies will qualify for admittance into such a category, and by their nature most will not succeed to the point that their taxes become a notable share of corporate tax yield. Therefore, even if such a strategy is a net positive for economic growth, all else being equal, the Exchequer will continue to rely on the same few large companies for the bulk of corporation tax.

We were glad the commission recommended that tax-based policies have a role in supporting productivity and employment growth among SMEs. However, we regret the executive summary’s editorialisation that they should be targeted towards early-stage, high-risk and research and development-intensive businesses. These two areas are important, but in the first case they are unlikely to become taxpayers given the high failure rate of failure. Meanwhile the research-related tax credits have, in practice, only proven to be useful for larger firms.

It is highly likely that a successful new business will be part of an evolution of old sectoral business practices rather than a disrupter of a sector. If we were cynical, we would suspect that restricting tax policy measures to a limited set of high-potential firms is a means of avoiding using tax-based measures to support new firms while not explicitly saying that is the aim. In contrast, a broad-based economic growth strategy that works for businesses across sectors and sizes of firms has a greater chance of growing the one euro in six of corporation tax that comes from locally owned companies than a strategy reliant on unicorns.

In the meantime, Chambers Ireland supports the use of excess corporation tax receipts to fund our long-neglected infrastructure investment. This much-needed investment will be far more expensive if funded through debt. We will need to support that investment, even if excess returns drop off. If corporation taxes are being spent, it is vital that they should be invested in capital rather than funding current expenditure. We strongly advocate for sustainable infrastructure that will reduce the hidden productivity and competitiveness costs associated with congestion, poor housing, childcare and energy supply uncertainty. Infrastructure investment is the most effective way to ensure future decades will experience fewer constraints on growth.

Where it is not possible to finance such projects in the short run, the State should create a climate transition infrastructure financing entity where the excess corporation tax receipts can be sequestered.