Results 6,141-6,160 of 6,653 for speaker:Rose Conway-Walsh
- Committee on Budgetary Oversight: Pre-Budget Engagement (18 Sep 2024)
Rose Conway-Walsh: But the Minister knows what it is now.
- Committee on Budgetary Oversight: Pre-Budget Engagement (18 Sep 2024)
Rose Conway-Walsh: It is okay but it will be in excess of that, so obviously there is an improved revenue forecast for 2025. We will see that on budget day.
- Committee on Budgetary Oversight: Pre-Budget Engagement (18 Sep 2024)
Rose Conway-Walsh: When does the Minister expect the Apple tax to come in and how does he expect it to come in?
- Committee on Budgetary Oversight: Pre-Budget Engagement (18 Sep 2024)
Rose Conway-Walsh: We could even have another Government providing that information. Imagine that.
- Committee on Budgetary Oversight: Pre-Budget Engagement (18 Sep 2024)
Rose Conway-Walsh: It will be up to the people. We had some good presentations before the Minister came in. One of them was from NERI. Its representatives said in their statement, which really struck me, that we have an economy of winners and losers. Net household wealth is at record levels on one hand while material deprivation is rising on the other. Will the Minister speak to that. Are they right?
- Committee on Budgetary Oversight: Pre-Budget Engagement (18 Sep 2024)
Rose Conway-Walsh: If we were to take out the one-off payments, they would not be progressive, would they? These are the measurements I have seen. It is adding in the windfall that-----
- Committee on Budgetary Oversight: Pre-Budget Engagement (18 Sep 2024)
Rose Conway-Walsh: Is the Minister saying they would not be as necessary this year to the extent they were last year because of interest rates and inflation decreasing?
- Committee on Budgetary Oversight: Pre-Budget Engagement (18 Sep 2024)
Rose Conway-Walsh: I will reiterate what the ESRI said regarding material deprivation and the inability of households to afford essentials increasing markedly between 2022 and 2023, especially for children. While we congratulate ourselves on budget decisions, the figures relating to child poverty and deprivation speak for themselves. Reference was made to inheritance tax. NERI has stated that inheritance...
- Committee on Budgetary Oversight: Pre-Budget Engagement (18 Sep 2024)
Rose Conway-Walsh: The Minister would favour that over addressing the worsening intergenerational inequity. While he is here, I want to ask him about an issue that came up earlier today with regard to the Central Bank. The Central Bank has renewed the agreement to facilitate the sale of Israeli sovereign bonds. ISIF said earlier this year that it would divest from six Israeli companies active in the occupied...
- Committee on Budgetary Oversight: Pre-Budget Engagement (18 Sep 2024)
Rose Conway-Walsh: I know it is, but one would seem to contradict the other in terms of the Central Bank agreeing to facilitate Israeli sovereign bonds. Obviously, the money from this is used in the context of genocide. More than 40,000 people have been slaughtered in Gaza. It is of great concern for many people that this would happen. Can this be prevented from happening?
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform, and Taoiseach: General Scheme of the Conclusion of IBRC Special Liquidation and Dissolution of NAMA Bill: Department of Finance (18 Sep 2024)
Rose Conway-Walsh: I will not be long. It is critical, in light of everything that has happened with the waste of people's money and money that could be sent to other places, and we are talking about €321 million by the end of 2024, that the C and AG carry out an investigation into that. Mr. Carville stated that it has done its very best. How do we know it has done its very best, with €321...
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform, and Taoiseach: General Scheme of the Conclusion of IBRC Special Liquidation and Dissolution of NAMA Bill: Department of Finance (18 Sep 2024)
Rose Conway-Walsh: It relates to NAMA.
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform, and Taoiseach: General Scheme of the Conclusion of IBRC Special Liquidation and Dissolution of NAMA Bill: Department of Finance (18 Sep 2024)
Rose Conway-Walsh: The analysis that has been done says this legislation is also expected to have a neutral impact on the economy. Surely, it cannot be true to say that it will have a neutral impact on the economy. Surely, there has to be a correlation between the activities of NAMA and house prices as they are today.
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform, and Taoiseach: General Scheme of the Conclusion of IBRC Special Liquidation and Dissolution of NAMA Bill: Department of Finance (18 Sep 2024)
Rose Conway-Walsh: I did not give a figure. I asked how much has been spent on litigation.
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform, and Taoiseach: General Scheme of the Conclusion of IBRC Special Liquidation and Dissolution of NAMA Bill: Department of Finance (18 Sep 2024)
Rose Conway-Walsh: I want to go back to the destroying of records. A question was asked as to whether, as we speak, those records have been destroyed.
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform, and Taoiseach: General Scheme of the Conclusion of IBRC Special Liquidation and Dissolution of NAMA Bill: Department of Finance (18 Sep 2024)
Rose Conway-Walsh: Can we find out for the committee whether they have been destroyed? If they have not been destroyed we need to make sure we have a paper trail and that we have records that can be analysed.
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform, and Taoiseach: General Scheme of the Conclusion of IBRC Special Liquidation and Dissolution of NAMA Bill: Department of Finance (18 Sep 2024)
Rose Conway-Walsh: This is not an ordinary liquidation we are speaking about.
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform, and Taoiseach: General Scheme of the Conclusion of IBRC Special Liquidation and Dissolution of NAMA Bill: Department of Finance (18 Sep 2024)
Rose Conway-Walsh: As legislators we have to do everything we possibly can to examine what has gone on here. We have to remember that when NAMA was set up it had absolute and total control of the property market, land development and everything else. We now have a situation a number of years later whereby nobody can afford a house with everything that has gone on in the midst of a housing crisis that is...
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform, and Taoiseach: General Scheme of the Conclusion of IBRC Special Liquidation and Dissolution of NAMA Bill: Department of Finance (18 Sep 2024)
Rose Conway-Walsh: Who decides what is kept and what is destroyed?
- Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform, and Taoiseach: General Scheme of the Conclusion of IBRC Special Liquidation and Dissolution of NAMA Bill: Department of Finance (18 Sep 2024)
Rose Conway-Walsh: I will leave it there because I want to give a chance to others to contribute.