In October 2015, Minister of Finance Michael Noonan announced the Irish government would implement a total of €750 million in tax cuts, with a similar increase in spending. That will leave the government with a budget deficit of 1.2% of gross domestic product, down from 2.1% in 2014 and a peak of 32.5% in 2010. The government expects the economy to grow by 6.2% this year, before slowing to 4.3% in 2016 and 3% thereafter.
34% Yes |
66% No |
29% Yes |
55% No |
4% Yes, but by drastically reducing the benefits and salaries of government officials |
3% No, increase taxes on large multinational corporations instead |
1% Yes, and eliminate federal agencies that are unconstitutional |
2% No, cuts to public spending will negatively affect the economy |
0% Yes, and increase taxes |
2% No, focus on ending tax evasion instead |
2% No, increase taxes on the wealthy instead |
|
1% No, reduce military spending instead |
|
1% No, reduce the number of government officials instead |
See how support for each position on “Government Spending” has changed over time for 125k Ireland voters.
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See how importance of “Government Spending” has changed over time for 125k Ireland voters.
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Unique answers from Ireland users whose views extended beyond the provided choices.
@8R5LX4T3yrs3Y
No, tax the rich, big companies and reduce excessive spending on government officials and civil servants
@8QVQDR23yrs3Y
yes, and also focus on taxing the wealthy and ending tax evasion
@queerultraviolet3yrs3Y
What debt? In debt to who? Ourselves? The world? We invented currency, it's no longer serving us and we should find an alternative to money. It's made up, just print more.
@8J2LNT24yrs4Y
We need increase taxes on the wealthy but we need to have balanced budgets
@9B3MH8K1yr1Y
No, fund them by drastically reducing the benefits and salaries of government officials, focus on ending tax evasion and increase taxes on the wealthy instead
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