'Bord Snip' reveals €5.3bn savings plan(IRELAND IS SCREWED)
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'Bord Snip' reveals €5.3bn savings plan(IRELAND IS SCREWED)
watch listen Thursday, 16 July 2009 20:06
'An Bord Snip Nua' has recommended €5.3bn in potential savings, including 17,300 public service job cuts and a 5% drop in social welfare.
Read the full report & appendices
Watch the RTÉ News special
Watch extended Colm McCarthy interview
The 'Special Group on Public Service Numbers and Expenditure Programmes' was chaired by UCD economist Colm McCarthy and runs to some 80 pages with over 200 pages of appendices.
Mr McCarthy said the Government was borrowing €400m per week and paying a substantial rate of interest on those borrowings - and this could not continue.
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On RTÉ News At One he said the board had to look to the big items of spending, which are health, education and social welfare.
In addition to 17,300 public service job cuts and the 5% reduction in social welfare payments - saving €850m a year - the report says social welfare recipients and Community Employment participants should receive only one payment.
'An Bord Snip Nua' also recommends reducing child benefit payments and revising and simplifying the qualification criteria for the medical card.
The group says the Department of Community, Rural & Gaeltacht Affairs should be closed and its functions redistributed. It also says the need for the Department of Arts, Sports & Tourism should be critically examined and the programme expenditure of both departments should be significantly scaled back.
Transfer payments and expenditure programmes across the agricultural area should be scaled back, according to the report.
It recommends reducing the number of Special Needs Assistants and English Language Support Teachers and introducing charges and co-payment mechanisms for services including, school transport, medicines and home help.
The report says there should be a further reduction in allowances for TDs and Senators. It recommends reducing the number of Local Authorities from 34 to 22.
It also recommends that the number of garda stations be halved from 700 to around 350.
Read political reaction to the proposals
OUTLINE OF PROPOSALS
Social and Family Affairs - More
* Cuts to all social welfare payments by 5% - €850m
* Reduction and changes to child benefit - €513m
* An end to receiving two welfare payments - €100m
* An end to payments for Community Employment Schemes for those already on benefit - €100m
* Cutting benefits for dental, optical and hearing services - €92m
* Grading of jobseekers allowance by age - €70m
* Cutting the Family Support Agency - €30m
* Changing eligibility for Family Income Supplement - €20m
* Taxing household benefits package - €11.6m
Staff cuts - None
Total cut €1.8bn
Health and Children - More
* Reduce the size of the Department by 10% a year over the next three years - €11m
* Reduce HSE staff - €391.3m
* Revise the income guidelines for the Medical Card to the basic rate of social welfare, the jobseekers allowance - €100m
* Increase the threshold for the Drugs Payment Scheme from 4100 to €125 a month - €37m
* Those previously receiving free prescriptions must now pay €5 for each prescription - €70m
* Hold an open competition to provide services under the General Medical Services scheme - €370m
* Increase Hospital Charges - €6m
* Increase charges for private facilities in public hospitals by 20% - €50m
* Hospitals and clinicians must provide generic medicines, off-patent drugs and value-for-money treatments - €30m
* Changes to agencies and organisations in the disability and mental health area which receive State funding - €50m
* Changes to the Fair Deal scheme with the individual to contribute more to nursing home care from their own residence - €50m
* Means test for Homecare packages - €24m
Staff cuts: 6168
Total cuts: €1.2bn
Education and Science - More
* Staff and pay cuts in primary and post primary schools - €150m
* Staff cuts at third level - €140m
* Cuts to number of special needs assistants and English language support teachers - €81m
* Increased pupil teacher ratio at primary and post primary - €80m
* Change to student support grant - €70m
* Cuts to capitation grants for primary and post primary schools - €25m
* Cuts to research and development - €27.5m
* Cuts to grants for private schools - €25m
* Merging of smaller primary schools - €25m
* Cuts to school transport - €25m
* Integration of senior travelling training - €25m
* Cuts to third level structures - €23.7m
Staff cuts 6,390
Total cut €746m
Agriculture - More
* Reduce expenditure on the Disadvantaged Area Compensatory Allowance Scheme by 30% - €66m
* Terminate the Suckler Cow Scheme - €44m
* Close REPS 4 and no rollover from REPS 2 and 3 into REPS 4 - €80m
* Reduce Teagasc staff numbers, rationalise Teagasc and Dept offices - €37m
Total cuts €305m
Staff cuts 1,140 staff
Enterprise, Trade and Employment
* Merge the regional offices and shared services of Enterprise Ireland, IDA and FÁS - €87m
* A single reduced funding stream for all science, technology and innovation activities across all departments - €53m
* Streamline all support of Irish enterprises and marketing functions in Enterprise Ireland - €10m
* Stop funding the FÁS Services to Business and Skillnets programmes - €27m
* Cuts to training allowances for the unemployed - €24.5m
Total cuts €237.7m
Staff cuts 594
Community, Rural and Gaeltacht Affairs
* Cuts to Community Services Programmes - €64m
* Cuts to Gaeltacht Schemes - €20.8m
* Cuts to islands infrastructure - €20m
Staff cuts 196
Total cut €151m
Environment, Heritage and Local Government - More
* Cuts to local government including an end to 12 county or town councils - €100m
* Further efficiencies - €30m
Staff cuts 30
Total cut €130m
Transport
* Efficiencies among CIE companies - €55m
* Cuts to road maintenance - €20m
* Cuts to regional air services - €15m
* Axing the Rural Transport Scheme - €11m
* Outsourcing of driver and vehicle testing - €10m
* Cuts to the Road Saferty Authority - €4.2m
* Merging the National Roads Authority and the Railway Procurement Agency - €3m
* Merging the National Vehicle and Driver File into the Road Safety Authority - €2m
Staff cuts 80
Total cut €127.1m
Arts, Sports and Tourism - More
* Cuts in allocation to tourism and marketing - €27m
* Cut in grant to Sports Council - €17.7m
* Cut allocation to Horse and Greyhound Fund - €16.4m
Staff cuts 170
Total cut €104.8m
Justice - More
* Cuts to pay and allowances for justice sector staff - including gardai - €65m
* Cuts to the courts service - €13.5m
* Cuts in immigration staff - €10m
* Transfer disability functions of department to Department of Health - €2.6m
* Cuts to Youth Detention Centres - €2.5m
Staff cuts 540
Total cut €136.4m
Communications, Energy and Natural Resources
* Cuts to energy efficiency schemes run by Sustainable Energy Ireland - €40m
* Cuts to direct funding to TG4 - to be partially funded from licence fee - €10m
Staff cuts 106
Total cuts €65.6m
Defence - More
* Measures including a reduction in Defence Forces personnel by more than 500
Total cuts €53m
Staff cuts 520
Finance
* Cuts to the Office of Public Works - reducing spare capacity and rental costs - €21m
Staff cuts 660
Total cuts €82.8m
Department of Foreign Affairs - More
* Cuts to overseas missions - €15m
* Cuts to overseas aid - €14.8m
* Cuts to Support for Irish Emigrants - €1m
Staff cuts 65
Total cut €41.7m
Houses of the Oireachtas Commission
* Changes to some operations - €6m
* Cuts to Oireachtas Allowances and Benefits - €1.5m
Total cuts €7.8m
Staff cuts 42
National Treasury Management Agency
* Reduce staff and other administrative costs - €5.3m
* Changes at the State Claims Agency including payment schemes, legal fees and risk management services
Total cuts €5.3m
Staff cuts 40
Department of the Taoiseach
* An end to the National Economic and Social Development Organisation - except for the National Economic and Social Council - €4m
* Axing the Law Reform Commission - €2.8m
* Cuts to the cost of Census 2011 - €2.2m
Staff cuts 77
Total Cut €17.5m
'An Bord Snip Nua' has recommended €5.3bn in potential savings, including 17,300 public service job cuts and a 5% drop in social welfare.
Read the full report & appendices
Watch the RTÉ News special
Watch extended Colm McCarthy interview
The 'Special Group on Public Service Numbers and Expenditure Programmes' was chaired by UCD economist Colm McCarthy and runs to some 80 pages with over 200 pages of appendices.
Mr McCarthy said the Government was borrowing €400m per week and paying a substantial rate of interest on those borrowings - and this could not continue.
Advertisement
On RTÉ News At One he said the board had to look to the big items of spending, which are health, education and social welfare.
In addition to 17,300 public service job cuts and the 5% reduction in social welfare payments - saving €850m a year - the report says social welfare recipients and Community Employment participants should receive only one payment.
'An Bord Snip Nua' also recommends reducing child benefit payments and revising and simplifying the qualification criteria for the medical card.
The group says the Department of Community, Rural & Gaeltacht Affairs should be closed and its functions redistributed. It also says the need for the Department of Arts, Sports & Tourism should be critically examined and the programme expenditure of both departments should be significantly scaled back.
Transfer payments and expenditure programmes across the agricultural area should be scaled back, according to the report.
It recommends reducing the number of Special Needs Assistants and English Language Support Teachers and introducing charges and co-payment mechanisms for services including, school transport, medicines and home help.
The report says there should be a further reduction in allowances for TDs and Senators. It recommends reducing the number of Local Authorities from 34 to 22.
It also recommends that the number of garda stations be halved from 700 to around 350.
Read political reaction to the proposals
OUTLINE OF PROPOSALS
Social and Family Affairs - More
* Cuts to all social welfare payments by 5% - €850m
* Reduction and changes to child benefit - €513m
* An end to receiving two welfare payments - €100m
* An end to payments for Community Employment Schemes for those already on benefit - €100m
* Cutting benefits for dental, optical and hearing services - €92m
* Grading of jobseekers allowance by age - €70m
* Cutting the Family Support Agency - €30m
* Changing eligibility for Family Income Supplement - €20m
* Taxing household benefits package - €11.6m
Staff cuts - None
Total cut €1.8bn
Health and Children - More
* Reduce the size of the Department by 10% a year over the next three years - €11m
* Reduce HSE staff - €391.3m
* Revise the income guidelines for the Medical Card to the basic rate of social welfare, the jobseekers allowance - €100m
* Increase the threshold for the Drugs Payment Scheme from 4100 to €125 a month - €37m
* Those previously receiving free prescriptions must now pay €5 for each prescription - €70m
* Hold an open competition to provide services under the General Medical Services scheme - €370m
* Increase Hospital Charges - €6m
* Increase charges for private facilities in public hospitals by 20% - €50m
* Hospitals and clinicians must provide generic medicines, off-patent drugs and value-for-money treatments - €30m
* Changes to agencies and organisations in the disability and mental health area which receive State funding - €50m
* Changes to the Fair Deal scheme with the individual to contribute more to nursing home care from their own residence - €50m
* Means test for Homecare packages - €24m
Staff cuts: 6168
Total cuts: €1.2bn
Education and Science - More
* Staff and pay cuts in primary and post primary schools - €150m
* Staff cuts at third level - €140m
* Cuts to number of special needs assistants and English language support teachers - €81m
* Increased pupil teacher ratio at primary and post primary - €80m
* Change to student support grant - €70m
* Cuts to capitation grants for primary and post primary schools - €25m
* Cuts to research and development - €27.5m
* Cuts to grants for private schools - €25m
* Merging of smaller primary schools - €25m
* Cuts to school transport - €25m
* Integration of senior travelling training - €25m
* Cuts to third level structures - €23.7m
Staff cuts 6,390
Total cut €746m
Agriculture - More
* Reduce expenditure on the Disadvantaged Area Compensatory Allowance Scheme by 30% - €66m
* Terminate the Suckler Cow Scheme - €44m
* Close REPS 4 and no rollover from REPS 2 and 3 into REPS 4 - €80m
* Reduce Teagasc staff numbers, rationalise Teagasc and Dept offices - €37m
Total cuts €305m
Staff cuts 1,140 staff
Enterprise, Trade and Employment
* Merge the regional offices and shared services of Enterprise Ireland, IDA and FÁS - €87m
* A single reduced funding stream for all science, technology and innovation activities across all departments - €53m
* Streamline all support of Irish enterprises and marketing functions in Enterprise Ireland - €10m
* Stop funding the FÁS Services to Business and Skillnets programmes - €27m
* Cuts to training allowances for the unemployed - €24.5m
Total cuts €237.7m
Staff cuts 594
Community, Rural and Gaeltacht Affairs
* Cuts to Community Services Programmes - €64m
* Cuts to Gaeltacht Schemes - €20.8m
* Cuts to islands infrastructure - €20m
Staff cuts 196
Total cut €151m
Environment, Heritage and Local Government - More
* Cuts to local government including an end to 12 county or town councils - €100m
* Further efficiencies - €30m
Staff cuts 30
Total cut €130m
Transport
* Efficiencies among CIE companies - €55m
* Cuts to road maintenance - €20m
* Cuts to regional air services - €15m
* Axing the Rural Transport Scheme - €11m
* Outsourcing of driver and vehicle testing - €10m
* Cuts to the Road Saferty Authority - €4.2m
* Merging the National Roads Authority and the Railway Procurement Agency - €3m
* Merging the National Vehicle and Driver File into the Road Safety Authority - €2m
Staff cuts 80
Total cut €127.1m
Arts, Sports and Tourism - More
* Cuts in allocation to tourism and marketing - €27m
* Cut in grant to Sports Council - €17.7m
* Cut allocation to Horse and Greyhound Fund - €16.4m
Staff cuts 170
Total cut €104.8m
Justice - More
* Cuts to pay and allowances for justice sector staff - including gardai - €65m
* Cuts to the courts service - €13.5m
* Cuts in immigration staff - €10m
* Transfer disability functions of department to Department of Health - €2.6m
* Cuts to Youth Detention Centres - €2.5m
Staff cuts 540
Total cut €136.4m
Communications, Energy and Natural Resources
* Cuts to energy efficiency schemes run by Sustainable Energy Ireland - €40m
* Cuts to direct funding to TG4 - to be partially funded from licence fee - €10m
Staff cuts 106
Total cuts €65.6m
Defence - More
* Measures including a reduction in Defence Forces personnel by more than 500
Total cuts €53m
Staff cuts 520
Finance
* Cuts to the Office of Public Works - reducing spare capacity and rental costs - €21m
Staff cuts 660
Total cuts €82.8m
Department of Foreign Affairs - More
* Cuts to overseas missions - €15m
* Cuts to overseas aid - €14.8m
* Cuts to Support for Irish Emigrants - €1m
Staff cuts 65
Total cut €41.7m
Houses of the Oireachtas Commission
* Changes to some operations - €6m
* Cuts to Oireachtas Allowances and Benefits - €1.5m
Total cuts €7.8m
Staff cuts 42
National Treasury Management Agency
* Reduce staff and other administrative costs - €5.3m
* Changes at the State Claims Agency including payment schemes, legal fees and risk management services
Total cuts €5.3m
Staff cuts 40
Department of the Taoiseach
* An end to the National Economic and Social Development Organisation - except for the National Economic and Social Council - €4m
* Axing the Law Reform Commission - €2.8m
* Cuts to the cost of Census 2011 - €2.2m
Staff cuts 77
Total Cut €17.5m
Guest- Guest
Re: 'Bord Snip' reveals €5.3bn savings plan(IRELAND IS SCREWED)
With that report we will be living on bread and water for the next God Knows how long if it all goes aheaad.
Nobody will be able to have any standard of life here. Nobody will be able to pay their bills and anyone that is on social welfare is completely screwed. They are living on little enough at the minute without the Government taking any more off them.
They annoying part is the Banks are being bailed out left right and centre even though it was the banks that put the country into recession in the first place and as per usual the ordinary joe soap has to pay for their mess.
The significance of the bank bail out
The decision of the government to guarantee the liabilities, the debt and deposits, of the Irish banks has been described by the Labour Party leader Eamon Gilmore as the ‘biggest blank cheque in history’. The guarantee amounts to around €400bn and will be nearer €500bn if non-Irish owned banks such as the Ulster Bank are included.
Beyond the nature of the decision and its suddenness, the sheer scale of this guarantee has been staggering. The US bail-out plan which was initially rejected by Congress was claimed to cost $700bn. In other words the Irish guarantee could grow almost to the size of the US bail out while the US economy is almost seventy times larger!
What we have seen is a financial shock and awe which most ordinary people have struggled to comprehend. Watching television, listening to radio or reading the papers they have learned that the guarantee is well over twice the size of the whole economy, over ten times the existing national debt, thirty seven years tax returns or over €100,000 for every citizen in the State – man, woman and child. How on earth could this be afforded?
On top of this they have heard a few absurd claims that the taxpayer could actually turn a profit, while the government claims that they are just using ordinary people’s taxes to save their own money. The extreme complexity of the financial system has frustrated many attempting to understand just exactly what is going on or efforts to orient themselves in the midst of a massive propaganda campaign which has hailed the bold and decisive leadership of the government.
It must also be stated that decisive in this confusion has been the role of the opposition, or rather the fact that the vote in the Dail to approve the plan revealed, not for the first time, that there is no opposition. Backed by a media increasingly controlled by a few extremely wealthy individuals there has been no room for a coherent alternative to be presented. At most we have heard doubts and criticisms of the precise way in which the bail out has been fashioned.
Claims
The claims of the government are lies. Last Tuesday’s front page of ‘The Irish Times’ reported a speech by Brian Cowan in which he said that the Irish economy was strong and that what we were witnessing was ‘part of the economic cycle.’ On Monday night, while that newspaper was being printed, the banks turned up and asked for the biggest bail out in history because one bank was about to go bust, another was likely to follow shortly thereafter, and the whole system would then collapse. A normal part of the economic cycle?
[u]
http://www.indymedia.ie/article/89700[u]
Nobody will be able to have any standard of life here. Nobody will be able to pay their bills and anyone that is on social welfare is completely screwed. They are living on little enough at the minute without the Government taking any more off them.
They annoying part is the Banks are being bailed out left right and centre even though it was the banks that put the country into recession in the first place and as per usual the ordinary joe soap has to pay for their mess.
The significance of the bank bail out
The decision of the government to guarantee the liabilities, the debt and deposits, of the Irish banks has been described by the Labour Party leader Eamon Gilmore as the ‘biggest blank cheque in history’. The guarantee amounts to around €400bn and will be nearer €500bn if non-Irish owned banks such as the Ulster Bank are included.
Beyond the nature of the decision and its suddenness, the sheer scale of this guarantee has been staggering. The US bail-out plan which was initially rejected by Congress was claimed to cost $700bn. In other words the Irish guarantee could grow almost to the size of the US bail out while the US economy is almost seventy times larger!
What we have seen is a financial shock and awe which most ordinary people have struggled to comprehend. Watching television, listening to radio or reading the papers they have learned that the guarantee is well over twice the size of the whole economy, over ten times the existing national debt, thirty seven years tax returns or over €100,000 for every citizen in the State – man, woman and child. How on earth could this be afforded?
On top of this they have heard a few absurd claims that the taxpayer could actually turn a profit, while the government claims that they are just using ordinary people’s taxes to save their own money. The extreme complexity of the financial system has frustrated many attempting to understand just exactly what is going on or efforts to orient themselves in the midst of a massive propaganda campaign which has hailed the bold and decisive leadership of the government.
It must also be stated that decisive in this confusion has been the role of the opposition, or rather the fact that the vote in the Dail to approve the plan revealed, not for the first time, that there is no opposition. Backed by a media increasingly controlled by a few extremely wealthy individuals there has been no room for a coherent alternative to be presented. At most we have heard doubts and criticisms of the precise way in which the bail out has been fashioned.
Claims
The claims of the government are lies. Last Tuesday’s front page of ‘The Irish Times’ reported a speech by Brian Cowan in which he said that the Irish economy was strong and that what we were witnessing was ‘part of the economic cycle.’ On Monday night, while that newspaper was being printed, the banks turned up and asked for the biggest bail out in history because one bank was about to go bust, another was likely to follow shortly thereafter, and the whole system would then collapse. A normal part of the economic cycle?
[u]
http://www.indymedia.ie/article/89700[u]
Guest- Guest
Re: 'Bord Snip' reveals €5.3bn savings plan(IRELAND IS SCREWED)
I know you posted this a while back but it really is gruesome reading.
I am dreading the next couple of years here.
I read yesterday some of the details that the Revenue Commission recommended and it seems less draconian than An Bord Snip's proposals.
You are right we will be living on bread and water...that's if we can afford water, because I think the Revenue Commission have recommended the introduction of water meters to all households!
I am dreading the next couple of years here.
I read yesterday some of the details that the Revenue Commission recommended and it seems less draconian than An Bord Snip's proposals.
You are right we will be living on bread and water...that's if we can afford water, because I think the Revenue Commission have recommended the introduction of water meters to all households!
Bridgieboo- Newbie
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Number of posts : 22
Location : Ireland
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