Local taxes are a farce. Since Jack Lynch did the dirty and abolished domestic rates in 1978, Local Government has relied on central government handouts. Funding local government from motor tax receipts makes no sense.
Ireland must be the only advanced country not to have a way of raising taxes from the local population for local services. In many countries local government must present costed programmes for the electorate to vote on and so that people can vote on the rate they will pay and what they will get for it.
Local government has been relying on developer contributions to pay for services over the last five years. Now construction is grinding to a halt, that particular conduit is running dry.
Today's Times says that Dublin City Council is to seek a share of income tax, stamp duty and VAT generated in the City as well as a power to levy rates on government buildings, schools, universities and hospitals. The City Council wants to be able to set the tax level and levy its own tax. Government has established a Commission on Taxation to determine the future of local government funding.
The Council also wants central government to pay for waste collection waivers and fire and ambulance services. The Council also wants central government to pay for any services such as water for which it is not allowed to collect charges.
Finally the Council wants to be able to charge a hotel tax.
It strikes me that Dublin City has an enormous rates base compared to other local authorities as there is a concentration of commercial activity that is used by people from all over Ireland and abroad. It is hard to see why Dublin would not be much better placed to pay for services than other counties.
The charges that Dublin wants to raise would all be substantially be raised from people who work, spend, study and go to hospital in the City and who may not live there, but don't expect people who live there to contribute to the services that make life there possible.
IMHO it is time to bring back domestic rates, along with the commercial rate, to fund local government.