11% of tax to be spent on national debt

Started by Yammitor, July 22, 2009, 10:50:54 AM

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Yammitor

11% is the low end of the estimate, it will probably he higher. I recall an article a few weeks back on the same paper which predicted that 16% of the states tax income next year would go to service the interest payments alone on the national debt.

Quote11% of tax to be spent on national debt
By Conor Keane Business Editor
Wednesday, July 22, 2009


IRELAND will spend close to €3.5 billion – 11% of all tax collected – servicing a national debt of close to €92 billion this year, according to Bloxham Stockbrokers.

The National Treasury Management Agency (NTMA) raised a further €1bn in what appears to be its most successful bond auction so far this year, drawing bids of three to four times the bonds on offer, sending the premium demanded by investors for holding Irish debt to the lowest since mid-June.

As the national debt screams past the €66bn mark, heading for €92bn by the end of the year, it is expected that 11% of all tax collected will be needed to cover interest payments this year, jumping to 16%, on Goodbody estimates, next year and up from just 4.5% of all tax collected in 2007.

Bloxham analyst Alan McQuaid said that the NTMA's bond sales programme for 2009 effectively covers Ireland's funding needs of €20bn as announced in the Supplementary Budget on April 7 as well as refinancing a €5bn bond which matured in April.

"The agency has now raised a total of €16bn through three syndicated bond issues in January, February and June in addition to €5.7bn in five bond auctions held in the months of March through July. Another four auctions are due to be held from August to November to raise the remaining money," he said.

Mr McQuaid said there is no doubt investor risk appetite has picked up in recent months which has helped the NTMA.

He said: "However, we as a country shouldn't become complacent and believe that the answer to all our problems is to keep on borrowing. Quite simply, the huge levels of debt we are building up are unsustainable in the long-run.

"Ireland is now in a position where it needs to borrow more to fund a larger budgetary deficit, while paying higher costs for this borrowing.

"This means that ever increasing proportions of the country's tax revenues will be needed to service the national debt."

Mr McQuaid said the Government cannot afford to sit back and relax with regard to the Irish public finances.

"It has already taken the first steps on the road to sorting out the dire budgetary position by 2013. If it delivers on much needed spending cuts, then there is no reason why the NTMA should have any difficulty in selling government bonds in the months ahead, and why yield spreads over Germany can't narrow.

"However, failure to act on the report of An Bord Snip Nua will only increase the funding costs for the country and put an unnecessary financial burden on future generations," he added.

The 10-year Irish/German bond yield spread tightened to 198 basis points from 206 basis points before yesterday auction, the success of which raised the prospect that Dublin could soon start prefunding for its 2010 borrowing needs.

* See Ireland's national debt mount before your own eyes at: http://www.financedublin.com/debtclock.php

This story appeared in the printed version of the Irish Examiner Wednesday, July 22, 2009
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Ognir

Repay 3.5€B a year

Maybe come back in 30 years to so
Most zionists don't believe that God exists, but they do believe he promised them Palestine

- Ilan Pappe

scorpio

Quote from: "Yammitor"11% is the low end of the estimate, it will probably he higher. I recall an article a few weeks back on the same paper which predicted that 16% of the states tax income next year would go to service the interest payments alone on the national debt.

That is an amazing statistic. I wonder what the % of tax money in the USA is spent on debt?
2+ trillion deficit just for this year alone. How long is gonna take to pay that off?

No wonder they don't pave the roads around here anymore.  :x

Scorpio11

jai_mann

Quote from: "scorpio11"
Quote from: "Yammitor"11% is the low end of the estimate, it will probably he higher. I recall an article a few weeks back on the same paper which predicted that 16% of the states tax income next year would go to service the interest payments alone on the national debt.

That is an amazing statistic. I wonder what the % of tax money in the USA is spent on debt?
2+ trillion deficit just for this year alone. How long is gonna take to pay that off?

No wonder they don't pave the roads around here anymore.  :x

Scorpio11


Roads are supposed to be paid for by the tax we all pay at the pump. It's one of the more rational ways of handling road maintenance but it still ain't good. Roads not getting paved probably just means the locals who get the gas tax money are dipping into it for themselves. Private toll roads were one of the first ways roads were established and maintained. It could be a good way to go again, if those doing business as the gubbament will relinquish CONtrol.  :lol:  yeh right...