Sinn Féin got its sums wrong when calculating its alternative budget, say finance officials â The Irish Times
New documents show that Sinn Féinâs costing of its alternative budget was tens of millions wide of the mark, according to a report in the Business Post.
Unveiling the partyâs alternative budget last October, Pearse Doherty, Sinn Féinâs finance spokesperson, said he was âputting fairness at the heart of taxation policyâ, the report noted.
Across more than 50 pages, the party outlined what it said was âa credible fiscal planâ, including a â¬6.8 billion package of measures aimed at investment in housing, healthcare and easing the burden during the cost-of-living crisis.
It promised mortgage interest relief and tax cuts in what was widely seen as a move to court the middle ground, with Doherty at the time saying Sinn Féinâs alternative budget was an appropriate response to the challenges at hand.
But a closer look at two documents compiled by the Department of Finance and the Department of Public Expenditure and Reform (DPER) published this week show a marked divergence between what Sinn Féin said on October 4th and what public officials estimated that their measures would actually cost the exchequer.
The documents also provide an insight into the measures that Mary Lou McDonaldâs party was considering but either dropped or could not get the cost of to put a price tag on.
The alternative budget said that the first-year cost to the exchequer of not proceeding with a carbon tax increase in 2024 would be â¬141 million; however, the DPER said the cost of not proceeding with two increases in May and October this year would be â¬47 million.
MetroLink station to boost house prices
Houses near proposed MetroLink Âstations will record a growth in value of at least 10 per cent if the project is granted planning approval, economists and financial experts have predicted, a report in the Sunday Times says.
An Bord Pleanálaâs oral hearings on MetroLink â the long-delayed centrepiece of the Governmentâs transport strategy, which has an estimated cost of â¬9.5 billion â continued last week with a number of community groups and stakeholders making presentations in support of, or objecting to, the plans.
Some businesses, residentsâ groups and heritage bodies have outlined Âworries about potential disruptions, business closures, adverse health impacts and pollution.
Others including Wynnâs Hotel have claimed that the construction period would pose an existential threat to their operations. However, it is expected that prices of homes in proximity will be boosted.
Overdue accounts at CleverCardsâ digital payments
Rapidly growing Irish digital payments firm CleverCards has not filed accounts or annual returns for any period since 2020, despite a requirement to do so, a report in the Sunday Independent reveals.
However, the company has insisted that although its accounts have been delayed, it is not one of the firms referred to in a Central Bank report last week that raised concerns about governance deficiencies in the payments and e-money sector.
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