
Plan to cut hospitality VAT to 9% to cost up to €1 billion for a year
The Government said that Budget 2026 will bring in €1.5 billion of tax cuts; however, the size of the package could reduce if there is a 'deterioration in the tariff landscape'.
Advertisement
Announcing the Summer Economic Statement, which sets out the Government's spending and tax cuts plans, Minister for Finance Paschal Donohoe said that increasing the tax package is not the 'right thing to do'.
The Budget Day package, set to be announced on October 7th, will be €9.4 billion.
This will comprise spending of €7.9 billion and taxation measures amounting to €1.5 billion.
Overall spending across current capital will increase by 7.3 per cent for next year.
Advertisement
If the Government commits to its pledge to cut the VAT rate for hospitality, it will cost around €1 billion, Mr Donohoe said on Tuesday.
'Our Budget Day decisions could change depending on the economic environment we find ourselves in during the summer and beyond,' he added.
'It would not be right to grow the scale of our tax package with everything that we are confronting at the moment.
'Our economy, just by seeing income grow, generates between €1.3 and €1.5 billion each year.
Advertisement
'If we were to have a bigger tax package than that, I don't believe it would be the right thing to do, given all we are confronting, but the exact component of what the tax package would be and the other tax measures that would be in it, I can't answer that question until Budget Day.
'I mean the Summer Economic Statement lays out the amount of money that will be available. It never lays out the detail of any one measure.'
Mr Donohoe warned that the figures published on Tuesday are based on 'a no-tariff scenario' imposed by the United States.
The statement does not set out how the budget will be affected by any change in tariffs, but states that the Government will 'recalibrate its fiscal strategy', adding that it will reduce the size of the package.
Advertisement
Mr Donohoe published the figures alongside Minister for Public Expenditure Jack Chambers.
'Our Budget Day decisions could change depending on the economic environment we find ourselves in during the summer and beyond,' he said.
He said all they can see is 'change and risk' around the uncertainty of trade, investment and politics.
'Of course, none of this is positive for the economy of the world, and by extension, therefore, for Ireland,' Mr Donohoe added.
Advertisement
'This is most evident in the debates and negotiations that are underway with regard to trade, which is why us, within the European Union and the (EU) Commission on our behalf, will be redoubling our efforts to negotiate a better deal with regard to trade between the EU between now and August 1.
'Because of all of this, it's very clear that we're at a moment of significant transition to the economy of the world, and even for the economy. But notwithstanding all of this, our economy continues to grow.
'In the first quarter of 2025, our economy grew by almost 3 per cent after a year of strong growth in 2024, and where that strong performance is most evident is in the number of people at work in our country.'
Mr Donohoe said it is 'very likely' that negotiations between the EU and the US will reach a conclusion in the coming weeks.
However, he said the Government's intention is to be 'flexible' in its approach to Budget Day.
'Our overwhelming priority is to maintain our public capital investment, in particular the figures that will be outlined by Minister Chambers,' Mr Donohoe added.
'However, should economic or budget conditions change, we will amend other elements of budget policy to ensure we get the balance right.
'Minister Chambers and I, in consultation with the party leaders, will continue to assess that balance in the weeks ahead.
'I emphasise that point because Minister Chambers and I are very much aware that we are publishing this statement and committing to a National Development Plan at a moment of uncertainty.
'We know an antidote to some of that uncertainty is certainty regarding our investment plans, and that is what is being outlined here today. We can do so because our economy is resilient.'
Mr Chambers said the Government is having to navigate 'serious economic uncertainty'.
'If there's a serious economic deterioration, we absolutely will have to revisit what we're setting out today to be responsible and agile in the context of changing our global position, and we agree on that,' he added.
'So this is very much caveated by what could happen in the coming weeks, and we won't make decisions that aren't sustainable or affordable for the Irish economy.'
He added: 'While capital expenditure will increase by €2 billion in line with the National Development Plan review, this will result in total available current expenditure of €97.5 billion, and capital expenditure of €19.1 billion in 2026.
'It will be against this backdrop that budget negotiations will commence with the individual departments in the coming weeks.
'The expenditure ceilings for 2026 will facilitate a budget that will provide for enhanced public service delivery and increased capital investment in critical infrastructure under the new and renewed National Development Plan.
'At the same time, given the profound global economic uncertainty, it's crucial we moderate current spending and provide permanent and sustainable investment, as well as focusing on addressing our infrastructure deficits.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
6 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Millions of workers could lose £18,000 in state pension if they have to wait until 68
Millions of people in their early 50s could miss out on up to £18,000 if the state pension age is hiked to 68 faster than expected, new research reveals. A new Government review of the state pension qualifying age has triggered speculation it might have to rise substantially to contain rapidly rising costs. The state pension is currently worth £230.25 a week or nearly £12,000 a year if you have paid enough National Insurance years to receive the full amount, and it starts at age 66. The qualifying age is already set to rise to 67 between 2026 and 2028, and then the next increase is technically not scheduled until the mid 2040s, which will affect those born from 6 April 1977. The Government is expected to give at least 10 years' notice of a change in the timetable, but it could act straight after the current official review concludes in 2029, according to wealth manager Rathbones. This could mean the rise to 68 is accelerated to 2039-41, which would affect workers now aged 51, 52 and 53, it says. Rathbones has crunched the numbers for future rises under the state pension triple lock, and reckons the annual amount could hit £17,774 in the year someone who is 51 now turns 68. When a 52-year-old is 68 - in 15 years' time - they could miss out on a year of state pension worth £17,340. And someone who is 53 now could lose out on £16,918. That is based on the state pension rising by at least 2.5 per cent a year, which is the minimum increase required under the triple lock pledge - so could easily be higher, unless politically difficult steps are taken to soften the popular guarantee. The triple lock means the state pension increases every year by the highest of inflation, average earnings growth or 2.5 per cent. The Government has promised to stick to the triple lock for the whole of this parliament. Although questions have been raised about affordability the Government has effectively, if not in so many words, told the experts working on the next two state pension age reports to operate under the assumption the triple lock pledge will remain in place indefinitely. How much does a comfortable retirement cost? What YOU will need The Government is required by law to review the state pension age every six years, so it has ordered two reports which will look at when to hike to 68. It will examine this in light of life expectancy, public spending and population trends. But a recent report by independent think tank, the Institute for Fiscal Studies, warned that without reform of the state pension triple lock, the retirement age would have to rise to 74 by 2069. Meanwhile, the Government has launched a new Pensions Commission to try to stop future retirees ending up poorer than older people today. It says nearly half of working age adults are saving nothing at all into a pension - despite the success of auto enrolment into work schemes - and nearly 15million people are under-saving for retirement. Rebecca Williams, a financial planning boss at Rathbones, says: 'With longevity increasing and population pressures mounting, future generations appear set to face a less generous state pension regime than that enjoyed by many of today's retirees. 'The situation appears particularly precarious for those in their early 50s who face a real prospect of missing out.' She says people in their late 40s and early 50s have come to her firm asking for help getting their retirement finances on track, given the shifting goalposts when it comes to pensions. 'The state pension alone is not enough for a comfortable retirement,' cautions Williams. 'Individuals need a broad foundation built on workplace pensions, private savings, and the ongoing support of pension tax relief. 'Cracks are beginning to show in the system,' she warns.


Telegraph
6 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Donald Trump is right to stir up the hornets' nest on North Sea oil and gas
In spite of their relationship being one of the political world's strangest bromances, Donald Trump's claim that Keir Starmer was 'destroying' the North Sea's oil and gas found other targets in his Aberdeen stopover. As a result – and even in their own backyard – he was not averse to letting John Swinney, the First Minister, and Anas Sarwar, the Scottish Labour leader, know that he didn't think much of their energy policies. That's assuming that any one of those who'll be called to vote in next May's Scottish Parliament elections really knows what Swinney's or Sarwar's definite policy on North Sea oil and gas will be. Both parties have been playing a version of dodgems, ducking and diving all over the place as they constantly seek to confuse the electorate about what the future holds for what the president rightly described as the North Sea's 'treasure chest'. The SNP have been all over the place in relation to energy, while at least with Nicola Sturgeon voters knew where they were. Then, in that ill-fated and completely nonsensical alliance with the sub-Marxist Scottish Greens, the Scottish Government had set its face firmly against more development of oil and gas fields and any still under way would presumably be abandoned. Everything was geared to renewable power – wind, solar and tidal. And definitely no nuclear generation, either – not ever. Swinney has managed to get the SNP off that ludicrous policy for keeping Scotland's lights on, if only by sitting on the fence and stating that they'd no longer ban all North Sea production and instead would consider new licences to drill on a case-by-case basis. I can just imagine the world's oil giants rushing to do business with the Scottish Government with that sort of 'maybe-aye-maybe-no' condition hanging over their development plans. The Scottish Tories are completely onside with the president in being ready to approve many new licences that would help preserve the current well-paid and highly skilled jobs in the North East of Scotland. And it should help them hang onto key constituencies. But it was Scottish Labour that, until fairly recently, looked to have a fair chance of challenging the SNP for the right to form a government next May. That hope, however, almost disappeared thanks to a whole series of own goals by the UK Labour Government over issues such as winter fuel payments and benefit cuts. It remains to be seen whether their Hamilton by-election victory has put new heart into Labour and also whether they now have a policy on North Sea oil and gas that will attract voters. The omens are not good, if the trades union leader Gary Smith is to be believed. The general secretary of the Labour-supporting GMB union has said that the UK Government's energy policy is 'bonkers' as it plans to cut off investment that would help create jobs. In that he was essentially echoing the president's comments. The UK Government is expected to grant permission for the giant new Rosebank and Jackdaw oil and gas fields in the North Sea to go ahead as they already have licences approved. But Ed Miliband, the UK Energy Secretary, has repeatedly said no future licences will be granted by Labour – meaning the North Sea sector is in danger of continuing to shed jobs over time. Labour aims to fight the nationalists on the record of Swinney's Government, which in spite of President Trump's nice words about him are nothing to boast about, and neither is his obsession with breaking up Britain. But there are lots of votes in the energy policies of the three main contenders, and currently only the Tories seem to agree with the Trump 'manifesto' on North oil and gas. He was right to stir up that hornets' nest. The electorate deserve clearer answers, especially from Labour.


Glasgow Times
25 minutes ago
- Glasgow Times
Trump didn't push me to support new oil and gas drilling, Swinney says
The SNP leader said the US President made his views clear during their dinner on Monday but did not actively press him to back fresh drilling in the North Sea. Mr Swinney said he was aware of Mr Trump's posts on his social media platform urging the UK to lower taxes and drill. US President Donald Trump played some golf at Trump International Golf Links, on the Menie Estate in Balmedie, Aberdeenshire (Jane Barlow/PA) On the last day of his five-day visit to Scotland, the American leader posted: 'North Sea Oil is a treasure chest for the United Kingdom. 'The taxes are so high, however, that it makes no sense. 'They have essentially told drillers and oil companies that, 'we don't want you'. 'Incentivize the drillers, fast. A vast fortune to be made for the UK, and far lower energy costs for the people!' Mr Swinney had dinner with the President who was flanked at the table at Trump MacLeod House & Lodge – named after Mr Trump's Scottish mother, Mary Anne MacLeod Trump – in the Menie estate alongside Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer. Asked if the President pressed Mr Swinney to back new oil and gas licenses during the two-hour event, the First Minister said: 'He didn't. He didn't press me to do that. Trump had dinner with Keir Starmer and John Swinney on Monday evening (Jane Barlow/PA) 'He obviously expressed his view that there should be more oil and gas activity undertaken and I've seen material from the President this morning which raises issues about taxation, which of course, is not under my control. 'I don't have any influence over North Sea oil and gas taxation. 'Obviously the President made clear his view that he is not a supporter of wind turbines and I expressed the view that we have about our energy priorities on renewable energy.' Mr Trump landed in Prestwick on Friday on Air Force One before travelling to his golf course in Turnberry, South Ayrshire. On Monday, he and the Prime Minister were transported by Marine One to his golf course in Menie. He opened up The New Course there on Tuesday shortly before leaving for Washington. Mr Swinney had dinner with Mr Trump for around two hours where the First Minister made the case for exempting Scotch whisky from US tariffs, while a shorter discussion on Tuesday morning focused on what Mr Swinney said was the 'humanitarian catastrophe' in Gaza. During his trip – his first since 2023 and first since winning re-election – Mr Trump repeatedly referred to Aberdeen as 'the oil capital of Europe'. The US President campaigned on 'drill baby drill' during his election campaign last year. He has been outspoken in his dislike of 'windmills', having taken the Scottish Government to court over an offshore wind farm near his Aberdeenshire estate. Mr Trump said Scotland had the 'ugliest windmills I've ever seen', describing them as 'ugly monsters' that were 'destroying the beauty' of the country. Donald Trump has urged the UK to extract more oil from the North Sea (Andrew Milligan/PA) 'Wind is a disaster,' Mr Trump said. 'Wind is the most expensive form of energy. 'When we go to Aberdeen you'll see some of the ugliest windmills you've ever seen. 'They're the height of a 50-storey building. 'You could take 1,000 times more energy from a hole in the ground. It's called oil and gas, and you have it in the North Sea. 'You are paying in Scotland, and the UK, and all over place, where they gave them massive subsidies to have these ugly monsters all over the place.'