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DUBLIN — Cut Ireland’s minimum wage? Check. Collect more in property taxes from beleaguered homeowners? Check. Raise the corporate tax rate, which could plug the gaping hole in Ireland’s ...
The Exchequer returns for the first half of the year were published on Thursday and recorded a surplus of €4.5 billion. This ...
Dublin to shut Double Irish corporate tax loophole next year on whatsapp (opens in a new window) Save Vincent Boland in Dublin. Published October 14 2014. Jump to comments section Print this page.
If recent efforts to clean up the global corporate tax system had worked, Chambers’ happy predicament shouldn’t be possible. The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development brokered ...
Dublin was responsible for €14.1 billion of corporate tax in 2024, meaning Dublin and Cork combined made up €35.5 of the €39 billion total in business tax receipts collected last year.
In 2013, Ireland made 4.3 billion euros from corporate tax receipts. In 2023, the corporate tax haul was 23.8 billion euros. U.S. multinationals account for about three-quarters of corporate tax ...
DUBLIN, Dec 2 (Reuters) - Ireland took in more corporate tax in November than it used to collect in entire years a decade ago, as a recent boom in receipts from multinationals picked up more pace ...
So Trump's plans to slash corporate tax, onshore multinationals and impose tariffs could hit Ireland ... I'm standing in Dublin's docklands, as you mentioned, which used to be, 25 years ago or ...
The Republic of Ireland is predicted to have a €65.2bn (£56.3bn) budget surplus by 2027; Many multi-national companies have settled in Dublin due to low corporation tax ...
Nearly a quarter of Dublin’s population was living in one-room tenements in 1911, according to newly released data from the ...
A low tax policy has paid dividends for the Republic of Ireland with corporate tax receipts more than doubling since 2019, to a record €24bn last year. However, Dublin has warned that the ...
Ireland has for years enjoyed healthy corporation tax receipts from the slew of large multinational firms based in Dublin partly to take advantage of its 12.5% headline rate.