Rob Lynch Profile
Rob Lynch

@RobDLynch

Followers
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Following
248
Media
42
Statuses
194

Views my own, criticise ideas not people

Dublin City, Ireland
Joined May 2020
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@RobDLynch
Rob Lynch
8 days
@Aidan_Regan @barratree @CormacLucey @danobrien20 @davidmcw @GerardBrady100 @seamuscoffey @stephenkinsella @TomAMcDonnell1 The scenarios are in https://t.co/0fo6R6K78h -> 7 options, and each option has 3 possibilities. 3^7 = 2,187 scenarios
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@RobDLynch
Rob Lynch
8 days
We need the Department to have a plan otherwise there will likely be bad outcomes, a simple proposal would be that the FIF is repurposed so that money from it can be used for infrastructure spending, starting from when windfall corporation tax receipts significantly reduce.
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@RobDLynch
Rob Lynch
9 days
The obvious question is what happens if the windfall CT receipts reduce significantly in the next few years or in the early 2030s.. what is the plan?
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@RobDLynch
Rob Lynch
9 days
In the over 2,000 scenarios that have been modelled, not one had a significant reduction in CT windfall taxes in the next few years or in the period 2030-40 - is this plausible? While we are currently putting away money in the FIF, its purpose is to support expenditure in 2041+
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@RobDLynch
Rob Lynch
9 days
The Department of Finance's Future Forty report, https://t.co/VyHJHC4f1x, ignored the elephant in the room, the windfall CT receipts that the government is receiving.
gov.ie
The next decade is a window of critical opportunity to boost economic growth potential, address the structural challenges and avail of the opportunities that may lie ahead
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@RobDLynch
Rob Lynch
1 month
Perfectly sums up the Government's transparency on managing the country's Finances https://t.co/IJeOiEPH2G
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@RobDLynch
Rob Lynch
1 year
Just to give CT trend over the years and 2020's receipts
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@RobDLynch
Rob Lynch
1 year
From the Budget Economic Fiscal Outlook doc https://t.co/a4eBQopow0 3 scenarios: 1) CT receipts grow from a base of €29.5 billion 2) CT receipts stalls at €29.5 billion 3) CT receipts reduce over time, revert to 2020 levels by 2030 Which one do people think is the more likely?
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@RobDLynch
Rob Lynch
1 year
would any of you be able to answer my question, or give your view(s)? @Aidan_Regan, @barratree, @CormacLucey, @danobrien20, @davidmcw, @GerardBrady100, @rlydon2, @seamuscoffey, @stephenkinsella, @TomAMcDonnell1
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@RobDLynch
Rob Lynch
1 year
While the Exchequer forecast wasn't disclosed in the SES, but based on both sets of numbers, are the government forecasting funding investment funds contributions in 2025-7 by running large exchequer deficits?
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@RobDLynch
Rob Lynch
1 year
the numbers disclosed in April's SPU, see https://t.co/bpj5OZLqiw page 52. The General Government balance GGB (budget) is underlined in red, the Exchequer balance is underlined in blue and the investment funds contributions is underlined in green. My question is as follows:
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@RobDLynch
Rob Lynch
1 year
I have a question for people, based on the latest IFAC's projections (based on April's Stability Programme Update (SPU) & updated for Government's Summer Economic Statement (SES)), see budget balance (€billions) underlined in Red, https://t.co/KYpyS82YWi page 4 &
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@RobDLynch
Rob Lynch
5 years
Funding ideas are there to build more affordable and social homes, need cross party & public support to agree and implement good solutions.
@DaraTurnbull
Dara Turnbull
5 years
4/4 Even in #Ireland, there is excess saving. The @DeptHousingIRL & the @NTMA_IE should team up to put these savings to a social function, like building social housing. The solutions are there if you look for them. Read my recent blog on this : https://t.co/aYraNq9Kf5
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