How Can We Charge For Excessive Use Of Water?
6 Mar 2017The proposal to charge for excessive use of water under the Water Services Act, 2007 is not credible.
In this section we present the evidence in relation to trends in income distribution in Ireland.
Written by researchers from the UCC School of Economics and commissioned by Publicpolicy.ie, this report analyses changes in the earnings distribution of employment income in Ireland using a dataset of approximately 1.4 million people who were employed continuously over the period 2006-2010. The report analyses inequality from several perspectives including age, gender and sector.
The skill levels among the working-age population in Ireland are relatively low. Up-skilling the adult population, especially in terms of the key information-processing skills, has to be a high priority for policy makers.
The conventional measure of youth unemployment does not account for comparatively higher participation in education by young people. This report contrasts the conventional measure with an alternative – the unemployment ratio.
Despite a relatively generous welfare net and the costs associated with working, most of the evidence suggests that the majority of unemployed people would be better off in a job.