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Tax Ireland Latest Information
Shoppers face 10p plastic bag tax in Northern Ireland by 2014 A 5p tax on single-use carrier bags will be introduced in Northern Ireland next year. Related Stories Impact of drink pricing questioned Report reveals fears over bills Translink Belfast bus driver made detour to Winemark off-licence Shoppers to face carrier bag tax Shoppers face 10p plastic bag tax in Northern Ireland by 2014 Ireland Creates Expert Panel For Property Tax Plans The Irish government is pushing forward with its plans for a property tax, appointing an expert panel to consider proposals. Pre-tax loss for Belfast hotelier One of Northern Ireland's largest hotel groups reports a pre-tax loss of £229,000 for the financial year to April 2011. Facebook's high tax rate likely to drop (Reuters) - Facebook, the social network giant on the verge of a huge initial public stock offering, pays an unusually high tax rate, but that is likely to change soon, analysts said. At 41 percent on an effective basis, Facebook's tax rate is well above rates paid by larger, more mature high-tech groups, and above the top U.S. corporate income tax rate of 35 percent. But the exercise by ... Shoppers to face carrier bag tax A 5p tax on single-use carrier bags will be introduced in Northern Ireland next year. Ireland Continues To Defend Corporate Tax Rate Ireland is 'not in the business' of changing its corporate tax rate, Deputy Prime Minister Eamon Gilmore has said, stressing that it remains vital to jobs and investment. Tax office strike 'well supported' A 24-hour tax office strike in a row over privatisation has been well-supported in Northern Ireland, a union official has said. Irish deficit narrows in January on delayed tax receipts DUBLIN (Reuters) - Ireland's budget deficit shrank 18 percent in January compared to a year earlier after the state coffers were buoyed by delayed corporation tax receipts, official data on Thursday showed. Under the terms of its EU/IMF bailout, Dublin must shrink its deficit to 8.6 percent of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) this year from an estimated 10.1 percent in 2011. The central bank on ... Ireland's retail sales slump for 4th straight year Ireland is counting on its citizens to spend more and help reverse the nation's daunting deficits. But new figures for retail sales reveal that debt-burdened shoppers spent less for the fourth straight year. |
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