‘People Who Get Up to Work Every Morning Get Nothing’: 2021 Budget Readers



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Following the Budget 2021 announcement on Tuesday, The Irish Times asked readers for their reaction: what, if anything, did they earn? Below is a selection of the responses we received.

‘I’m better off unemployed’

I am dismayed by Budget 2021. I am an airline employee with two children, a single mother who has worked her entire life. My hours have been drastically reduced. I normally have a 26 hour contract, which was reduced to 20 hours due to Covid-19. My contract is renewed every year and has been cut in half, so now I only work 10 hours a week. My total net pay is now € 363 per week. If you were completely unemployed you would be receiving € 350 a week, double pay at Christmas and fuel allowance. I’m better off unemployed, it’s shocking to say. I am actively looking for a second job because I had bills and loans based on my previous normal salary. I can’t survive with this, and Christmas seems impossible. – Fiona Sheehan, Co Cork

‘Many senior citizens continue to work as an economic necessity’

When Covid-19 payments went into effect last spring, those of us over the age of 66 who lost our jobs were not entitled to any help or payment. Many of us who only have the state contributory pension find it necessary to supplement that weekly payment with part-time work. I had to stop giving a Tai Chi class in a day center for the elderly, in addition to giving a music class in a school. If you have to pay the rent (even with the help of the housing assistance payment) and even with the help of the fuel subsidy, it hardly adds up if you live on the state pension alone. I am 70 years old and fortunately in good health. But I think it should be understood that many of us senior citizens still work, not as a hobby, but as an economic necessity. The current budget still does not take into account our circumstances. – K. James Donahue, Dundalk

‘I’ll be financially crippled this winter’

This is the second consecutive year that people with disability pensions have not had an increase. I, at the age of 65, do not qualify for the heating plan because my daughter, who is unemployed, and my granddaughter live with me. I have severe arthritis, shortness of breath, and an underactive thyroid, which affects my body temperature. I am still paying for my heating from last winter, at € 102 per month. I will be financially crippled this winter. – Maryna Kriel, Dublin

‘People who get up to work every morning don’t get anything’

Absolutely disappointed and angry with this budget, once again those who contribute the least to the country get more, while the people who get up to work each morning receive nothing but more expensive bills. – John Ryan, Limerick

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