Deposit Interest Retention Tax

Deposit Interest Retention Tax (DIRT) is a form of tax on interest earned on bank accounts in Republic of Ireland that was first introduced in the 1980s. It controversial because it discourages saving, but taxpayers can withhold it in protest because it is taken at source. In the late 1990s a parliamentary inquiry under Jim Mitchell, TD, established the existence of a culture of tax evasion within Irish banks, which had allowed wealthy customers to set up off-shore (ie, international) bank accounts into which money was transferred, enabling the account holder to avoid paying DIRT. (Such accounts in theory should only have been set up by residents living abroad.) Thousands of tax-evaders were prosecuted as were leading banks, producing hundreds of millions of Irish pounds of the Irish Exchequer through financial settlements and fines. Several famous Irish people have been found evading the tax including Padraig Flynn.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
yuan mei
c2b
parque del buen retiro
to catch the uncatchable
george julius poulett scrope
bowling for soup
woodenbong
edward daniel clarke
conistorgis
english river (ontario)
william hallowes miller
rathdowney, queensland
ganzhou
henry clifton sorby
castle acre priory
protopterus
bunny yeager
thomas davidson
fetal stethoscope
pinard
jane tranter
beaudesert, queensland
double bind
bonk
leisel jones
grard paul deshayes
oswald heer
sonicaid
maimun palace
jones
george busk
konehelsinki
celtic reiki
jimboomba, queensland
laurent guillaume de koninck
gnuboy
list of saguenens
ivanahelsinki
philip de malpas grey egerton
louis charles breguet
veb polytechnik
logan river, queensland
william willoughby cole, 3rd earl of enniskillen
kitab al i'tibar