Exchequer returns show tax revenues up by over €1bn

Tax revenues for the first two months of the year are running more than €1

Tax revenues for the first two months of the year are running more than €1.05 billion ahead of the same period last year, figures from the Department of Finance show.

The Exchequer returns published today put overall tax revenue for the end of February at €5.9 billion, up nearly 22 per cent on last year.

Significantly, the tax take was also €656 million or 12.5 per cent ahead of the department’s own budgetary target.

However, the department warned there were two specific factors driving this “over performance”.

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The large year-on-year increase was partly due to the late payment in January of more than €250 million in corporation tax which had originally been due in December.

The figures were also boosted by a 32.7 per cent surge in income tax receipts which came in €643 million up on last year, reflecting the impact of the universal social charge and the technical reclassification of receipts from employers which they had previously returned as PRSI.

While monthly tax receipts are notoriously volatile, they remain one of the most accurate measures of the health of the economy.

VAT and excise duties - the other of the “big four” tax-heads - performed close to expectations so far this year, coming in marginally up on the same period last year.

The Exchequer deficit at end of February stood at €2.07 billion, up from €1.94 billion recorded at the same stage last year. The overall exchequer deficit for 2012 is expected to be in the region of €18 billion.

The figures showed the increased tax and non-tax revenues were offset by the higher cost of servicing the national debt. The State has spent €891 million so far this year servicing the interest on its debt, compared with €626 million by the end of Febraury last year, reflecting the State's bigger debt burden.

The figures showed overall spending for the month was €7.5 billion, €475 million or 6.8 per cent up than the same period last year.

Current or day-to-day spending by the Government was €7.16 billion at the end of February, up 7.4 per cent on last year primarily because of an overspend in the Department of Social Protection related to income tax/PRSI reclassification issue.

Capital spending was €336 million in February, down from €356 at the same period last year.

Eoin Burke-Kennedy

Eoin Burke-Kennedy

Eoin Burke-Kennedy is Economics Correspondent of The Irish Times