- Conveyances of lands, houses and other property, leases and mortgages
- Transactions in Stocks and Shares
- Companies Capital Duty (discontinued in December 2005)
- Cheques, Credit cards etc.
- Insurance and Miscellaneous
- Levy on Certain Financial Institutions (2003-2005, discontinued)
Of course all taxes rose during the boom, but the rise in Stamp Duty was disproportionate. By 2006 Stamp Duty had risen nearly 1300% from its 1993 level, while total tax revenues had increased by less than 400%. See graph here. Stamp Duty made up about 3% of total tax revenue in the mid-1990s, but reached almost 8% of total revenue in 2006. Graph here.
What is of some interest is the source of the Stamp Duty revenues. The following graph shows the revenues from the six different forms of Stamp Duty.
The source of the “bubble” is easily identifiable! As a proportion of total Stamp Duty, revenue from the conveyances of land and property rose from and 45% of the total in the mid-1990s to over 80% in 2006. By 2009 this had collapsed back to 33%.
The following graph gives the proportions of total Stamp Duty revenue that each of the four remaining duties have comprised since the early 1990s. 2009 was the first time that Stamp Duty on the conveyances of land and property did not generate the largest revenue.
The increase in insurance Stamp Duty is due to an increase in the duty on non-life assurance premiums from 2% to 3% and the introduction of a 1% duty on life assurance premiums. Without these duty from land and property conveyances would still be ahead and overall Stamp Duty revenue would be down about €200 million.
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