Tag: finance

  • My Future Fund: What does the new pension plan mean for students and small businesses? 

    My Future Fund: What does the new pension plan mean for students and small businesses? 

    By Sean Kavanagh 

    The Irish Government has announced that they will provide €154 million in contributions to fund a new pension scheme named My Future Fund, beginning in 2026. 

    This initiative will offer many young people their first opportunity to start saving for retirement, and those who aren’t focused on retirement planning can withdraw all contributions to the fund following the six-month minimum participation period.  

    Employees will have until the end of August 2026 to inform their employer that they wish to withdraw their funds and upon doing so, all contributions will be returned to them through their paycheck, minus tax.  

    “I never really thought about [saving for a pension], but it’s nice to have and even in a few months’ time if I need the money, I’ll just take out what I’ve saved,” Adam Drea, a 22-year-old student and barista, said.  

    Employees aged between 23-60, who earn €20,000 or more annually and are not already contributing to a separate pension scheme, will be automatically enrolled in the program, with auto-enrollment beginning Sept. 30, 2025.   

    Those who do not meet the criteria will still be able to partake in the program but will have to ask their employer to enroll them in the scheme. 

    Employees will pay 1.5% of their total income into the fund, and that money will be matched by their employer. The government will also contribute an additional 0.5% to the personal savings plan.  

    For example, if an employee pays €30 per week into their personal savings plan, their employer will be obligated to also contribute €30 and then the state will provide €10 to the fund, leaving the employee with a total weekly contribution of €70.  

    “Contributions are beginning at the low level of 1.5% for employees to ease the cost of the introduction of My Future Fund and give them opportunity to budget for contributions,” a spokesperson from the Department of Social Protection said.  

    While the scheme will have a minimum contribution of 1.5% of a person’s income in 2026, this figure will increase incrementally over the next decade, eventually capping at 6% in 2026. 

    This low minimum contribution in the early stages will also give small businesses an opportunity to prepare for an increase in their wage bill.  

    “Any additional cost to the business is always a challenge, especially in the current environment, and it is certainly a significant factor for 2026 costs and by extension, the available budget for salary increases,” Fergal O’Connor, CEO of Buymedia, said. 

    Employers will be expected to inform all of their employees on the implementation of My Future Fund and any business owner that attempts to hinder their staff from enrolling in the program may face a fine or imprisonment.  

    A key difference between My Future Fund and other government pension schemes is that it is not tied to a specific employer, so if you decide to change jobs, your contributions will continue to be added into the same fund when you start your new role.   

    The fund will be managed by the National Automatic Enrolment Retirement Savings Authority (NAERSA), a new state agency that has been established to implement the scheme.  

    Employees will be given the choice of whether they want their money invested in low, moderate or high-risk investment strategies.  

    Those who do not choose a specific investment strategy will have their savings invested in the ‘default’ strategy. 

    “The default risk strategy operates on a life cycle basis that de-risks as participants move towards retirement, taking advantage of higher risk growth in younger years and the stability of lower risk the closer they get to retirement,” the Department of Social Protection said.  

  • Dublin’s parks cost €3 million in 2016

    Dublin’s parks cost €3 million in 2016

    Almost €3 million was spent on the maintenance of Dublin City’s parks in 2016, thecity.ie has learned.

    Over half of the total money was used to maintain the Phoenix Park with €1.57M spent, with costs ranging from pest control to animal welfare to the upkeep of the park’s gardens.

    Over 1.3 million people passed through the Phoenix Park Visitor Centre complex in the last twelve months, and it is estimated that ten million people use the whole park on an annual basis.

    “Our principal objective is to protect, conserve, maintain and present national historic properties while encouraging appropriate public access,” said Niamh Guihen of the Heritage Services.

    A further €630,000 was spent on the maintenance of the National Botanical Gardens, which saw 583,539 visitors in 2016.

    A total of €251,000 and €201,000 was spent on the upkeep of St Enda’s Park and St Stephen’s Green respectively.   There are six hundred trees in Stephen’s Green that need to be managed and maintained.

    The upkeep of the Irish National War Memorial Gardens (€155,000), the Garden of Remembrance (€34,000) and the Iveagh Gardens (€24,000) brought the total amount spent maintaining Dublin parks by the Office of Public Works to €2.86 million in 2016.

    “Some of the costs [included] electricity, gas and water services, oil and diesel services, plants, shrubs and seeds health, safety and first aid repairs, gardening, painting [and] site maintenance,” said Guihen.

    St Stephen’s Green was the second most visited park last year with 4.6 million visitors. The busiest month was August, with 574,726 visitors.

    St Enda’s Park was the least busy with just 70,320 visitors despite the opening of the Padraig Pearse Exhibition in the park museum last July.

     

    By Andrew Barnes & Jenna Cox