The Times Australia
Google AI
Business and Money

try renovating your tax system before asking for a new one

  • Written by Neil Warren, Emeritus Professor of Taxation, UNSW

A major report[1] commissioned by the NSW government has proposed lifting and expanding the goods and services tax and replacing stamp duty with a broad-based land tax.

Launched at the National Press Club[2] on July 1 by NSW Treasurer Dominic Perrottet, panel chair David Thodey and panel member Jane Halton, the report said what has been said before – that these particular big bold changes will set Australia up for the future.

But they’ve fallen flat in the past.

try renovating your tax system before asking for a new one Former Telstra chief David Thodey launching the Federal Financial Relations Review on July 1. MICK TSIKAS/AAP

Big bold proposals have losers as well as winners. When the losers are identified, it is hard to get traction, even if the winners want them.

NSW residential stamp duty is roughly equivalent to a tax on property of one and a half to twice the current municipal rates. Transitioning from one to the other might take 10 to 20 years[3].

The losers (people paying higher rates) are more numerous and likely to be more vocal than the winners (people finding it cheaper to move home).

And proposals involving the goods and services tax lead to finger pointing – towards the Commonwealth for waiting for the states, and towards the states for waiting for each other.

Proposing the Commonwealth fix state problems is attractive to everyone but the Commonwealth.

Thodey’s report[4] is an improvement on many past reports, but it too has shot for the big headlines. The states do have genuine problems with tax design and the current federal arrangements, but a more worthy strategy might be to focus on renovating the system they’ve got.

Repairing what states already have is simpler, less contentious and almost certainly just as effective as big bold programs, albeit less exciting.

A recent review I took part in, commissioned by the Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute, found it was best to start small[5], build each case, and move incrementally.

First, state governments should wind back the current array of tax concessions[6]. Doing so in NSW could increase land tax collections by 27%, payroll tax collections by 19% and conveyancing stamp duty by 9%.

Read more: Cutting out the insurance "free rider" when it comes to funding fire services [7]

Second, in NSW there would be value in revisiting the failed 2017 proposal to replace insurance stamp duties with a property-based fire and emergency services levy applying to all homes needing fire protection, not just those that are insured, a proposal the new NSW review supports[8].

Most states have already done it. The levy would lay the foundations for property making a greater contribution to state revenue and build the architecture needed for a land tax for stamp duty swap.

Read more: Post-coronavirus, we'll need a working tax system, not more taxes and not higher rates[9]

Third, and very unexciting, states should renovate their tax administration. One initiative would be a national harmonised payroll tax administered by the Australian Tax Office.

Another would be publishing tax gap[10] estimates. The tax office has found publishing estimates of what is not being collected compared to what could be collected is fundamental[11] to identifying what is not working.

None of these ideas make for big headlines. But on the track record of ideas that attract big headlines so far, they are likely to achieve more than those that do.

References

  1. ^ major report (www.treasury.nsw.gov.au)
  2. ^ National Press Club (iview.abc.net.au)
  3. ^ 10 to 20 years (www.ahuri.edu.au)
  4. ^ report (www.treasury.nsw.gov.au)
  5. ^ small (www.ahuri.edu.au)
  6. ^ tax concessions (www.budget.nsw.gov.au)
  7. ^ Cutting out the insurance "free rider" when it comes to funding fire services (theconversation.com)
  8. ^ supports (www.treasury.nsw.gov.au)
  9. ^ Post-coronavirus, we'll need a working tax system, not more taxes and not higher rates (theconversation.com)
  10. ^ tax gap (www.ato.gov.au)
  11. ^ fundamental (www.ato.gov.au)

Authors: Neil Warren, Emeritus Professor of Taxation, UNSW

Read more https://theconversation.com/memo-to-australias-states-try-renovating-your-tax-system-before-asking-for-a-new-one-141893

Business Times

Mint Payments partners with Zip Co to add flexible payment option…

Mint Payments, Australia's leading travel payments specialist, today announced a partnership with Zip Co (ASX: ZIP), a digi...

When Holiday Small Talk Hurts Inclusion at Work

Dr. Tatiana Andreeva, Associate Professor in Management and Organisational Behaviour, Maynooth University, Ireland, tatia...

Reflections invests almost $1 million in Tumut River park to boos…

Reflections Holidays, the largest adventure holiday park group in New South Wales, has launched four tiny homes at its Tu...

The Times Features

AEH Expand Goulburn Dealership to Support Southern Tablelands Farmers

AEH Group have expanded their footprint with a new dealership in Goulburn, bringing Case IH and ...

A Whole New World of Alan Menken

EGOT WINNER AND DISNEY LEGEND ALAN MENKEN  HEADING TO AUSTRALIA FOR A ONCE-IN-A-LIFETIME PERFORM...

Ash Won a Billboard and Accidentally Started a Movement!

When Melbourne commuters stopped mid-scroll and looked up, they weren’t met with a brand slogan or a...

Is there much COVID around? Do I need the new booster shot LP.8.1?

COVID rarely rates a mention in the news these days, yet it hasn’t gone away[1]. SARS-CoV-2, ...

Why Fitstop Is the Gym Australians Are Turning to This Christmas

And How ‘Training with Purpose’ Is Replacing the Festive Fitness Guilt Cycle As the festive season ...

Statement from Mayor of Randwick Dylan Parker on Bondi Beach Terror Attack

Our community is heartbroken by the heinous terrorist attack at neighbouring Bondi Beach last nigh...

Coping With Loneliness, Disconnect and Conflict Over the Christmas and Holiday Season

For many people, Christmas is a time of joy and family get-togethers, but for others, it’s a tim...

No control, no regulation. Why private specialist fees can leave patients with huge medical bills

Seeing a private specialist increasingly comes with massive gap payments. On average, out-of-poc...

Surviving “the wet”: how local tourism and accommodation businesses can sustain cash flow in the off-season

Across northern Australia and many coastal regions, “the wet” is not just a weather pattern — it...