Armchair_Politician wrote on May 21
st, 2013 at 8:37am:
Makka wrote on May 19
th, 2013 at 3:39pm:
We know the Feds collect the GST for the State government
Does anyone know the process of increasing the GST?
I can't imagine the Feds wanting to change it as the increase would gain them nothing financially or politically
So anyone saying any Fed government is going to change the GST will need to put a pretty convincing argument forward otherwise they are branded as scare mongering
So the question is - can the State governments organise themselves enough to make the change
If State gov are LIBs proposing and the Feds are Lab then the ALP will have a field day politically
This is not to mention the State governments taking political hits in the polls
So I can't see practically how the GST can be changed without the current governments losing at the next election
Simple: every state and territory must agree on the change to the GST, as well as getting it through both Houses in Canberra.
Time to review GST: Gallagher
Updated 2 hours 7 minutes ago
Map: ACT
ACT Chief Minister Katy Gallagher says she is not trying to undermine her federal Labor colleagues by supporting Coalition moves to review the GST as part of a wider tax assessment.
If elected in September, the Coalition will commission a white paper on tax which could include the GST.
But federal Labor opposes raising the tax rate and has accused the Opposition of wanting to lift it.
Ms Gallagher says the tax needs another look.
"I understand it's difficult to have a conversation about it particularly in the lead-up to an election but any rational look at this, and look at the Australian taxation system, would at least have the discussion around the GST not necessarily whether you increase it or change it but have it as part of that discussion," she said.
But Ms Gallagher concedes she is out of step with federal Labor.
"I'm not trying to undermine anything and you know I'll leave those matters for the Federal Government and the Federal Opposition," she said.
"I'm coming from it from the point of the Chief Minister of the ACT and I think it's fair and reasonable that at times we will have different opinions to that of a federal government."