bogarde73 wrote on Apr 3
rd, 2014 at 9:17am:
For Bam:
•Abolish concessional rate of capital gains tax.
•Abolish stamp duty on property transfers except for the cost of processing the property transfer.
•Introduce annual land tax for all properties except land under primary production, such that it raises the same
•amount of money overall as the abolished stamp duty.
•Reduce payroll tax.
Agree with you on the CGT, but stamp duty, land tax and payroll tax are state taxes and are not relevant to the coming budget.
You are correct here. These are state taxes. The discussion did not specifically state that the budget measures had to be in the Federal budget.
Quote:Except that it would be a good idea to revisit GST so as to make any increase subject to eliminating these taxes. On the other hand, GST is regressive and therefore affects the poor more, while those state taxes I would think impact more on the better off, especially land tax and stamp duty.
Let's include GST in this discussion in conjunction with these state taxes, and take a holistic approach. Here's what we can do.
Increase the GST to 15%. = More money for the states (especially Western Australia and Victoria, the two states that subsidise the others the most).
Reduce payroll tax or abolish it (depending on whether it is affordable).
This is paid for by the GST revenue.Raise the tax free threshold to $32,000. Next tier is 30% to $80,000.
Needed to balance the increase in the GST.Increase all income support payments.
Needed to balance the increase in the GST.Reduce stamp duty on real estate property transfers to a more reasonable $250 + 0.1% of the value of the property over $250,000. = saving of 95% or more.
Introduce land tax (primary production being exempt) at a rate that replaces the revenue lost as a result of the abolition of stamp duty.
These two measures must be implemented together. Doing this broadens the tax base and provides increased stability for state budgets.