ImSpartacus2 wrote on Sep 13
th, 2014 at 10:14am:
[quote author=longweekend58 link=1410507855/39#39 date=1410563964]
that is drivel. do you care to explain how any earner avoids paying tax?
What follows is an article from the SMH in May 2014 And its just the tip of the iceburg. Google Australia opened new offices in Darling Harbour in mid 2009 and derives revenue of 2 billion but its total tax expense was $466,802. Similar story with Apple. And none of this is to mention the corporate welfare they recieve and Taxpayer $$$ from dirty deals. Remember $880Million payed out to Abbotts mate Murdoch straight after Abbott won the election. OH yes it was all above board I'm sure.
"Budget pain? Not for millionaires who pay no tax
Only some parts of this article are reproduced here to allow me space to respond to LongLiar. Check earlier version for the complete article
“Pain all round”....
The latest tax statistics show 75 ultra-high-earning Australians paid no tax at all in 2011-12. Zero. Zip.
Each earned more than $1 million from investments or wages. Between them they made $195 million, an average of $2.6 million each.
The fortunate 75 paid no income tax, no Medicare levy and no Medicare surcharge, even though 60 of them had private health insurance.
The reason? They managed to cut their combined taxable incomes to $82. That’s right, $1.10 each.
Cutting taxable income that far doesn’t come cheap.
Forty-five of the uber millionaires claimed a total of $64.4 million for the “cost of managing their tax affairs”. That’s a staggering $1.4 million each. (As a point of comparison an entry-level H&R Block consultation costs $49.)
At face value the figures suggest these super-high earners were prepared to spend an unlikely half of their incomes on tax advice. A more likely explanation is that they received far greater incomes than they reported and spent only a portion on tax advice.
....
n work-related deductions, for things such as car expenses and clothing. Ten claimed a total of $5 million for donations and gifts, a category that includes political as well as charitable donations.
And they ran loss-making businesses.
The 30 who were in business reported total business income of $121 million offset by expenses of $122 million. Those who ran farms carried over $61.5 million in earlier tax losses and lost an extra $3 million in 2011-12.
there are 15million tax payers in Australia. do you think that whinging about 75 of them somehow means anything? and in NONE of these cases was the tax minimisation illegal. how about concentrating on the vast, vast majority of people who pay all their tax and at huge rates compared to average-or-below earners.
Oh dear. Do you ever set out to have a clean honest debate. Look at your post I responded to; Quote:"
" Now if you were being honest i think you would find from what I posted the mechanisms by which some people avoid paying tax. Your question answered. Now as to how many wealthy people are out there who go from paying no tax, to hardly any tax, to some but insufficient amounts of tax, to less tax proportionately to the % of tax that the average PAYE tax payer pays, I shudder to think of the numbers.
Why did I only refer to legal non tax payers. Because i was being honest. Its the
that I have a problem with. There will always be those who will break the law and provided the law does not deliberately have loopholes (and I believe many do have deliberate loopholes) to allow them to escape paying their fair share, I'm not for the moment criticising the govt for that. Its where the laws dont tax them fairly
that I have an issue with and I reproduced an article that shows just the tip of the iceburg on how that happens. And of course there are many, many more corporate examples such a google which I refer to.