Mr Parkers announcement of research data showing the wealthy are paying a lower percentage of tax is not news to most of us; but it is shameless political grandstanding from somebody who has been in power for 6 years. There has been articles that some/many of the wealthy would agree to pay more tax but as the massive perfectly legal tax loopholes allow some to run through with wild abandon, then it would be economic suicide for ‘good wealthy people’ not to stay competitive and do the same.
Tax compliance needs strong simple rules that are hard to avoid so that people know others are paying their fair share so they know it is equitable to pay their share. Tax loophole problems have been known for years; and this is the problem. The ‘left’ politicians are terrified of business tanking the economy so they do nothing; or worse they panda to business. The right politicians are sucking up to those who benefit from lower tax and are actively making loophole exemptions as requested. And guiltiest of all, our mandarins have been ideologically captured by neo-liberal capitalism so they aren’t providing robust diverse advice (free and frank). E.g. Reserve Bank interest rate rises are basic neo-liberal theology.
Linked to this is; why don’t we have a capital gains tax (CGT)? Inland Revenue under the tenure of a few recent Commissioners has been against a capital gains tax. Because?
- Our Tax Act is already 3 large books or two very large ones. The books would at least double with a capital gains tax. So taxpayer voluntary compliance would be difficult and the administrative burden for IR would be high. Isn’t that a dead weight cost to the economy?
- ‘Income tax’ allows losses so that the highs and lows of income can be spread over several years so tax is in effect paid on an average income (a spreading privilege not given to salary and wage earners). So for consistency a capital gains tax should also allow losses. But capital losses can be huge, e.g. massive drops in share market values could wipe out some companies revenue stream for years. Without tax coming in governments would be forced into massive borrowing just to maintain existing services, let alone keynesian stimulating the economy to keep up demand.
- Overseas capital gains tax are not large tax generators. Mainly because massive loopholes get built into the rules. Perhaps too much consultation occurs with businesses who lobby for exceptions which often get stretched later.
These three outcomes would all be true if we design a capital gains tax along the lines of what has been done overseas. But the above problems are relatively easily avoided by having simpler tax rules, like:
- Tax gross income rather than net income. Gross income is well established in existing law so nothing new to learn. It stops future losses, and existing losses would immediately cease. Losses are the risk of the entrepreneur who has the knowledge to take the risks. That risk should not be shared by the government or taxpayers through a reduced tax take as they did not take the risk or have the knowledge to take the risk. Gross income would collect more tax than net income does allowing us to eliminate the regressive GST tax and its economic distortions The headline tax rate could be lowered but more tax is collected. It would fix a lot of economic behaviour distortions, e.g. running up expenses, and tax avoidance opportunities, e.g. deductability of interest on loans
- Define ‘income’ widely in legislation for non-individuals. It is currently defined in common law and has three features.
- It must come in.
- it must be periodic (if its a one off it is capital and not income so not taxed)
- It must have the character of income in the hands of the person getting it. e.g. they use it to live their day to lives or run day to day business).
Simply use point (I) ‘it must come in’ for the definition of income. The second and third features establish the capital/revenue distinction but we should get rid of this as everything a non-individual does is it to gain or protect assets or income. The distinction creates so much tax avoidance. What has ‘come in’ can be defined from the books of accounts used to get loans. This helps stop having two sets of accounts one for tax and one for other revenue raising purposes; like Mr Trump had. Or tax on what has ‘come in’ could be calculated from the highest set of accounts prepared e.g. a share issue prospectus may have higher figures .
Item two would tax ‘all gains’ so capital is fully taxed – but by calling it income (for a non-individual). I had already written about what transactions could be exempted. e.g. Only loans from New Zealand registered entities/banks that are true third parties. Because income is so often run through multiple entities and it comes out as a loan (non-taxable).
This item two would generate a substantial amount of extra tax income, on top of what I have already said is generated from item 1 taxing gross income. Tax to – address climate change, to fix our affordable housing crisis, to fix our infrastructure problems, and reward our people (teachers, nurses, scientists, etc so they stay in New Zealand and we have a functioning society). And all this would stimulate our domestic economy. But we would have to stop firms just using demand to price gouge. The pricing process is the current problem with inflation and New Zealand is importing most of that – see articles and commentary on greedflation.
The best alternative to the above on capital gains tax, from a left perspective, is the deemed rate of return method. There are no losses. But it too struggles with lots of rules and valuations.
But Mr Parker is presumably wanting to build a momentum to bring in capital gains, but he will be open to accusations of mudslinging at the moment, trying to make tax a moral issue. And he doesn’t need to risk this. His government already had a previous mandate to bring in a capital gains tax but didn’t fight for it; I blame the mandarins as a significant player in that previous decision.
Mr Parker rather than just finger pointing and innuendo about some people not pulling their weight – the fact is they aren’t behaving ‘illegally’; and Mr Parker controls that concept. So, how about you, Mr Parker, do some doing; so there is a framework in which paying tax is hard to avoid.
And the solutions are actually very simple and clear.
Rich people donate to all the political parties. Doing studies is one thing but actually biting the hand that feeds you is another.
Labour has proven very good at doing reviews without actuating review results
There is more money in continuously reviewing and creating reports then increasing their own taxes.
Factually year on year right wing parties take the biggest donations from the rich.
2021 alone…
National $1,000,000 rounded up..
Act $900,000
Labour $250,000
They don’t know how to do things except to muck things up.
We have over 5 years of proof.
oh so this tax bludging was started by jacinda bob the first…..repeating labour is rubbish adds nothing to the conversation.
admittedly LINO did nothing about it, that’s their sin.
Thank you Stephen for providing some practical alternatives. Will Labour finally become a ‘labour’ party again? I am not overly hopeful, the power wielded by corporates and the wealthy runs deep.
This lot have never been a Labour Party,the proof is 5 years plus of doing nothing,except to make people’s lives more difficult.
Let’s be honest the Chipster is a career politician.
Jacinda Ardern is off to the USA.
Grant Robertson has gone silent.
They are leaderless and heartless.
And Luxon continues to crucify National.
Until the centre bloc of the electorate demand change the major parties will fight over that centre ground.
I think ‘heartless’ is relative – National and Act certainly don’t exhibit any ‘heart’.
nice powerpoint presentation, he will do zero…the news cycle will move on to a human interest story of a pig that can fart the national anthem…and that’s the subject kicked up the road for another 10yrs.
I think you meant “pander” but cute fluffy panda is not inappropriate.
oops.
I think Stephens idea of taxing gross income would be preferable to a CGT for farmers. Developing into a larger enterprise may be slowed as rebates on expenditure would disappear. I would still prefer that to the death duties I paid as a young farmer. Our farm now run by my son still struggles because of death duties tax I paid 50 years ago.
Can someone update us all on how MMT is going? Ey Orr and Bazooka Robo have gone quiet on that one ay?
Robo is suspiciously quiet?
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