|
Key all but rules out property capital gains taxTuesday 15 September 2009 While the Prime Minister John Key virtually ruled out a capital gains tax yesterday, he is much less unequivocal about other forms of tax on property investment. By Rob Hosking Key virtually ruled out a capital gains tax at his post Cabinet press conference yesterday afternoon, listing the reasons why such taxes are a bad idea: they're not efficient, cause distortions and don't prevent property market booms anyway. However, he is much less downbeat on other forms of property tax, such as a land tax or putting increased onus on existing provisions in the Income Tax Act aimed at property investors. Asked about public comments from various members of the Tax Working Group indicating interest in some form of land tax, Key said he hadn't seen enough detail about those statements to comment, and he would wait to see what would come out of the working groups, final report.
"But a straight capital gains tax, no, I'm not convinced." The Tax Working Group meets again this week, with the issue of taxation of party the main focus of this meeting. Meanwhile the Institute of Chartered Accountants has cautioned that a capital gains tax is no magic bullet for economic stability. The institute's tax director Craig Macalister says there is too much propensity for people to look to the tax system as the magic lever to be pulled when some behaviour in the economy needs changing. "There are many complex factors that come into play. Using the tax system to target bubbles in the markets is fraught with danger."
Comments from our readersNo comments yet Add your comment:Soft housing activity predicted for the rest of the year amid weak REINZ data Economists are predicting the housing market will stay soft for the rest of the year after Real Estate Institute data showed sales volumes stayed under pressure last month. Review may give investors some depreciation relief Commercial and industrial property investors should still be able to claim significant depreciation allowances, an asset depreciation expert says. Economist pushes out dates for next OCR hikes One economist has pushed out the date for the Reserve Bank’s next official cash rate hike citing recent downgrades to its forecasts for global GDP growth, including in Australia and New Zealand. |
|